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25

The figures born on this date span five centuries and several continents, yet each exercised a form of power that depended heavily on control, fear, and the vulnerability of those beneath them. Ivan IV — the first tsar of Russia — presided over a reign of extraordinary territorial expansion and extraordinary internal terror, establishing the oprichnina as an instrument of political purging that left thousands dead. Luise Brunner rose to chief guard at Auschwitz-Birkenau, where supervisory authority over imprisoned women carried consequences measured in suffering and death. Choi Tae-min, a South Korean cult leader, cultivated a decades-long hold over Park Geun-hye that later investigations described as manipulation bordering on psychological domination. Different eras, different mechanisms — the same essential dynamic.

August 25, 1912 - Choi Tae-min

His influence over Park Geun-hye, daughter of South Korean dictator Park Chung-hee, began in the 1970s and reportedly endured for decades — extending, through his daughter Choi Soon-sil, into the years of Park Geun-hye's presidency itself. The relationship became central to one of South Korea's most significant political scandals, raising questions about how deeply a single private individual had shaped the decisions of a sitting head of state.

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August 25, 1908 - Luise Brunner

Her career traced the arc of the SS female guard system at its most lethal — trained at Ravensbrück, deployed to Birkenau during the height of its operations, and eventually elevated to chief guard at Ravensbrück in the camp's final months. Survivor testimony records her as feared for physical violence against prisoners over minor infractions, and her role extended to selections for the gas chamber. The three-year sentence she received at the Ravensbrück Trial stood in stark contrast to the scale of what the proceedings documented.

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August 25, 1530 - Ivan the Terrible

His reign divides sharply into two phases: an early period of genuine institutional reform and military expansion, and a later descent into paranoid repression that gave him his enduring epithet. The oprichnina — a state within a state staffed by personal loyalists — became the instrument of mass executions, forced relocations, and the destruction of the boyar class. The 1570 sack of Novgorod, carried out on his orders against his own subjects, remains one of the most devastating episodes of internal violence in Russian history. He consolidated and expanded the Russian state while simultaneously terrorizing it, a contradiction that has made him one of the most studied rulers of the early modern period.

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