Dictionary Definition
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- reigning; currently
holding power in government
- 1910, A. M. Fairbairn, Studies in Religion and Theology,
page 99
- The people are now the State, their will is the regnant will, and that will has this characteristic — it loves principles, it hates compromises; and the principles it loves must be regulative, fit to be applied to the work and guidance of life.
- 1910, A. M. Fairbairn, Studies in Religion and Theology,
page 99
- dominant; holding more power or influence than others
Extensive Definition
A monarch is the person who heads a monarchy, a form of
government in which the country or entity usually ruled or
controlled by an individual who usually rules for life or until
abdication. Monarchs
may be autocrats
(absolute
monarchy) or may be ceremonial
heads
of state who exercise little or no power or only reserve
power, with actually authority vested in a parliament or other body
(constitutional
monarchy). Most states only have a single monarch at any given
time, although a regent
may rule when the monarch is a minor, not
present or debilitated. Two monarchs have ruled simultaneously in
some countries, as in the ancient Greek
city-state of Sparta or the joint
sovereignty of spouses or relatives (eg. William
and Mary
of Kingdom
of England and Scotland,
Peter
and Ivan
of Russia,
Charles and Joanna
of Castile,
etc).
Monarchs have various title - king or queen, prince or princess (eg.
Sovereign Prince of Monaco), emperor or empress (eg. Emperor of
Japan, Emperor of
India), or even duke or
grand
duke (eg. Grand
Duke of Luxembourg). Many monarchs are distinguished by
titles and
styles. They often take part in certain ceremonies, such as a
coronation.
Monarchy are associated with political or
sociocultural in nature hereditary
rule; most monarchs, both historically and in the modern day,
have been born and brought up within a royal family
(over a period of time called a dynasty) and trained for future
duties. Different systems of succession
have been used, such as proximity
of blood, primogeniture, and
agnatic
seniority (Salic law).
While traditionally most monarch have been male, female monarchs
have also ruled in history; the term queen
regnant refers to a ruling monarch, while a queen
consort refers to the wife of a reigning king.
Some monarchies are non-hereditary. In an
elective
monarchy, the monarch is elected but
otherwise serves as any other monarch. Historical examples of
elective monarchy include the Holy
Roman Emperors (chosen by prince-electors
but often coming from the same dynasty) and the free
election of kings of the
Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth. Modern examples include the
Yang
di-Pertuan Agong of Malaysia and the
pope of the Roman
Catholic Church, who serves as Sovereign of the
Vatican
City State and is elected to a life term by the College
of Cardinals.
Monarchies have existed throughout the world,
although in recent centuries many states have abolished the
monarchy and becomes republics. Advocacy of
republics is called republicanism, while
advocacy of monarchies is called monarchism. The principal
advantage of hereditary monarchy is the immediate continuity of
leadership, with a usually short interregnum (as seen in the
classic phrase "The
King is dead. Long live the King!").
Form of governments may be hereditary without
being considered monarchies, such as that of family
dictatorships or political
families are present in many democracies.
Etymology
The word monarch (lang-la monarcha) comes from the Greek μόναρχος (from μόνος, "one"/"singular," and ἀρχός, "leader"/"guide"/"chief") which referred to a single, at least nominally absolute ruler. With time, the word has been succeeded in this meaning by others, such as autocrat or dictator. In modern usage the word monarch is generally used when referring to a traditional system of hereditary rulership, with elective monarchies often considered as exceptions.Classification
A particular case is the French co-prince of Andorra, a position held by the elected President of France. Nonetheless, he is still generally considered a monarch because of the traditional use of a monarchical title (even though Andorra is, strictly speaking, a diarchy.) Similarly, the Yang di-Pertuan Agong of Malaysia is considered a monarch despite only holding the office for five years at a time. On the other hand, several life-time dictators around the world have not been formally classified as monarchs, but that may be more to do with international political sensitivities than with semantics.Succession
Hereditary succession within one family has been most common. The usual hereditary succession is based on some cognatic principles and on seniority, though sometimes merit has played a part. Thus, the most common hereditary system in feudal Europe was based on cognatic primogeniture, where a lord was succeeded by his eldest son, and failing sons, by either daughters or by sons of daughters. The system of tanistry was semi-elective and gave weight also to merits and capability. The Quasi-Salic succession provided firstly for male members of the family to succeed, and secondarily males descended from female lines. In most feudal fiefs, females (such as daughters and sisters) were allowed to succeed, should the male line fail, but usually the husband of the heiress became the real lord and most often also received the title, jure uxoris. Great Britain and Spain today continue this model of succession law, in the form of cognatic primogeniture. In more complex medieval cases, the sometimes conflicting principles of proximity and primogeniture battled, and outcomes were often idiosyncratic.As the average life span among the nobility
increased (thanks to lords limiting their personal participation in
dangerous battles, and generally improved sustenance and living
conditions among the wealthy), an eldest son was more likely to
reach majority age before the death of his father, and
primogeniture became increasingly favoured over proximity,
tanistry, seniority and election.
Later, when lands were strictly divided among
noble families and tended to remain fixed, agnatic primogeniture
(practically the same as Salic Law)
became more usual: the succession would go to the eldest son of the
monarch, or, if the monarch had no sons, the throne would pass to
the nearest male relative through the male line, to the total
exclusion of females.
In some countries however, inheritance through
the female line was never wholly abandoned, so that if the monarch
had no sons, the throne would pass to the eldest daughter and to
her posterity. (This, cognatic primogeniture, was the rule that let
Elizabeth II become Queen.)
In 1980, Sweden became the
first monarchy to declare equal primogeniture or full cognatic
primogeniture, meaning that the eldest child of the monarch,
whether female or male, ascends to the throne. Other kingdoms (the
Netherlands in
1983, Norway
in 1990, and Belgium in 1991)
have since followed suit.
In some monarchies, such as Saudi
Arabia, succession to the throne usually first passes to the
monarch's next eldest brother, and only after that to the monarch's
children (agnatic seniority). In some other monarchies (e.g.
Jordan), the
monarch chooses who will be his successor, who need not necessarily
be his eldest son.
A series of Pharaohs ruled
Ancient
Egypt over the course of three millennia (circa 3150 BC to 31
BC) until it was conquered by the Roman
Empire. In the same time period, several kingdoms flourished in
the nearby Nubia region.
Central
Africa hosted the Kanem Empire (700 - 1376).
In East Africa,
the Aksumite
Empire and later the Ethiopian
Empire (1270-1974) were ruled by a series of monarchs. Haile
Selassie, the last Emperor of Ethiopia, was deposed in a
communist coup.
Southern
Africa was isolated from other cultures until the modern era,
but did later feature kingdoms like the Kingdom of
Kongo (1400 – 1914).
As part of the Scramble
for Africa, Europeans conquered, bought, or established African
kingdoms and styled themselves as a monarch.
Prince was a common title within the Holy
Roman Empire, along with a number of higher titles listed
below. Such titles were granted by the Emperor, while the
titulation of rulers of sovereign states was generally left to
their own discretion, most often choosing King or Queen. Such
titulations could cause diplomatic problems, and
especially the elevation to Emperor or Empress was seen as
an offensive action. During the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
most small monarchies in Europe disappeared, merging to form larger
entities, and so King the most common title for male rulers and
Queen has become the most common title today for female
rulers.
Today in Europe, there are
seven kingdoms, one
grand
duchy, one duchy , one
papacy, and three
principalities
(Liechtenstein,
Wales and
Monaco),
excluding the peculiar case of Andorra and one
"Lord
of Mann" — the title for the monarch of Isle of
Man.
Monarchs in Asia
In China, "king" is the usual translation for the
term wang 王, the sovereign before the Qin dynasty
and during the Ten Kingdoms
period. During the early Han dynasty,
China had a number of small kingdoms, each about the size of a
county and subordinate to
the Empress or Emperor of China.
The Japanese
monarchy is now the only monarchy to still use the title of
Emperor.
Monarchs in the Americas
The concept of monarchy existed in the Americas long before the arrival of European colonialists. When the Europeans arrived they referred to these tracts of land within territories of different aboriginal groups to be kingdoms, and the leaders of these groups were often referred to by the Europeans as Kings, particularly hereditary leaders. Many of the leaders were queens, but this was not understood by the Europeans, who had no knowledge of the indigenous history or languages, much less an understanding of matrilinealityPre-colonial titles that were used included:
- Cacique - Aboriginal Hispaniola and Borinquen
- Tlatoani - Nahuas
- Ajaw - Maya
- Qhapaq Inka - Tawuantin Suyu (Inca Empire)
- Morubixaba - Tupi tribes
- Sha-quan- King of the world used in some America Indian tribes
The first local monarch to emerge in North
America after colonization was Augustin
I, who declared himself Emperor of
Mexico in 1822. Mexico again had an emperor, Maximilian
I from 1863 to 1867. In South America, Brazil had a European
royal house ruling as emperor between 1822 and 1889, under Emperors
Pedro
I and Pedro
II.
These American emperors were deposed due to
complex issues, including pressure from the highly republican United
States, which had declared itself independent of the British
monarch in 1776. The British, worried about U.S. colonial
expansion, invasion following the American
Civil War, and the fact that the U.S. had aided the Mexican
republican rebels in overthrowing Maximilian I, pushed for the
union of the Canadian provinces into a country in 1867. With
Confederation,
Canada became a self-governing nation which was considered a
kingdom in its own right, though it remained subordinate to the
United
Kingdom; thus,
Victoria was monarch of Canada, but not sovereign of it. It was
not until the passing of the
Statute of Westminster that Canada was considered to be under a
distinct Canadian Crown, separate to that the British, and not
until 1953 that the Canadian monarch, at the time
Elizabeth II, was
titled by Canadian law as Queen of Canada.
Between 1931 and 1983 nine other previous British
colonies attained independence as kingdoms, all, including Canada,
in a personal
union relationship under a shared monarch. Therefore, though
today there are legally ten American monarchs, one person occupies
each distinct position.
Titles
The normal monarch title in Europe — i.e., the one used if the monarch has no higher title — is prince or princess, by convention. As an absolute ruler, a monarch can choose a title. However, titles are usually defined by tradition and diplomatic considerations.Note that some of these titles have several
meanings and do not necessarily designate a monarch. A Prince may be a
person of royal blood (some languages uphold this distinction, see
Fürst).
A Duke may be
a British
peer. In
Imperial
Russia, a Grand Duke was
a son or grandson of the Tsar or Tsarina.
Holders of titles in these alternative meanings did not enjoy the
same status as the monarchs of the same title.
Within the Holy
Roman Empire, there were even more titles that were used
occasionally for monarchs although they were normally noble;
Margrave,
Count
Palatine, and Landgrave. A
monarch with such a low title still was regarded as more important
than a noble Duke.
The pope is the Bishop of Rome (a celibate office
always forbidden to women), in English however, reports of female
popes such as (Pope Joan)
refer to them as pope and Popess is used,
among other things, for the second trump in the Tarot
deck; some European languages also have a feminine form of the word
pope, such as the Italian papessa, the French papesse, and
the German Päpstin''
Titles by region
When a difference exists below, male titles are placed to the left and female titles are placed to the right of the slash.- Africa
- Chieftain - Leader of a people
- Negus - Ethiopia
- Tutsi Mwami - Kings of Rwanda and Burundi
- Oba - Yoruba people of Nigeria
- Eze - Igbo people of Nigeria
- Kabaka - Baganda people of Buganda in Uganda
- Almamy - Fulani people of west Africa
- Omukama - Bunyoro, title of some kings in Uganda
- Asantehene - Ashanti, title of the King of the Ashanti People in Ghana
- Asia
- Arasan/Arasi - Tamil Nadu(India), Sri Lanka
- Veyndhan, ko/Arasi - Tamil Nadu(India)
- Druk Gyalpo — hereditary title given to the king of Bhutan
- Chakrawarti Raja - India Sri Lanka
- Chogyal — "Divine Ruler" — ruled Sikkim until 1975
- Engku or Ungku - Malaysia, to denote particular family lineage akin to royalty
- Qaghan - Central Asian Tribes
- Hwangje - States that unified Korea
- Wang - States of Korea that do not have control over all of Korea
- Huángdì - Imperial China (Emperor)
- Susuhanan - the Indonesian princely state of Surakarta until its abolition
- Sultan - Aceh, Brunei Darussalam, Java, Oman, Malaysia, Sultan is the title of seven (Johor, Kedah, Kelantan, Pahang, Perak, Selangor, and Terengganu) of the nine rulers of the Malay states
- Maha Raja - India Sri Lanka
- Meurah - Aceh before Islam
- Yang di-Pertuan Agong - Monarch of Malaysia, elected each five years among the reigning Sultan of each Malaysian state
- Sumeramikoto, Okimi - Japan, king
- Tennō or Mikado - Japan
- Shogun - Japanese military dictator, always a Samurai
- Saopha - Shan, king of Shan, today as a part of Myanmar
- Shahinshah or Padshah or Badshah or simply Shah - Emperor of Iran or Hindustan(India)
- Syed or Shariffah - Malaysia, descendants of the Islamic prophet Muhammad; Syed/Sharifah in Perlis if suffixed by the royal clan name, is roughly equivalent to Prince or Princess
-
Wang (King) - pre-Imperial China
- In China, "king" is the usual translation for the term wang 王.
- Emperor of China
- Patabenda - Sub- king Sri lanka
- Preah Karuna Preah Bat Sâmdech Preah Bâromneath - King of Cambodia Khmer , the title literally means "The feet of the Greatest Lord who is on the heads (of his subjects)" (This royal title doesn't refer directly to the king himself but to his feet, according to traditions.)
- Phrabat Somdej Phrachaoyuhua - King of Thailand (Siam), the title literally means "The feet of the Greatest Lord who is on the heads (of his subjects)" (This royal title doesn't refer directly to the king himself but to his feet, according to traditions.)
- Racha - Thailand same meaning as Raja
- Datu - pre-colonial Philippines
- Raja - pre-colonial Philippines
- Raja - Malaysia, Raja denotes royalty in Perak and certain Selangor royal family lineages, is roughly equivalent to Prince or Princess
- Tengku - Malaysia, Tengku (also spelled Tunku in Johor, Negeri Sembilan and Kedah is roughly equivalent to Prince or Princess
- Raja - Nepal King
- Rani - Nepali Queen
- Hari - Filipino title for king
- Europe
- Giray - Crimean King
- Arqa/Thagavor - Armenian King
- Germanic king
- Basileus - Greek King
- Despot - Serbia (originating from Byzantium)
- Vezér - Ancient Hungarian
- Fejedelem - Ancient/Medieval Hungarian
- Imperator Tsar / Czar Autocrat - The Ruler of Imperial Russia
- Vojvoda (Serbian)/Vajda (Hungarian) - Serbian/Hungarian/Romany Title
- Domn (in Romanian) /Gospodar (in Old Slavonian) - Medieval Romania (Moldova, Wallachia)
- Rí, Rúirí, Rí Rúireach and Ard Rí - King, local overking, regional King, and High King in pre-Norman Ireland
- Kniaz'/Knyaginya/Knez/Knjeginja (generally translated as "prince") - Kievan Rus'/Serbia
- Kralj- Croatia, Serbia
- Kaiser - Imperial Germany
- Tsar/Tsaritsa - Bulgaria, pre-imperial Russia, Serbia
- Kunigaikshtis (Kunigaikštis) - Lithuanian, duke as in Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
- Župan sometimes Veliki Župan (Grand Župan) - Serbia, Croatia
- Autocrator Greek term for the Byzantine Emperor
- Mbret - Albanian King
- Oceania
- Chieftain - Leader of a tribe or clan.
- Tui or tui - there were/are also kings in Oceania (i.e. Tonga, Wallis and Futuna, Nauru)
- houeiki, matai, alii, tūlafale, tavana, ariki - usually translated as "chief" in various Polynesian countries.
- "Mo'i" normally translated as King is a title used by Hawaiian monarchs since unification in 1810. The last person to hold that title was Queen Lili'uokalani.
Current monarchs
seealso List of current monarchs NOTE: The table comprises all sovereign monarchs of the world today, but is severely incomplete with regard to the non-sovereign monarchs.Use of titles by non-sovereigns
It is not uncommon that people who are not generally seen as monarchs nevertheless use monarchical titles. There are four cases of this:- Claiming an existing title, challenging the current holder. This has been very common historically. For centuries, the British monarch used, among his other titles, the title King of France, despite the fact that he had had no authority over French territory since the fifteenth century. Such as any one of the numerous antipopes who have claimed the Holy See.
- Retaining the title of an extinct monarchy. This can be coupled with a claim that the monarchy was in fact never, or should never have been, extinct. An example of the first case is the Prince of Seborga. Examples of the second case are several deposed monarchs or otherwise pretenders to thrones of abolished monarchies, e.g., Leka, Crown Prince of Albania who is styled by some as the "King of The Albanians." Retaining the title of an extinct monarchy can, however, be totally free of claims of sovereignty, for example it was customary of numerous European Monarchies to include "King of Jerusalem" in their full titles. When it comes to deposed monarchs, it is customary to continue the usage of their monarchical title (e.g., Constantine II, King of the Hellenes) as a courtesy title, not a constitutional office, for the duration of their lifetime. However the title then dies with them and cannot be used by anyone else unless the crown is restored constitutionally. (Some republicans take offense at this custom, in spite of the fact that the same courtesy is often given to former republican heads of state too – a former U.S. president is usually styled "Mr President" for the rest of his life.) Monarchs who have freely abdicated lose their right to use their former title. However where a monarch abdicated under duress (e.g., Michael I of Romania), it is customary to see the abdication as invalid and to treat them as deposed monarchs entitled to use their monarchical style for their lifetime.
- Inventing a new title. This is common by founders of micronations, and also may or may not come with a claim of sovereignty. When it does, it is disregarded by state leaders. A notable example is Paddy Roy Bates, styling himself the "Prince of Sealand," but not recognized as such by any national government, thus failing at least the constitutive condition for statehood (see Sealand for a fuller discussion of his claims).
References
External links
regnant in Arabic: الملك
regnant in Min Nan: Ông
regnant in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Кароль
regnant in Bosnian: Monarh (naslov)
regnant in Bulgarian: Монарх
regnant in Catalan: Monarca
regnant in Czech: Panovník
regnant in Danish: Monark
regnant in German: Monarch
regnant in Estonian: Monarh
regnant in Spanish: Monarca
regnant in Esperanto: Monarko
regnant in Basque: Errege
regnant in Persian: شاه
regnant in French: Monarque
regnant in Galician: Monarca
regnant in Korean: 군주
regnant in Croatian: Kralj
regnant in Indonesian: Monarch
regnant in Icelandic: Konungur
regnant in Italian: Monarca
regnant in Hebrew: מונרך
regnant in Georgian: მეფე
regnant in Dutch: Monarch (staatshoofd)
regnant in Japanese: 君主
regnant in Norwegian: Monark
regnant in Polish: Monarcha
regnant in Portuguese: Monarca
regnant in Russian: Монарх
regnant in Simple English: Monarch
regnant in Slovak: Panovník
regnant in Slovenian: Kralj
regnant in Serbian: Краљ
regnant in Serbo-Croatian: Monarh
regnant in Finnish: Monarkki
regnant in Swedish: Monark
regnant in Thai: พระมหากษัตริย์
regnant in Turkish: Hükümdar
regnant in Ukrainian: Монарх
regnant in Chinese: 君主
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
ascendant, at the head,
average, besetting, boss, chief, commanding, common, controlling, current, dominant, epidemic, general, governing, head, hegemonic, hegemonistic, in
ascendancy, in charge, in chief, in the ascendant, leading, master, normal, on the throne, ordinary, overbearing, pandemic, paramount, popular, predominant, predominate, predominating, prepollent, preponderant, preponderate, prepotent, prevailing, prevalent, rampant, regulating, regulative, regulatory, reigning, rife, routine, ruling, running, sovereign, standard, stereotyped, supreme, swaying, usual, widespread