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  1. monarchy, Undivided sovereignty or rule by a single person, who is the permanent head of state. The term is now used to refer to countries with hereditary sovereigns. The monarch was the ideal head of the new nation-states of the 16th and 17th centuries; his powers were nearly unlimited ( see absolutism ), though in Britain Parliament was able ...

  2. Monarchy - Constitutional, Hereditary, Absolute: When he crowned himself emperor of France in 1804 (and ratified the act by a people’s referendum), Napoleon Bonaparte instituted a new type of monarchy—the “nationalist monarchy,” whereby the monarch ruled on behalf of society’s nationalist aspirations and drive for independence.

  3. Newly created academies in the arts and sciences generated heroic representations of the king that reinforced the royal religion. Increasing censorship targeted “scandalous” texts (for example, pornography) and political writings incompatible with absolute monarchy.

  4. Absolute monarchy. In an absolute monarchy, the monarch rules as an autocrat, with absolute power over the state and government—for example, the right to rule by decree, promulgate laws, and impose punishments. Absolute monarchies are not necessarily authoritarian; the enlightened absolutists of the Enlightenment were monarchs who allowed ...

  5. Louis XIV. Of the historical examples of absolute monarchy, one that stands out is the reign of Louis XIV, who established this form of government in France. A monarch of the House of Bourbon, he ruled as the King of France and Navarre from May 14, 1643, until his death on September 1, 1715. His reign, which lasted for a whole of 72 years and ...

  6. Once the last rebellion of the feudal nobility was suppressed, the framework and mechanisms of absolute monarchy were in place, needing only the arrival of Louis XIV to complete the scene. In this illustration, the combined arms of Brittany and Orléans appearing behind the lady praying to the Virgin indicate that this book was produced for ...

  7. An absolute monarchy is a form of government in which the ruling monarch enjoys absolute control without limitations from a constitution or from law. In this form of government, the monarch is the head of state and head of government with unrestricted political power. In most instances, power transmits either through marriage or heredity to ...

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