Criminals - TV Tropes
- ️Thu Oct 02 2014
This is an alphabetical list of all articles on this site about real-life criminals: murderers, rapists, thieves, smugglers, gangsters, bandits, pirates, terrorists, etc. In some cases, the historical villain's reputation may even have had an upgrade (or downgrade, if not an outright whitewashing), but nevertheless we list them all here.
TV Tropes also wants to make clear that it in no way do we wish to glorify these people's crimes. Their presence on this site usually have to do with their dominant appearances in popular culture and/or legendary reputation. Most of the articles about the criminals listed below are here to separate myth from reality, and to indicate in which media they have become a staple of popular culture.
NOTE: This page is only meant to list notable real-life criminals with articles on this wiki in the Useful Notes namespace (so absolutely excluding any Creators, Musicians, or Wrestlers, regardless of whatever laws they have broken), who are all most remembered in the public consciousness for the high-profile crimes they have committed.
Notable real-life criminals (with articles on this wiki) include:
- Elizabeth Báthory: 17th century Hungarian noblewoman and Serial Killer, who murdered young women and supposedly bathed in their blood. One of the inspirations for Dracula.
- Billy the Kid: 19th century American outlaw of The Wild West.
- Osama bin Laden: Saudi terrorist warlord, founding leader of the Sunni Islamic jihadist organization Al-Qaeda.
- Blackbeard: Infamous 18th century English pirate.
- Anne Bonny: 18th century Irish female pirate.
- John Wilkes Booth: Actor turned assassin who, in 1865, killed sitting U.S. President Abraham Lincoln.
- Lizzie Borden: 19th century American woman who was tried and acquitted in the axe murders of her parents.
- Ted Bundy: An infamous rapist and sadistic Serial Killer.
- Al Capone: Early 20th century American mobster; boss of the Chicago Outfit, the Mafia's Windy City branch.
- Charlotte Corday: 18th century French woman who assassinated Jacobin leader Jean-Paul Marat.
- John Dillinger: Early 20th century American gangster.
- Guy Fawkes: 17th century English Catholic rebel who tried (and failed) to blow up the English Parliament and assassinate James VI and I. The British still celebrate the day that the Gunpowder Plot of 1605 was uncovered as Bonfire Night. He also inspired V in V for Vendetta.
- Ed Gein: Infamous American murderer and grave robber.
- Hermann Göring: The highest ranking surviving official of Nazi Germany to be put on trial. Convicted of conspiracy, crimes against peace, war crimes, and crimes against humanity at the Nuremberg Trials in 1946 and sentened to death, but committed suicide.
- Willi Herold: Young German soldier who impersonated a Luftwaffe Captain with the help of a uniform he found and ordered an infamous massacre in the Aschendorfermoor prison camp in April 1945, for which he was sentenced to death by a British war crimes tribunal.
- Saddam Hussein: The former President of Iraq, who led a brutal dictatorship with massacres that killed thousands of people in his own country. After his overthrow, the new US-backed government convicted him of crimes against humanity, and had him executed by hanging.
- Jack the Ripper: 19th century British Serial Killer, who murdered and mutilated several prostitutes in London. He was never caught, and his true identity is still unknown.
- Jesse James: 19th century American outlaw of The Wild West.
- Jim Jones: 20th century American cult leader who ordered his own followers to drink a cyanide cocktail, thus killing off about 800 people in a mass murder-suicide in their community of Jonestown, Guyana.
- Ned Kelly: 19th century Australian outlaw.
- Lampião: Early 20th century Brazilian outlaw.
- Henri Désiré Landru: Early 20th century French Serial Killer.
- Leopold and Loeb: Early 20th century American murderers, famous for their (failed) attempt to commit the "perfect crime".
- Charles Manson: Infamous American cult leader who drove his followers to murdering people, including the actress Sharon Tate.
- Gilles de Rais: 15th century French knight, lord, and ally of Joan of Arc. Suspected and convicted of numerous crimes including occultism, pedophilia, and serial murder, for which he was hanged in 1440.
- Albert Speer: One of the surviving major figures of Nazi Germany who was put on trial in Nuremberg. Found guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity (mainly for the use of slave labor). Condemned to 20 years in prison.
- Hideki Tojo: WW2-era Japanese general and prime minister, sentenced to death for war crimes, crimes against humanity, and crimes against peace at the Tokyo Trials.
- Zodiac Killer: Unidentified American serial killer active in the late 1960s.