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3%% This list of examples has been alphabetized. Take care to put your example in its proper place in accordance with Administrivia/HowToAlphabetizeThings!
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7[[quoteright:256:[[UsefulNotes/{{Virginia}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/seal_of_virginia.gif]]]]
8[[caption-width-right:256:Seal of Virginia.[[note]]''Sic semper tyrannis'' means "Thus always to tyrants"[[/note]]]]
9
10->''And do you not understand that it is enough for brave men to have learnt how noble a thing it is as to the act, how grateful it is as to the benefit done, how glorious as to the fame acquired, to slay a tyrant?''
11-->--'''Creator/{{Cicero}}''', ''Philippics 2.117''
12
13A ruler tyrannizes his realm, whether by committing [[FinalSolution genocide]], [[EvilDebtCollector robbing his subjects]] or [[KickTheDog kicking puppies]]; one day, LaResistance murders him in order to free their country.
14The act, along with the one committing it, was historically sometimes seen as praiseworthy, except in contexts where the given head of state held his power from divine right.[[labelnote:For the history nerds...]]The ancient Greek root, ''tyrannos'', only denoted a ruler who came to power through means that weren't considered legitimate. The word began to take on its modern connotations late in the Classical period.[[/labelnote]]
15
16Can be the fate of a PresidentEvil, PresidentForLife (with emphasis on the ''[[OnlyServesForLife Life]]'' part), the FeudalOverlord, TheEvilPrince, TheCaligula, TheGeneralissimo, the EvilQueen, and the EvilOverlord.
17
18The ruler's death [[AndThereWasMuchRejoicing getting a favorable reaction from the people]] is also more likely when said ruler has a ZeroPercentApprovalRating.
19
20It's nothing to do with a ''UsefulNotes/TyrannosaurusRex'', unless the dinosaur's a Tyrannical [[GratuitousLatin Rex]], too.
21
22Related to TheKingslayer, AssholeVictim, and BullyHunter. If done by a foreign power, then it's RegimeChange. Compare MeetTheNewBoss and FullCircleRevolution, and contrast TyrantTakesTheHelm.
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24Real-life examples are limited to the {{Trope Namer}}s.
25
26!!As a {{Death Trope|s}}, spoilers will be unmarked on this page.
27----
28!!Examples:
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30[[foldercontrol]]
31
32[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
33* In ''Anime/CodeGeass'', Lelouch {{Deconstruct|edTrope}}s this trope--and in a metaphorical sense, you could even say he {{Exaggerate|dTrope}}s it. One of his most consistent goals throughout the series is to assassinate the tyrannical Emperor of Britannia. [[spoiler:When he eventually succeeds, he takes up the throne and deliberately fashions himself into an ''even worse'' tyrant, specifically to give all of humanity a single shared enemy to unite them, leading to a better world after his [[ThanatosGambit arranged assassination]]. In other words, he metaphorically destroys the role of Emperor itself]].
34* ''Anime/MobileSuitGundam'': Happens to [[GloriousLeader Gihren]] near the end, at the hands of his own younger sister no less. Not that Kycilia is [[ALighterShadeOfBlack that much better of a person herself]], but killing their father proves to be a bridge too far for her, so she decides to shoot him, consequences be damned.
35[[/folder]]
36
37[[folder:Comic Books]]
38* Issue #247 of Creator/MarvelComics' ''ComicBook/FantasticFour'' has ComicBook/DoctorDoom bring the ComicBook/FantasticFour to his homeland to show them how Prince Zorba has reduced Latveria to a CrapsackWorld where its people live in misery and fear. While the Four battle war-class Doombots, Doom seeks out Zorba and confronts him about his tyranny.
39-->'''Prince Zorba''': So long as I live, you have no claim to the throne!\
40'''Doctor Doom''': [[PreMortemOneLiner Precisely]].
41* Double subverted in ''ComicBook/JudgeDredd''. In the backstory, the Judges rise up against PresidentEvil Bob Booth for starting a nuclear war by invoking the U.S. Constitution's pre-ambles against tyranny. After they capture him they can't bring themselves to execute the last President, however, so they sentence him to 100 years [[HumanPopsicle suspended animation]] instead. [[spoiler:Dredd sentences him again to hard labor after the President wakes up, then finally passes sentence of death on Booth a few decades later when he tries to raise an army in the Cursed Earth to take over Mega-City One.]]
42[[/folder]]
43
44[[folder:Fan Works]]
45* Averted in ''LetsPlay/AScotsmanInEgypt''. There's a guy running around with the name of [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Niels_Ebbesen Niels "Tyrantslayer" Ebbesen,]] but his title is never explained, and he dies in battle against ordinary soldiers instead of the king.
46[[/folder]]
47
48[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
49* ''WesternAnimation/TheLionKing1994'': Scar, the BigBad turns the African savannah he rules over into a dustbowl after [[TyrantTakesTheHelm usurping his own brother]]. At the end of the movie it is implied that he's killed (and devoured) by his own starving hyena henchmen.
50[[/folder]]
51
52[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
53* Occurs preventively in ''Film/DieHard2'', in which cronies of deposed dictator General Esperanza take all of Dulles Airport hostage. They demand, and receive, Esperanza; he and his corrupt [=CIA=] cohorts are about to depart for a coup of his BananaRepublic when TheHero takes them all out.
54* ''Franchise/StarWars: Film/ReturnOfTheJedi''. Darth Vader returns to the light and kills the Emperor by throwing him down the Death Star reactor shaft. His death signals the beginning of the end of the Empire's tyranny, sparking uprisings and celebrations on a number of planets. The ExpandedUniverse goes into more detail about it, showing that the Empire fractured without Palpatine or Vader's leadership, making it all the more easy for the Rebels, now known as the New Republic, to liberate Imperial-held space.
55* Once the Wicked Witch has been liquidated in ''Film/TheWizardOfOz'', the captain of the witch's guards cheers Dorothy and company, and gladly presents them with the witch's broom in gratitude. Presumably, the flying monkeys also bear the protagonists no ill will, since the monkeys nevermore impede Dorothy's progress.
56* ''Film/XMenApocalypse'': The Ancient Egyptians who are fed up with En Sabah Nur's blood-thirsty reign attempt to assassinate him, but his Four Horsemen sacrifice themselves to save his life. It does save the Egyptians who suffered under his reign, since Apocalypse is [[SealedEvilInACan sealed away for thousands of years]].
57[[/folder]]
58
59[[folder:Literature]]
60* In the ''Literature/{{Deryni}}'' novel ''Camber of Culdi'', the ''coup d'etat'' against King Imre Festil by Cinhil Haldane, aided by Camber [=MacRorie=] Earl of Culdi and his family, involves this. Imre is depicted mistreating ordinary humans (taking DisproportionateRetribution for the murder of a Deryni lord by taking fifty human hostages and executing them when the killers don't come forward), and he's killed in an arcane duel by Cinhil. Camber and his family are motivated to find Cinhil and persuade the reluctant priest to take the throne because of Imre's tyranny.
61* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'':
62** Suffer-not-Injustice "Old Stoneface" Vimes, ancestor of the current Vimes, chopped off the King's head for his [[PaedoHunt horrific crimes]]. He was the only one with the balls to do it -- no court wanted to try the king. He was later executed, his body getting the [[AnArmAndALeg Osiris treatment]]. His [[OnceDoneNeverForgotten bad reputation]] was so ''powerful'', his descendants ''many generations later'' are still being bugged about it.
63** ''Literature/{{Night Watch|Discworld}}'': The revolution ends with the murder of Homicidal Lord Winder by [[spoiler:a young Havelock Vetinari]] and Lord Snapcase being made the new Patrician, but [[spoiler:Snapcase immediately turns out to be [[MeetTheNewBoss just as tyrannical,]] [[TheCaligula if not worse]]. ''Literature/InterestingTimes'' implies that Snapcase ended up facing mob justice for his own crimes.]]
64* In the parody novel ''Doctor Whom'' by Adam Roberts, the Master Debator justifies his intention to kill the Dr. by revealing that his title is not short for Doctor, as both the characters and the reader had been led to assume, but ''Dictator''.
65-->'''Master Debator:''' While murder may be a crime, tyrannicide is ''not''.
66* In ''Literature/DragonBlood'', high king Jakoven is an overall bad ruler, who also kills innocent men and rapes children. LaResistance has been planning his carefully timed demise for some time and is only waiting for him to dig himself a bit deeper so that even more people will oppose him. After [[spoiler:the revolutionaries get the HiddenBackupPrince out of prison]], there is nothing that stands between the tyrant and a sharp blade anymore... at least nothing that would hinder the heroes in any meaningful way.
67* ''Literature/TheHungerGames'': At the execution of [[PresidentEvil President Snow]] at the end of ''Literature/{{Mockingjay}}'', Katniss kills President Coin, the leader of LaResistance, after realising she and Snow weren't so different. Snow is later lynched by the mob.
68* Christopher Paolini's ''Literature/InheritanceCycle'': In the end, it is Eragon who kills Galbatorix, the BigBad and current ruler of Alagaesia. [[spoiler:He does this by inventing a game-changing spell (with the help of the dragon's WildMagic) that causes the tyrant to feel all the pain he has caused directly or indirectly during his hundred-year reign, [[MyGodWhatHaveIDone forcing Galbatorix to finally realize what he's done to the nation]] and [[DrivenToSuicide kill himself]] [[FantasticNuke with magic]] when Eragon refuses to end the spell]].
69* ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'':
70** [[Characters/ASongOfIceAndFireJaimeLannister Jaime Lannister]] , who killed an evil, mad king, [[TheCaligula Aerys II]] through BackStab [[spoiler:to stop them burning down King's Landing with wildfire]]. He did a lot of good to the realm [[spoiler:and had the most genuinely noble intentions]]. [[OnceDoneNeverForgotten No one will let him forget it]], though, as he was sworn to protect the King.
71** [[TheCaligula Joffrey]] is later murdered by [[spoiler:his grandmother-in-law Olenna Tyrell and Littlefinger]], although this was not so much for the sake of the realm as it is for advancing their own personal agendas.
72** At the end of the Dance of the Dragons Aegon II was poisoned as Cregan Stark's army approached King's Landing, though it is unknown who was responsible. However, Cregan arrested many people for the crime, giving most of them the choice between death or exile, as he felt a king's murder should be punished. Aegon's rival, his half-sister Rhaenyra, was killed by him when he fed her to his dragon and had proved tyrannical in her half-year rule over King's Landing, starving the people and executing many.
73** Aegon the Conqueror fought the cruel Black Harren Hoare, who had spent his sixty-year reign forcing the Riverlands to build his gigantic castle of Harrenhal, meaning when Aegon attacked many of the Riverlords joined him. When Harren took refuge in his castle, Aegon used his dragon to burn the castle, eliminating House Hoare.
74[[/folder]]
75
76[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
77* ''Series/The100:'' In the TimeSkip between seasons 4 and 5, Octavia has become a ruthless, bloodthirsty dictator of those in the bunker, who worship her with cult-like reverence. When the group is threatened with hostile takeover by Eligius, a criminal mining ship, Octavia's one-track mind for power and vengeance jeopardize any attempts at negotiation and peace. To get her out of the way so she doesn't get them all killed, Bellamy poisons her with an algae that induces a coma, very much aware that it has the potential to kill her. Fittingly, the episode dealing with the aftermath of this decision is called [[Recap/The100S05E09 "Sic Semper Tyrannis."]] Octavia survives this (barely), and sentences her own brother to the [[GladiatorGames fighting pits.]]
78* ''Series/TheBarrier'': The series is set in PoliceState dictatorship that has been in place for twenty-five years and the protagonists are people who are suffering under the regime and[=/=]or opposing it to various levels. Take a wild guess as to whether the President leading that dictatorship is still alive by the end of the last episode of the series or not. Messing with the granddaughter of a former LaResistance member who is in possession of a gun is a bad idea.
79* Londo Mollari's plan to murder the omnicidally-insane [[TheCaligula Caligula]] Emperor Cartagia in ''Series/BabylonFive'', which succeeds except for a previously naive and innocent party having to deliver the killing blow, which Londo regrets.
80* ''[[Series/Napoleon2002 Napoléon]]'': Narrowly avoided when UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte attempts to address the Directorate to give him and two of his political allies emergency powers, and one of the deputies attempts to stab him in the chaos. Napoleon is protected from assassination by his soldiers, and he uses the opportunity to have the Directorate dissolved and himself named First Consul.
81* ''Series/GameOfThrones'': Deconstructed. Euron openly admits to kinslaying his own brother, Balon, and justifies himself on the grounds that Balon's rule brought nothing but grief to the Ironborn as he led them into two wars that they couldn't win and made them the laughing stock of Westeros and says that his only regret was that Balon was not killed ''before'' he did these terrible things. The other Ironborn agree with Euron. While it may be true that Balon was a terrible king, it doesn't change the fact that Euron is all kinds of worse than Balon could ever be, with [[FullCircleRevolution one tyrant replaced with a more malicious one]]. The best you can say about Euron is that he understands the importance of powerful allies and that the Ironborn are too few in number to take on all of Westeros.
82* ''Series/{{House}}'': in the episode "The Tyrant" ([=S6E4=]), Dibala, a repressive and genocidal ruler, is being cared for by the hospital. An "orderly" named Ruwe asks Chase to let Dibala die, because of his human rights violations. After hearing Dibala, when asked about genocide, replying he would do what he thinks necessary for his country, Chase bungles the diagnosis, thereby causing the death of Dibala.
83* '' Series/TheLordOfTheRingsTheRingsOfPower'': After Morgoth's demise, Sauron was left to take control over the Orcs. Instead of trying to be better than his predecesor, Sauron continued Morgoth's horrible treatment of The Orcs, which absolutely garanteed a MistreatmentInducedBetrayal from The Orcs. He was "split open" by Adar.
84* ''Series/{{Merlin 2008}}'': Morgana kills Uther by using her own magic to cause the amulet Merlin-in-disguise gives Arthur to save Uther to backfire and kill him, seeing him as a tyrant for his brutal repression of magic users.
85* ''Series/{{Rome}}'' depicts the assassination of UsefulNotes/GaiusJuliusCaesar by Brutus and his allies at the end of the first season. When they later discuss the aftermath with Caesar's surviving ally Mark Antony, the latter points out that justifying Caesar's murder as tyrannicide has created a conundrum for everyone, as all of Caesar's motions, including the appointment of Brutus' and Antony's offices, are legally null and void. The factions agree to [[DemocracyIsBad forego a new election]] by declaring a general amnesty. Antony then rouses the common people (for whom Caesar was a hero) against the assassins, forcing them to flee Rome.
86[[/folder]]
87
88[[folder:Music]]
89* Music/CannibalCorpse's "Firestorm Vengeance" is about [[KillItWithFire killing tyrants with fire]].
90* ''Music/EvilliousChronicles'': The main goal of LaResistance is to depose the petty, despotic Princess Riliane and execute her for the sake of the kingdom. Unfortunately, she performs a TwinSwitch with her HalfIdenticalTwin.
91[[/folder]]
92
93[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
94* Happens every so often in ''TabletopGame/BattleTech'':
95** The most historically important example is the overthrow of the mad despot [[https://www.sarna.net/wiki/Stefan_Amaris Stefan Amaris]]. Unique in that the group that overthrew him was the army of the realm he had overthrown, and that killing him didn't involve an assassination as much as a decades-long campaign to destroy his home nation and depose Amaris himself, followed by summary execution by firing squad.
96** A lesser example is [[https://www.sarna.net/wiki/Hohiro_Kurita_(30th_c.) Hohiro Kurita I]], regarded as a domineering and austere megalomaniac. He is eventually [[BodyguardBetrayal killed by a member of his own Otomo bodyguard unit]], though it does not ease the suffering of the people by much--his successor Takashi Kurita proved to be just as brutal in his own ways.
97[[/folder]]
98
99[[folder:Theatre]]
100* In Music/StephenSondheim's musical ''Theatre/{{Assassins}}'', John Wilkes Booth believes he is doing this when he kills UsefulNotes/AbrahamLincoln, comparing the situation to ''Theatre/JuliusCaesar''.
101-->"Hunt me down, smear my name. Say I did it for the fame, what I did was kill the man who killed my country! Now the Southland can end! Now this bloody war can end! Because someone slew the tyrant, just as Brutus slew the tyrant!"
102* ''Theatre/JuliusCaesar'' is about Marcus Brutus and Caius Cassius assassinating Julius Caesar because they think he has become a tyrant of Rome. The play is BasedOnATrueStory.
103* In ''Theatre/{{Pippin}}'', the title character tries to liberate the people by killing his father Charles and becoming king in his place. It doesn't work out well, but the play's NoFourthWall nature gives him the opportunity to undo it.
104[[/folder]]
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106[[folder:Video Games]]
107* Subverted in ''VideoGame/BeyondTwoSouls''. [[spoiler:The CIA sends Jodie on a mission to eliminate a tyrannical warlord in a war-torn African country. After she completes the mission, she learns that the man she killed was actually a democratically elected president who was seen as the last hope for his country to ever achieve peace and stability. She doesn't take the news well.]]
108* In the background of ''VideoGame/BioShock1'', Bill [=McDonagh=], angry at Andrew Ryan [[BrokenPedestal mismanaging the civil war with Atlas by refusing to negotiate]], attempted to kill him but failed and ended up pinned against the wall of his office.
109** In [[Literature/BioshockRapture the novel adaptation]], Bill simply beat his head with his gun but doesn't dare shoot his old friend. Afterward, given Ryan's bodyguards were Bill's family friends, they shot him instead of pinning him ''alive''.
110* ''VideoGame/ConkersBadFurDay''. After taking down the Fabled Panther King, Conker is made the new King and everyone seems happy now that they're free, [[spoiler:everyone except Conker himself, who doesn't really want to be king, mainly because he is depressed over his girlfriend being killed]].
111* In ''VideoGame/{{Democracy}}'', according to the extremists' point of view.
112* The player is able to slay rulers in ''VideoGame/DwarfFortress'' Adventure mode; some of these rules can be demons or other dark creatures.
113* ''VideoGame/FireEmblemPathOfRadiance'' has the main protagonist, Ike, defeat the tyrannical Ashnard to free Crimea.
114* In the ''Franchise/{{Halo}}'' series, two of the High Prophets of the Covenant, dogmatic leaders that were responsible for the war with humanity and the betrayal of [[spoiler:the Elites]], are assassinated. Master Chief assassinates the Prophet of Regret in ''VideoGame/{{Halo 2}}'' as part of a UNSC mission, while Truth is summarily executed by the Arbiter towards the climax of ''VideoGame/Halo3'' in order to cement the Covenant's defeat.
115* In ''VideoGame/JaggedAlliance'' 2, Queen Deidranna of BananaRepublic Arulco has transformed the formerly peaceful nation into a militaristic dictatorship. former husband and king Enrico Chilvaldori, after escaping execution on her orders, hires a band of mercenaries to remove Deidranna from power, by whatever means necessary.
116* ''VideoGame/MegaManZero4'':
117** In the climax, Craft [[TheStarscream rebels against]] the current ruler of [[TheEmpire Neo Arcadia]], [[TheCaligula Dr. Weil]], and hijacks the control system of [[KillSat Ragnarok]] in order to kill him. In a subversion, not only does Neo Arcadia get utterly destroyed in the process, Weil survived the attack thanks to his regenerative armor. In the end, Weil does get killed by Zero, but by then the country is already no more.
118** Downplayed with the previous ruler of Neo Arcadia, Copy X. He does try to make the empire close to a utopia... but he's so oppressive to Reploids in that he considers retiring minor, innocent Reploids is a good solution for the energy crisis. Then Zero slays him in the first game. In the second game, his second in command Harpuia assumes the role in secret, where the empire becomes less oppressive under him. In the third game, this is fully played straight -- Copy X is revived by Dr. Weil and becomes worse; he now considers human society a fair game, as seen when he demolished an entire city block with a missile just to get the Dark Elf. Zero slays him again, only for Weil to take his place.
119* ''VideoGame/MortalKombat11'': During most of the game, the tyrannical Shao Kahn usurps back the throne from its previous ruler, Kotal Kahn, who was a fair ruler. During most of the game's story mode, Shao Kahn is seen oppressing the denizens of Outworld in order to rebuild their armies for Kronika's purposes. Then he's confronted by Kitana, after Kotal Kahn is freed from his shackles. After a gruesome fight, Kitana [[SlashedThroat slashes]] Shao Kahn's throat, killing him for good.
120* ''VideoGame/StarWarsTheOldRepublic'': The Jedi Knight's story ends with them confronting and killing the Sith Emperor himself. [[spoiler:Come ''The Shadow of Revan'', though, it turns out he's NotQuiteDead, and now his spirit has escaped into the galaxy to get up to who knows what sort of mischief.]]
121** In the Zakuul Saga, the Emperor reveals his master plan was to build a ''second'' Empire that swallows up and oppresses both the Republic and the Sith with precursor tech. Your character [[spoiler:or the crown prince]] assassinates Emperor Valkorion, who then possesses you and intends to GrandTheftMe your ass. [[spoiler:Then you murder his soul by throwing the Force of his angry, abused family on his ass.]]
122* In the climax of ''VideoGame/StarcraftIIHeartOfTheSwarm'', Kerrigan storms Korhal Palace and finally kills Emperor Arcturus Mengsk after all the crap he put through on her, her allies, and the entire Korpal Sector.
123* This is what the [[LaResistance guerilleros]] want to happen to El Presidente of ''VideoGame/{{Tropico}}''.
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125
126[[folder:Webcomics]]
127* ''Webcomic/KaitenMutenmaru'': The rebels in [[spoiler:Sick's]] backstory not only planned to kill the [[spoiler:Solitude]] family and burn their house but also killed their young peer in a blind rage. This, along with their triumphant return, implies that they succeeded in killing [[spoiler:Pain and Yamai]] for their tyranny over the town of [[spoiler:Throne]], leaving [[spoiler:Sick]] an orphan and the only survivor of the family.
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130[[folder:Web Original]]
131* ''WebVideo/PiratesSMP'': The island state of Naya is effectively a military dictatorship ruled over by the Armada, itself headed by ten commanders. The finale reveals that Kuervo killed eight of the commanders in their sleep after finding out they were responsible for his CoolBigBro's death, before being violently caught on the ninth and sent on the run. Going from star indoctrinated {{Child Soldier|s}} to outlaw DefectorFromDecadence in one night, by the canon era, he fully intends to kill the last two commanders, [[spoiler:and aims to free the island state after completing his quest for vengeance.]]
132* ''Website/SCPFoundation:'' [[http://www.scp-wiki.net/scp-2578 SCP-2578]] is an alien aircraft drone manned by the ☽☽☽ Initiative that executes (via an energy weapon) any rulers who it judges to be tyrannical. Interestingly, it always warns its targets 72 hours in advance and will cancel the assassination if the target resigns or repents of their crimes. The Foundation hasn't found any way to contain SCP-2578 yet, so they focus instead on disguising these executions as completely mundane assassination plots.
133[[/folder]]
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135[[folder:Western Animation]]
136* In the backstory of ''WesternAnimation/StevenUniverse'', [[Characters/StevenUniverseRoseQuartz Rose Quartz]] killed [[Characters/StevenUniversePinkDiamond Pink Diamond]] six thousand years ago to end the GreatOffscreenWar and free the Earth from her rule. Unfortunately, she was only leading a small part of an interstellar empire, and the other rulers decided to SaltTheEarth in retribution. [[spoiler:Then things get more complicated when it's revealed that both Rose and Pink Diamond were one and the same...]]
137* In ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'', [[Characters/TheLegendOfKorraZaheer Zaheer]] murders the Earth Queen, a tyrant who conscripted her own citizens to be part of a private army. After her death, the city of Ba Sing Se descends into anarchy. With the rest of the Earth Kingdom falling into chaos.
138[[/folder]]
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140[[folder:Real Life]]
141* In the 6th century BC, Athens was rules by brothers Hippias and Hipparchus. A pair of lovers, Harmodius and Aristogeiton tried to assassinate them but only managed to kill Hipparchus. After Hippias was overthrown and democracy was re-established in Athens, Harmodius and Aristogeiton were celebrated as tyrannicides.
142* In the latter days of UsefulNotes/TheRomanRepublic Brutus and Cassius famously assassinated UsefulNotes/GaiusJuliusCaesar in the Roman Senate chambers on the grounds that he was a tyrant. They were forced to retract this charge when it became clear that the Caesarian faction had overwhelming military support, drafting a reconciliation that ratified Caesar's decrees (whereas a tyrant's decrees would be thrown out as obviously illegitimate) and granted the conspirators amnesty for the murder as well as appointments to governorships. Brutus and Cassius were killed themselves several years later by the Caesarions when they outlived their usefulness.
143* During UsefulNotes/TheHundredYearsWar, Louis, duc d'Orléans was assassinated in UsefulNotes/{{Paris}} by agents of Jean ''sans Peur'' ("the Fearless"), duc de Bourgogne. This assassination was welcomed by students in Paris and by several merchants who were friendly with the Duc de Bourgogne. A theologian, Jean Petit, presented a case before a Church Committee that the death of the duc d'Orléans was a justifiable act of tyrannicide citing his unpopularity among Parisiens and submitting him to a HistoricalVillainUpgrade. Jean ''sans Peur'' on his arrival in Paris, was granted a reward and since he was backed by soldiers, his argument actually won the day. It did trigger, however, a Civil War between the Burgundians and the Armagnac faction (who regrouped with the Orleans family) and years later, Jean ''sans Peur'' would himself [[LaserGuidedKarma be assassinated on his way to discuss peace]].
144* The executions of UsefulNotes/LouisXVI and UsefulNotes/MarieAntoinette during UsefulNotes/TheFrenchRevolution are very often misinterpreted as this. [[SubvertedTrope The truth is way more complex.]]
145* John Wilkes Booth apparently believed he was doing this when he shot President Abraham Lincoln at the end of the UsefulNotes/AmericanCivilWar, as he shouted "Sic semper tyrannis!", the motto of Virginia, after he did the deed. In his journal, Booth compared himself to Brutus and Myth/WilliamTell.
146* In the 20th century, the July 1918 mass shooting of the Romanovs by Lenin's Red Guards during World War I's last months, the lynching of Mussolini and his mistress in April 1945 during World War II's last months, and the Christmas Day, 1989 executions of Communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu and his equally unpopular wife Elena in that year's Romanian Revolution were seen by supporters as tyrannicides.
147[[/folder]]

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