Academic literature on the topic 'Monarchy'

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Journal articles on the topic "Monarchy"

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Qardaşəli qızı Əliyeva, Aysel. "Democratization in European Monarchic States." SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH 09, no. 5 (May 22, 2022): 116–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.36719/2789-6919/09/116-118.

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Məqalənin məzmunu monarxiya ilə demokratiya anlayışlarının bir-birinə zidd hesab olunmasına baxmayaraq, monarxiyanın quruluşuna demokratiyanın necə təsir etməsi kimi xüsusiyyətləri ön plana çəkilir. Bundan başqa, müasir demokratik monarxiyalı dövlətlərdə monarxın gücünün hazırda mövcud olub-olmaması, monarxın hansı həcmdə muxtariyyətdən istifadə edə bilməsi, kral ailəsinin ölçüsünün, varisliyinin və maliyyəsinin tənzimlənmə qaydası, 150 ildən sonra rəsmi səlahiyyətlərinin çox azaldılmasına baxmayaraq bu qədim irsi institutun mövcudluğunu qoruyub saxlaması və müasir monarxın rolu ilə əlaqədar məsələlərə münasibət bildirilmişdir. Açar sözlər: monarxiya, demokratiya, demokratiyaya inteqrasiya, monarxik demokratiya, monarxın gücüs Aysel Gardashali Aliyeva Democratization in European Monarchic States Abstract Although the notions of monarchy and democracy are considered to be incompatible, the article's content emphasizes the aspects such as how democracy impacts the monarchy's structure. In addition, the monarchy's existence in modern democracies, the monarch's autonomy, the regulation of the royal family's size, inheritance, and finances, the preservation of this ancient legacy institution despite the reduction of official powers after 150 years, and contemporary issues related to the monarch's role were addressed. Key words: Monarchy, democracy, incorporation into democracy, monarchical democracies
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Olson, Paul A. "William Shakespeare's All Is True , Lord Chamberlain's "Truth," and Civil Religion." Christianity & Literature 71, no. 3 (September 2022): 287–305. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/chy.2022.0038.

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Abstract: The first title for Shakespeare's Henry VIII — All Is True —may reflect standard early modern usage signifying that all is an aspect of 'troth' or loyalty, all is common understanding, or all is received from a divine source. In the play, the Lord Chamberlain, Shakespeare's only character so named, serves the Henrician monarchy's "truth" by serving Henry's religious and monarchic goals as the Jacobean Lord Chamberlain similarly served James I's goals, assuring audiences of the integrity, truth, and legitimacy of the monarchy and its faith. The play shows the Lord Chamberlain working to strengthen the loyalty of Henry's realm to the putatively divinely sanctioned sovereignty flowing through the monarch. He does so to create a legitimate image of the Tudor regime pivotal to the Jacobean monarchy's need for support for its 1613 religious goals and the "troth" inherent in English civil religion.
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Chutong, Wang. "Comparison of Japanese and British Monarchy after World War II." Studies in Social Science Research 2, no. 4 (October 13, 2021): p22. http://dx.doi.org/10.22158/sssr.v2n4p22.

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Both Britain and Japan have made reservations and continuations to the monarchy in the process of historical development, and their political systems are constitutional monarchy. The royal family of both countries has a very long history. With the historical development and social change, the monarch has become a spiritual and cultural symbol. The “sanctification” of the monarch and the strong “plot of the monarch” have been deeply rooted in social culture. From the perspective of historical development and social and cultural influence, although there are similarities between the royals of the two countries, their roles in political, economic and social stability are different from the ways in which they are exerted. Through the comparison between Britain and Japanese monarchy in the above three aspects, this paper analyzes the difference between the two countries monarchy in the size of the role, the way to implement the role and the impact, and finally compares and summarizes the role of the two countries monarchy.
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Floss, Pavel. "K některým filosofickým aspektům Dantova díla." FILOSOFIE DNES 7, no. 2 (August 10, 2016): 3–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.26806/fd.v7i2.214.

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Článek se zaměřuje na některé aspekty Dantova spisu De monarchia, především na povahu Alighieriho realizace ideje celosvětové monarchie, jež je jedinou zárukou trvalého míru, který je představen jako nezbytný předpoklad plné realizace všech duchovních potencí lidského rodu jako takového. Ačkoliv Dantovy názory vykazují ovlivnění dobovým averroismem, opírá se ve filosofické argumentaci pro upřednostnění vlády jediného celosvětového vladaře o scholasticky interpretovanou aristotelskou metafyziku. Autor konfrontuje základní momenty Dantovy politické filosofie s názory Marsilia z Padovy a především s koncepcemi Tomáše Akvinského. Ačkoliv Dante přispěl k posílení autonomie světského a vymanění se panovnické moci z nároků, jež si osobovalo dobové papežství, vytvořilo jeho zbožštění panovnické moci ideové předpoklady pro zbožštění státu a novodobý etatismus. The study focuses on aspects of Dante`s De monarchia — particularly on Alighieri`s conception of realization of the idea of universal monarchy as the only guarantee of permanent peace. This is presented as a necessary precondition for a full realization of all spiritual potentialities of the human kind as such. Although Dante`s views display an influence of contemporary Averroism, his philosophical argumentation in favour of the rule of one universal monarch is based on scholastic interpretations of Aristotelian metaphysics. Key moments of Dante`s philosophy are confronted with the views of Marsilius of Padua and, particularly, with the conceptions of Thomas Aquinas. It is then argued that Dante contributed to strengthening of the autonomy of the secular order and to liberation of monarchic rule from power claims of the contemporary papacy. At the same time, however, his deification of monarchic rule created preconditions for deification of the state and modern etatism.
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Floss, Pavel. "K některým filosofickým aspektům Dantova díla." FILOSOFIE DNES 7, no. 2 (August 10, 2016): 3–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.26806/fd.v7i2.372.

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Článek se zaměřuje na některé aspekty Dantova spisu De monarchia, především na povahu Alighieriho realizace ideje celosvětové monarchie, jež je jedinou zárukou trvalého míru, který je představen jako nezbytný předpoklad plné realizace všech duchovních potencí lidského rodu jako takového. Ačkoliv Dantovy názory vykazují ovlivnění dobovým averroismem, opírá se ve filosofické argumentaci pro upřednostnění vlády jediného celosvětového vladaře o scholasticky interpretovanou aristotelskou metafyziku. Autor konfrontuje základní momenty Dantovy politické filosofie s názory Marsilia z Padovy a především s koncepcemi Tomáše Akvinského. Ačkoliv Dante přispěl k posílení autonomie světského a vymanění se panovnické moci z nároků, jež si osobovalo dobové papežství, vytvořilo jeho zbožštění panovnické moci ideové předpoklady pro zbožštění státu a novodobý etatismus. The study focuses on aspects of Dante`s De monarchia — particularly on Alighieri`s conception of realization of the idea of universal monarchy as the only guarantee of permanent peace. This is presented as a necessary precondition for a full realization of all spiritual potentialities of the human kind as such. Although Dante`s views display an influence of contemporary Averroism, his philosophical argumentation in favour of the rule of one universal monarch is based on scholastic interpretations of Aristotelian metaphysics. Key moments of Dante`s philosophy are confronted with the views of Marsilius of Padua and, particularly, with the conceptions of Thomas Aquinas. It is then argued that Dante contributed to strengthening of the autonomy of the secular order and to liberation of monarchic rule from power claims of the contemporary papacy. At the same time, however, his deification of monarchic rule created preconditions for deification of the state and modern etatism.
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Żmigrodzki, Radosław. "Pozycja monarchy w systemie politycznym Hiszpanii." Facta Simonidis 7, no. 1 (December 31, 2014): 9–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.56583/fs.206.

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Niniejsza analiza została poświęcona problematyce pozycji monarchy w Hiszpanii. Odwołano się do bogatej tradycji monarchizmu w Hiszpanii, przypominając koronowane głowy państwa. Interesujące wydały się także wątki dotyczące struktury administracji zapewniającej prawidłowe funkcjonowanie monarchii. Starano się udowodnić tezę, iż monarcha hiszpański jest arbitrem i moderatorem w systemie władzy politycznej. Tezę tę sformułowano pod wpływem postanowień Konstytucji Hiszpanii, z których wynika że król jest szefem państwa, symbolem jego jedności i trwałości, sprawuje arbitraż i moderuje prawidłowe funkcjonowanie instytucji, spełnia najwyższe funkcje reprezentacyjne państwa hiszpańskiego w stosunkach międzynarodowych szczególnie z narodami związanymi z nim historyczną wspólnotą oraz wykonuje funkcje przyznane mu w konstytucji i ustawach.
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Szulc, Tadeusz. "The position of the sovereign in the provisions of the Constitution of 3 May 1791 against the background of the French Constitution of 3 September 1791 and the Constitutional Charter of 4 June 1814." Gubernaculum et Administratio 1(23) (2021): 137–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.16926/gea.2021.01.09.

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Three different monarchical systems emerge from the Constitution. From constitutional monarchy based on the English model, through monarchy with some features of a republic, to a monarchy with the principle of unity of state power. The acts show that the Polish king was situated between a monarch dominated by the legislature and a sovereign monarch. He was not a figurehead. The introduction into the constitution of the principles of the sovereignty of the nation and the tripartite division of power meant that the organs of the state, and the king was one of them, performed only such activities as were allowed by the constitution. This is what the May and French Constitutions of 1791 stated. The Constitutional Charter of 1814 returned to the principle of unity of power. The monarch exercised not only the powers enumerated in the Charter, but also those not reserved to other bodies. The provisions of the Charter proved attractive to monarchies seeking a transition from enlightened absolutism to a constitutional parliamentary monarchy.
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Dorji, Nima. "The Progressive Monarchy of Bhutan: A Not-So-Absolute Monarchy to a Democratic Constitutional Monarchy." Asian Journal of Law and Society 9, no. 3 (October 2022): 440–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/als.2022.34.

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AbstractThis article provides a descriptive account of the evolution of the Bhutanese monarchy, and normative claims about its endurance and its nature, suggesting that the monarchy is both the expression of as well as the guardian of the country’s constitutional identity. Bhutan became a democratic constitutional monarchy by adopting the written Constitution in 2008 after a successful 100 years of hereditary monarchy. The willingness of successive monarchs to evolve based on changing times, their ability to ensure stability and continuity, and work for the benefits of the people and country guided by the principles of Buddhist kingship seem to have contributed not only in them benefitting from unqualified support of the people, but also in attaining the status of an expression of Bhutanese constitutional identity.
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RUSSELL-WOOD, A. J. R. "‘Acts of Grace’: Portuguese Monarchs and their Subjects of African Descent in Eighteenth-Century Brazil." Journal of Latin American Studies 32, no. 2 (May 2000): 307–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022216x00005757.

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This article examines direct appeals to Portuguese monarchs and how this extrajudicial option was invoked by slaves and free persons of African descent in colonial Brazil. It also addresses the production and content of appeals and what these reflect of the lives of Afro-Brazilians, relations between slave and owner, manumissions, judicial and individual abuse of women and popular perceptions and expectations of a monarch. The pros and cons of this appellate recourse are discussed in the context of colonial governance and of how royal acts of private justice reinforced the moral authority of monarchs, the sacred quality of monarchy and those personal qualities of magnanimity and compassion associated with the ideal of kingship.
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Kyriacou, Christos. "Why Monarchy Should Be Abolished." Think 22, no. 65 (2023): 39–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1477175623000210.

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AbstractMonarchy is a form of government that, roughly, dictates that the right to rule is inherited by birth by a single ruler. But monarchy (absolute or constitutional) breaches fundamental moral principles that undergird representative democracy, such as basic moral equality, dignity and desert. Simply put, the monarchs (and their family) are treated as morally superior to ordinary citizens and as a result ordinary citizens are treated in an unfair and undignified manner. For example, monarchs are respected, enjoy dignity, income, opportunity, public office and exalted social status just because of their inherited office, which is due to the mere historical accident of family lineage. Hence, we have good moral reason to abolish monarchy. Finally, I briefly reply to the pragmatic argument for constitutional monarchy, namely, the argument that monarchy can be allowed to play a largely ceremonial role in the context of democracy because it is beneficial for the function of society. As I argue, societies run by presidential democracies can function equally well and, what is more, no matter what the pragmatic reasons for constitutional monarchy are, we still have stronger moral reasons against it. Therefore, it should be abolished.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Monarchy"

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May, Simon. "Marlowe and monarchy." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2015. https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:84716f56-e527-4a6b-820c-d2204c87cfe2.

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Focusing on the works of Christopher Marlowe (1564-93), this thesis explores the complex engagement of popular drama with the political and religious writing of the Elizabethan fin de siècle. It focuses on the five plays by Marlowe that feature royal protagonists: 1-2 Tamburlaine (1587), Dido, Queen of Carthage (1588), Edward II (1592), and The Massacre at Paris (1593). By interpreting each play in its immediate political context, it shows that Marlowe did not deal with monarchy in the abstract but responded to current affairs - from the incursions of the Ottoman Empire to the threat of the Spanish Armada, from the conspiracy claims of Catholic polemic to the debate surrounding England's involvement in continental warfare. The introduction situates the thesis in the critical and historiographical context relating to Marlowe and to the relationship between literature and politics in the early modern period; it provides the justification for reading Marlowe's plays as topical statements. Chapter One looks at 1-2 Tamburlaine in the light of contemporary attitudes to the Ottoman-Safavid War. Chapter Two shows that Dido, Queen of Carthage adapted the stories and tropes of polemic to reflect fears of Catholic conspiracy and Spanish invasion. Chapter Three reads Edward II as a creative response to the print war of 1591-2, which centred on the moral character of the queen's closest counsellors. Chapter Four proposes that Marlowe's final play, The Massacre at Paris, employed arguments drawn from Reason of State to influence decisions at the 1593 Parliament. The thesis concludes by suggesting that despite Marlowe's reputation as a radical overreacher, his drama displays considerable sympathy for the monarchs who must rule precariously and without the option of private happiness.
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Wright, Ann. "The role of the monarchy in Thailand and Cambodia since 1945." Thesis, [Hong Kong] : University of Hong Kong, 1993. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record.jsp?B13478783.

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Hayman, Mark. "The Labour Party and the monarchy." Thesis, University of Warwick, 1999. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/34760/.

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This work examines periods and episodes which illustrate the Labour Party's developing attitudes towards the monarchy. Chapter One traces the historical background in the nineteenth century, identifying those aspects of radicalism, republicanism and a changing monarchy which had a subsequent bearing on Labour views. It finds that the lack of a serious challenge to the monarchy resulted from its increasing popular acceptance, the prevalence of anti-monarchic sentiment over republicanism, and the indifference of social democracy to strictly political reform. Chapter Two finds the monarchy increasingly accepted by Labour during the Great War, and includes sections on republicanism during the war, patriotism, anti-Germanism, royal visits, civil liberties, and the Crown and royal philanthropy. Chapter Three concentrates on the early 1930's, and examines Labour's concerns about the powers of the Crown in the aftermath of 1931. The ideas of Laski and Cripps receive particular attention, as does the paradox of the left's fear of the use of the Crown's powers to frustrate them, whilst recognising the necessity of its use to realise their Jacobin plans. The next two chapters incorporate discourse analysis techniques. Chapter Four takes an extended look at the 1935 Silver Jubilee and 1937 Coronation celebrations, and analyses the range of Labour responses to the events, at local as well as national level. The chapter includes a section of textual analysis, contrasting Labour's Daily Herald with its popular rivals in their coverage of the two celebrations. The contrastive analysis points up the centrality of Labour's constitutionalism to its approach to the monarchy. Chapter Five deals with the Abdication crisis, again analysing the spread of Labour opinion, contrasting those ready to exploit the political opportunity with the constitutionalists. Chapter Six looks at the Honours System, and at the development of Labour's attitudes and conduct in the matter. It finds Labour drawn into the system it inherited and examines the justifications offered.
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Price, Munro. "Lafayette, the Lameths and 'republican monarchy'." Virginia University Press, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/10454/17578.

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Hunt, Alice. "The Drama of coronation : medieval ceremony in early modern England /." Cambridge : Cambridge Univ. Press, 2008. http://opac.nebis.ch/cgi-bin/showAbstract.pl?u20=9780521885393.

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McLean, Roderick Reid. "Monarchy and diplomacy in Europe, 1900-1910." Thesis, University of Sussex, 1996. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.296526.

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Sugden, Rebecca Ann. "Conspiracy in Balzac and Sand's July Monarchy fiction." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2019. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/289912.

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This thesis explores the representation of conspiracy in the literature of the July Monarchy (1830-1848) and its engagement with conspiracy thinking, with particular reference to the work of Honoré de Balzac (1799-1850) and George Sand (1804-1876). In providing the first sustained scholarly exploration of conspiracy and cultural production in nineteenth-century France, it situates the novel within wider discourses on European political history in the years leading up to the upheaval of 1848. Through close readings of Balzac and Sand's common investment in conspiracist modes of explanation, this study makes the case for a new generic category, the novel of conspiracy, around which literary poetics, historical imagination and political fantasy come to coalesce. Chapter one proposes a re-evaluation of the dialectic between models of surface and depth reading in Balzac's Une ténébreuse affaire (1841), arguing that the conspiratorial landscape of this proto-detective novel belies Balzac's fraught relationship to the severed referentiality of his narrative. As illustration of a Balzacian poetics of conspiracy, Une ténébreuse affaire, it is suggested, points forward in literary history towards the Flaubertian aesthetic of platitude. Chapter two looks to the political criticisms Jacques Rancière makes of Sand's patrician benevolence to inform its reading of Le Compagnon du Tour de France (1840), which depicts workers' secret societies and the underground networks of Restoration liberalism. Accusations of misguided idealism, this thesis shows, align Rancière's critique and the literary-critical narrative informing Sand's twentieth-century aesthetic devaluation with the reproach that she herself levels at the Carbonarist conspirators of her novel. Chapter three, finally, turns to the alternative origin myth of 1789 that Sand elaborates in Consuelo-La Comtesse de Rudolstadt (1842-44). Her engagement with the founding text of the conspiracist tradition of explanation, it argues, provides the cornerstone for the interrogation of the tensions of a pre-Revolutionary Europe torn between Enlightenment and Illuminism. Framing the Balzacian and Sandian novel as emblematic of a wider discourse on the conspiratorial origins of 1789 has a two-fold advantage. On an immediate level, it nuances received critical ideas on these authors' relationships to history and literary genre (a realist Balzac incapable of looking back further than the Restoration whose demise he so lamented; an idealist Sand too caught up in a utopian future to envisage the historical past). In doing so, this study seeks to problematize the narrative of oppositionality behind the Balzac-Sand binary in terms of which the literary history of nineteenth-century France is habitually couched. Yet, more significantly, it also gestures towards the importance of the conspiratorial as a prism through which to approach the porosity of the very categories of 'literature' and 'history' in the nineteenth-century French context.
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Williams, Peter Richard. "Public discussion of the British monarchy, 1837-87." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 1989. https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/272194.

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Klint, Lola. "The Greenlandic Paradox - Greenlandic autonomy under Danish monarchy." Thesis, Malmö universitet, Fakulteten för kultur och samhälle (KS), 2020. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-23447.

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While the general attitude towards Danish influence in Greenland is negative, the generalattitude towards the Danish royal family is positive. This thesis seeks to uncover theparadoxical Greenlandic discourses by tracing the emergence and development ofroyalism in Greenland from the early colonial period until today. The underlyingmethodological framework is constructivism, while the method is Discourse HistoricalAnalysis. The analysis is conducted by chronologically comparing and analyzing theGreenlandic discourse about the monarchy in relation to the discourse of the monarchfamily concerning Greenland. By drawing on the theories of 'Arctic-orientalism' andPratts' theory of 'contact zones,' this study highlights how variations occur in the colonialrelation of Denmark and Greenland. Despite the legacy of Danish colonialism, thechanges in the Monarch family's discourse towards the Greenlandic people havestrengthened a Greenlandic discourse of kinship to Denmark.
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Farguson, Julie Anne. "Art, ceremony and the British monarchy, 1689-1714." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2014. http://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:e63509b1-425c-4308-bfc7-d991d46aa693.

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This thesis investigates the ceremonial and artistic strategies of the British monarchy in the years following the Glorious Revolution. By adopting a range of methodologies used in the study of visual culture, the thesis considers royal ceremonies as channels for conveying political messages non-verbally. These could affect attitudes to the monarchy, and inform artistic output. By paying particular attention to the way royal participants performed ceremonially in relation to the various formal and informal architectural settings for the court, the thesis highlights the process of seeing as a communicative act. Being alert to the impact of royal ceremonial and artistic activities on contemporary audiences, the thesis also considers the dissemination of royal imagery in England by commercial means. The thesis surveys paintings, prints and medals produced in England, and places the intended audiences at the centre of the analysis. It also pays keen attention to the impact of war on royal image making, and highlights the political context of continental Europe, especially in relation to William’s role as Stadholder-King but also the exiled Stuart court at St Germain near Paris. The evidence presented here supports a number of conclusions. Firstly, war had a profound impact on all aspects of royal image making. Secondly, royal behaviour and involvement in ceremony were vital elements in the visual presentation of monarchy. Kings and queens were of paramount importance, but their consorts were highly significant. Art was also taken seriously by the monarchy and the Crown tightened controls on royal image making during the period in question. The thesis also concludes that the nationalities of the incumbent monarchs and their consorts, along with their previous experiences and personalities, influenced their individual approach to visual representation. These approaches could shift depending on political circumstances and the personal inclinations of the person concerned.
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Books on the topic "Monarchy"

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Chippindale, Peter. British Monarchy plc. London: Bath Street, 1988.

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Sean, Connolly. Monarchy. Mankato, Minn: Smart Apple Media, 2013.

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Michael, Rawcliffe John, ed. Monarchy. London: Evans, 2009.

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Stefoff, Rebecca. Monarchy. New York: Marshall Cavendish Benchmark, 2008.

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Starkey, David. Monarchy. Glasgow: HarperCollins, 2008.

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Richard, Tames. Monarchy. Chicago: Heinemann Library, 2008.

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Riches, Christopher. Monarchy. London: Franklin Watts, 2008.

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Alighieri, Dante. Monarchy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996.

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von Friedeburg, Robert, and John Morrill, eds. Monarchy Transformed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781108225083.

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Farthing, Stephen. Absolute monarchy. London: Anne Berthoud, 1996.

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Book chapters on the topic "Monarchy"

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Forman, F. N. "The Monarchy." In Mastering British politics, 123–34. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1991. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-11203-6_9.

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Cook, Chris, and John Stevenson. "The Monarchy." In British Historical Facts, 1688–1760, 1–10. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-02369-1_1.

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Forman, F. N., and N. D. J. Baldwin. "The Monarchy." In Mastering British Politics, 201–8. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-02159-5_9.

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Forman, F. N., and N. D. J. Baldwin. "The Monarchy." In Mastering British Politics, 211–34. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-15045-8_9.

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Forman, F. N., and N. D. J. Baldwin. "The Monarchy." In Mastering British Politics, 171–89. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-13493-9_9.

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Jupp, Peter. "The Monarchy." In British Politics on the Eve of Reform, 9–37. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-26819-1_2.

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Redwood, John. "The Monarchy." In The Death of Britain?, 51–66. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780333982778_4.

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Kennedy, Gavin. "Constitutional Monarchy." In Adam Smith's Lost Legacy, 78–80. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230511194_16.

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Jones, Bill. "The monarchy." In British politics, 189–98. Second edition. | Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2021. | Series: The basics: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429199509-16.

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Forman, F. N. "The Monarchy." In Mastering British Politics, 125–39. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-17778-3_9.

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Conference papers on the topic "Monarchy"

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Burman, Ritambhar, Swagatam Das, Zeeshanul Haque, Athanasios V. Vasilakos, and Soumyadeep Chakrabarti. "The Monarchy Driven Optimization technique." In 2014 IEEE Congress on Evolutionary Computation (CEC). IEEE, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cec.2014.6900510.

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Brajović, Danilo. "Legal Theory and Political Pragmatism by Legal Transfers – The Case of South-Slavic Collective Property." In Mezinárodní konference doktorských studentů oboru právní historie a římského práva. Brno: Masaryk University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/cz.muni.p280-0156-2022-6.

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This article focuses on the conflictual relationship between theoretical and practical influences and factors affecting the legislative activity of the Habsburg Monarchy. It is to give a wide overview of the situation, using the example of South-Slavic collective property (“Zadruga”). The goal of the paper is to encourage a debate about the dichotomy theory/practice in this period and to increase the interest for the subject of South-Slavic collective property in the Monarchy.
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Panov, Vladimir Nikolaevich. "Russia in the beginning of the XX century: from the absolute monarchy to bourgeois parliamentary monarchy." In IV International Scientific and Practical Conference. TSNS Interaktiv Plus, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.21661/r-118539.

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Gravity. "Disintegration by monarchy ft. Dita von Teese." In ACM SIGGRAPH 2013 Computer Animation Festival. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2503541.2503563.

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Hashemi, Seyed Mahmood. "Secure Routing of WBAN with Monarchy Butterfly Optimization." In the 2017 2nd International Conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3158233.3159325.

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Čeč, Dragica. "Complex legal and political use of right of domicile in the late Habsburg Monarchy." In Decade of decadence: 1914–1924 spaces, societies and belongings in the Adriatic borderland in historical comparison. Znanstveno-raziskovalno središče Koper, Annales ZRS, Slovenija, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.35469/978-961-7195-46-0_01.

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Modern citizenship embodies a triad of dimensions: a legal status granting rights, a principle underpinning democratic self-governance, and a conception of collective identity and membership [Joppke 2010]. This nuancedconcept of citizenship was partially introduced to the successor states following the dissolution of the Habsburg Monarchy. In the 19th century, the right of domicile (Heimatrecht) exhibited certain characteristics akin to modern citizenship but also served as a “technology” [Cruikshank 1999] for the practical management of mobility, encompassing both impoverished individuals and migrant workers. Political debates and policies regarding mobile populations during this period were pulled in two conflicting directions. On one side, there was a drive to control and secure the movement of these “dangerous” population groups. On the other, there was a need to meet labor demands, which necessitated greater freedoms [cf. Foucault 2007]. Immigrant men and women, particularly those experiencing temporary unemployment, improper behavior, incapacity to work, poverty, chronic illness, or those seeking access to local, municipal, and provincial politics, faced discrimination based on the right of domicile. They were often subjected to close scrutiny by municipal authorities and native-born residents. A change of residence within the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy could lead to an individual’s perception of themselves, and by others, as foreigners, regardless of the high mobility and multicultural nature of urban centers such as Vienna and Trieste. Nevertheless, the concept of “foreignness” is a variable construct, changing according to political, economic, and social circumstances and networks. Following the dissolution of the Habsburg Monarchy, the exclusionary tools of pertinency automatically granted citizenship to certain individuals, irrespective of their workplace or long absence from their domicile municipality. However, this right of pertinence also caused significant social trauma across post-Habsburg Europe, leaving many at risk of statelessness (Kirch-ner-Reill et al.). Despite the extensive and varied application of the right of domicile in different social contexts within the late 19th-century Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, some recent historical analyses reduce its meaning to a mere “legal mechanism that communities used to avoid the costs and presence of persons considered socially undesirable.”
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Gravity. "Making of Disintegration by Monarchy ft. Diva von Teese." In ACM SIGGRAPH 2013 Computer Animation Festival. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2503541.2503593.

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Závodský, Prokop. "Karl Czoernig and the State Statistics of the Habsburg Monarchy." In Applications of Mathematics and Statistics in Economics. International Scientific Conference: Szklarska Poręba, 30 August- 3 September 2017. Publishing House of Wroclaw University of Economics, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.15611/amse.2017.20.40.

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Salamova, Renata. "The Role of Leader in Monarchy Evolution: Morocco Under King Mohammed VI." In 2021 International Conference on Social Science:Public Administration, Law and International Relations (SSPALIR 2021). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/assehr.k.210916.001.

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Stevin, Iva. "Political and Legal Views of Dante Alighieri According to the Treatise «Monarchy»." In XIV Итоговая студенческая научная конференция. Санкт-Петербург: Санкт-Петербургский институт (филиал) ВГУЮ (РПА Минюста России), 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.47645/9785604755112_56.

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Reports on the topic "Monarchy"

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Manning, Joseph P. Threats To The Saudi Arabian Monarchy. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, April 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada342525.

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Barrett, Roby C. Saudi Arabia: Modernity, Stability, and the Twenty-First Century Monarchy. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, June 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada620023.

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Chachavalpongpun, Pavin. “Above Politics”?: Rolling Back into Absolutely Monarchy in Thailand with King Vajiralongkorn. Critical Asian Studies, March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.52698/ktpd1440.

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Valhondo Crego, José Luis. Monarchy, jesters, politicians and audiences Comparison of TV satire in UK and Spain. Revista Latina de Comunicación Social (RLCS), March 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.4185/rlcs-66-2011-932-252-273-en.

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Ramos Fernández, Fernando. The monarchy, a journalistic taboo in Spain. The royal crisis and the circumstantial crisis. Revista Latina de Comunicación Social, March 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4185/rlcs-2013-975en.

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Monsalvo Antón, José María. The Monarchy and Rural Communities in Castile: Political Communication between Royal Powers and Non-Privileged Groups in Avila’s Council (1475-1500). Edicions de la Universitat de Lleida, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.21001/itma.2023.16.07.

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Larkin, Jeffery L., D. J. ,. Jr McNeil, Emma Keele, Jeffery T. Larkin, Michael Akresh, and David King. Assessing eastern whip-poor-will and monarch butterfly responses to NRCS conservation programs targeting early-successional habitats in the eastern forests. Washington, D.C: Natural Resources Conservation Service, January 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.32747/2022.8135353.nrcs.

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Throughout the eastern deciduous forests of North America, a lack of disturbance coupled with advancing ecological succession in many regions has led to forests dominated by even-aged sawtimber with very little in the early successional stage. Monitoring of response of these target species to early successional communities created through Working Lands for Wildlife and Regional Conservation Partnership Programs have been completed. ARU-based regional monitoring protocol was used to assess whip-poor-will occupancy across various landscapes contexts, silvicultural treatments, and forest types in the Appalachian Mountain and New England regions. Researchers conducted milkweed, monarch egg, and larvae surveys simultaneously with the pollinator surveys. Preliminary results support that increasing milkweed and nectar-rich plants within alder and upland early successional communities will provide valuable resources for the monarchs and other pollinators in the northern Great Lakes.--
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Royo Pérez, Vicent. Power, monarchy and nobility on the frontiers of the crown of Aragon. The dispute between James I and Blasco de Alagón for the town of Morella (1231-1239). Edicions de la Universitat de Lleida, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21001/itma.2021.15.10.

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Reppert, Steven M. Navigational Strategies of Migrating Monarch Butterflies. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, November 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada614266.

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Rostow, Eugene V. President, Prime Minister, or Constitutional Monarch? Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, October 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada271342.

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