"A kingdom founded on injustice never lasts"
About this Quote
Seneca’s intent is practical. In Roman political life, injustice wasn’t an occasional bug, it was often the operating system: confiscations, show trials, purges, public spectacles of humiliation. Seneca is warning that regimes built on fear and extraction create their own enemies and, just as corrosively, their own paranoid logic. Injustice forces a ruler to keep doing more injustice to protect the first injustice. That’s not a sermon, it’s a feedback loop.
The subtext is also Stoic: you can’t anchor a polity in vice and expect it to produce order. For Stoics, injustice isn’t merely immoral; it’s irrational, a failure of self-governance that metastasizes into bad governance. The kingdom collapses because it loses the inner discipline that makes rule coherent.
Context matters: Seneca served Nero, the very symbol of a court where legality could be theater and mercy a mood. Read this as counsel written in the shadow of imperial volatility: power can look permanent right up until it isn’t. Seneca’s brilliance is in making moral language do double duty - a critique of tyranny that can be spoken safely as a lesson in political durability.
Quote Details
| Topic | Justice |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Medea (in Ten Tragedies of Seneca, 1902 translation) (Seneca the Younger, 1902)
Evidence: True! But the unjust exercise of power does not rest for ever with the dispenser thereof. (Page 417 (DJVU scan), in the dialogue between Medea and Creon). The popular modern phrasing “A kingdom founded on injustice never lasts” appears to be a loose paraphrase, not a verbatim Seneca line in English. The closest primary-source line is from Seneca’s tragedy *Medea*, Latin: “Iniqua nunquam regna perpetuo manent.” A well-known English rendering in Frank Justus Miller’s translation is “Unrighteous sovereignty has never long endured.” (Miller, *Tragedies of Seneca*, 1907; *Medea* around line 196). The exact wording you provided (“A kingdom founded on injustice never lasts”) does not appear to be traceable to a specific canonical published translation; it seems to be a later rewording of the *Medea* line. Other candidates (1) How to Lead with Genius (Walter P. von Wartburg, 1991) compilation95.0% ... A kingdom founded on injustice never lasts . – Lucius Annaeus Seneca ( с . 4 В.С. - 65 A.D. ) The highest virtue ... |
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APA Style (7th ed.)
Younger, Seneca the. (2026, February 9). A kingdom founded on injustice never lasts. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-kingdom-founded-on-injustice-never-lasts-541/
Chicago Style
Younger, Seneca the. "A kingdom founded on injustice never lasts." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-kingdom-founded-on-injustice-never-lasts-541/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"A kingdom founded on injustice never lasts." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-kingdom-founded-on-injustice-never-lasts-541/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.









