Lucius Verus

Politician 130 – 169
Cooling Off
#938
Historical Importance
410K
2025 Wikipedia Views
-19.0%
Year-over-Year
-64%
2025 Momentum

📈 2025 Monthly Wikipedia Views

About Lucius Verus

Lucius Verus (130 - 169 CE) was a Roman Emperor who co-ruled the vast Roman Empire alongside Marcus Aurelius from 161 CE until his death. His historical importance stems from his role as the first Roman emperor to rule jointly with another, marking a significant, though brief, constitutional shift. Though often overshadowed by his philosophical colleague, Verus was an active military commander, notably leading Roman forces to victory in the Parthian War. This dual-emperor structure is key to his ranking at #938 on the Pantheon scale of historical influence.

Despite this significant imperial role, Lucius Verus currently exhibits an attention profile suggesting near-parity with his historical weight, displaying an Attention Gap of approximately 1x. In 2025, his annualized Wikipedia pageviews totaled 410K. This level of attention is remarkably similar to that of Louis Philippe I, a French monarch ranked similarly at #946 importance, who garnered 781K views, and even David Ben-Gurion (#986), who drew 965K views. His attention is currently aligned with his historical stature relative to these contemporaries, unlike figures whose HPI rank is much higher but views are lower.

However, the trend in modern attention is declining: his viewership dropped by 19.0% year-over-year, and the momentum from Q1 to Q3 2025 showed a sharp negative shift of -64%, indicating his digital relevance is currently fading.