Resultado de búsqueda
An elective monarchy is a monarchy ruled by a monarch who is elected, in contrast to a hereditary monarchy in which the office is automatically passed down as a family inheritance. The manner of election, the nature of candidate qualifications, and the electors vary from case to case.
Elective monarchy. The name for a government in which one cannot become king except by election; this doubtless is a very legitimate way of acquiring sovereignty, since it is based upon the consent and free choice of the people.
- Louis, chevalier de Jaucourt ( biography)
- Elective monarchy
- Monarchie élective
- Vol. 10 (1765), p. 637
7 de dic. de 2017 · This book examines the transformation of elective monarchy in Transylvania and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in the 1570s. It does so by focusing on the foundational and experimental character of the first elections of 1571 (Transylvania) and 1573 and 1575–6 (Poland-Lithuania).
30 de abr. de 2023 · A monarchy in which the king or queen is chosen from several candidates is known as an elective monarchy. Calling a system an elective monarchy does not imply that the monarch is elected popularly by all the people of the country; this is possible, but very rare.
1 de oct. de 2019 · For an American monarchist like Sean, his preferred system of government “is some manner of elective monarchy modeled to a degree after what you saw in the Holy Roman Empire”, he told me. “The...
7 de dic. de 2017 · Felicia Roșu. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198789376.003.0002. Pages. 19–53. Published: December 2017. Split View. Annotate. Cite. Permissions. Share. Abstract. Chapter 1 introduces the Transylvanian and Polish-Lithuanian stories chronologically.
Kingship, Elective Monarchy and Masculinity in Poland-Lithuania, 1574–1733. The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth included territories found in modern Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Belarus, Ukraine and Russia, but this vast state remains a marginal presence in even the most ambitious recent histories of early modern Europe.