About: Monarchy   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

History of team is unknown.

AttributesValues
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  • Monarchy
  • Monarchy
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  • History of team is unknown.
  • Some Current And/Or Former Monarchies include Yorkshire, the Earth Greater Empire, Jiohaff, Gojoseon, Kingdom of Pattani, 1st Kingdom of Ava, Sydnesia.
  • Monarchy is a fairly early technology in Civilization games, allowing the Government of the same name.
  • monarch + -y
  • The act of renouncing one's position of monarchical authority is called abdication. A man by the name of Roy La Post once tried unsuccessfully to make his own kingdom called Frerpland. The Lava Men seem to have a monarchical society, as they were shown to have a King, which at the time was Solderath.
  • The Monarchy provides powerful bonuses to cavalry and artillery warfare - nations heavily relying on such units (especially the Mongols, Turks, Lakota) should definitely consider becoming a Monarchy. More peaceful, economic-building oriented nations should prefer Monarchy's foil, Democracy.
  • Monarchies come in three distinct types, Constitutional Monarchies, Elective Monarchies and Absolute Monarchies. An example of a Constitutional Monarchy is Great Britain. They have had kings there but it seems female rulers are more popular and haven't gone mad. Good Queen Bess, We're Not Amusing and the er..horsey one. Elective monarchies include the Vatican where the entry requirement is that you are (A) a man with testicles, (B) Catholic and (C) Never slept with a woman - though often the third clause has been forgotten by those Popes who became dads. Absolute Monarchies were the Russian Romanovs and today, Lady Gaga.
  • A monarchy is a form of government where the highest office of state is held by a king, emperor, prince, or other noble, usually for life and usually on the basis of inheritance. Monarchies are generally contrasted with republics. Traditionally, monarchies have been very common around Vexillium, and most places have, at some point, been ruled by monarchs. Today, the number of monarchies is considerably lower — fewer than half the states of Vexillium have retained a monarchic system of government.
  • A monarchy is a form of government in which the people have no power and the King, Queen, or Emperor has all the power. A monarchy can take many forms such a Constitutional Monarchy where the King, Queen, or Emperor has limited power and the Prime Minister has most of the power like the President in a republic form of government. On the other half a Monarchy in general is usually referring to the leader of the country or empire having all of the power or unlimited power like a dictator.
  • A monarchy is a form of government where a nation is ruled under the authority of a king and/or queen. Kingdoms were generally hereditary, traditionally being passed from father to son. In the event that a King does not have a male heir, there is a ladder of family members next in line to be ruler. In most historical monarchies, if a King's daughter were married to another nation's prince or king, that ruler would inherit the daughter's family's kingdom. If a king had no children, the kingdom would then be passed down to the next closest relative (uncle, cousin, nephew, in laws, etc). In Alagaesia, the dwarves and Elves would elect a new king or queen in a democratic style. Although the title of queen was not used during her reign over the Varden, Nasuada was similarly elected as ruler ove
  • A monarchy was a system of government in which an individual known as a monarch, usually titled king or queen depending on gender, held a degree of authority. An individual could become a monarch through inheritance, with the title being passed down through familial ties known as a royal bloodline, or through democratic election. If inherited, the title and role of monarch was most often held until death. The amount of power a monarch could exercise varied from government to government, ranging from them having a purely ceremonial role, to being bound by a constitution, to wielding absolute power. Some monarchies had a council of officials who would advise the monarch in political matters.
  • Forms of monarchy differ widely based on the level of legal autonomy the monarch holds in governance, the method of selection of the monarch, and any predetermined limits on the length of their tenure. When the monarch has no or few legal restraints in state and political matters, it is called an absolute monarchy and is a form of autocracy. Cases in which the monarch's discretion is formally limited (most common today) are called constitutional monarchies. In hereditary monarchies, the office is passed through inheritance within a family group, whereas elective monarchies are selected by some system of voting. Historically these systems are most commonly combined, either formally or informally, in some manner. (For instance, in some elected monarchies only those of certain pedigrees are c
  • A Monarchy is a system of government. It has many definitions, for there are many systems of government that are forms of a monarchy. In most monarchies, the Head of State rules until death or abdication and the new recipient of power is determined by a hereditary dynastic system. However, the hereditary principle is not the defining characteristic, as such states as the Vatican City are still considered monarchies despite their elective nature. Neither is absolute power a defining characteristic, as the Princes of Liechtenstein and Monaco and even the almost entirely ceremonial sovereigns of the Commonwealth and many other modern European states are considered monarchs.
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