Monarch
''This article treats the generic title monarch. For the origins of the word king and its English use, see Germanic king. For other meanings of the word, see Monarch (disambiguation) A monarch is a type of ruler or head of state. The word derives from Greek monos archein, meaning "one ruler", and in ancient Greece it was used to designate an absolute ruler. With time, the word has been succeeded in this meaning by others, like autocrat or dictator, and the word monarch has become a more general term. Which rulers are considered monarchs today is partially a matter of tradition, so there are no hard and fast rules. There are, however, a number of characteristics that are commonly, though not universally, distinguishing for monarchs:
- Most monarchs hold their office for life, while most other rulers do not. They are usually raised within a royal family where they are taught to expect and obey this "duty." A monarch may chose to resign his position through abdication, though this is a rare and dramatic practice.
- Most monarchs are, formally or informally, succeeded upon their death or abdication by members of their own family, usually their eldest child. As a result, most stable monarchies have a long legacy of rule by a single family or bloodline.
- Most monarchs hold titles that are traditional among monarchs (see below). While this is a fairly arbitrary characterstic, it might just be the best distinction between monarchs and non-monarchs at the moment.
European monarchical titles
In Europe, a monarch may traditionally bear any of several titles. Although monarchs have normally been male, each of these titles also has a female counterpart. This is used not only in the (historically rare) case that the monarch is female, but also for wives of monarchs. (When there is need to distinguish between the two cases, terms like Queen regnant and Queen consort come in handy.) The converse is not true however: the husband of a Queen regnant is not automatically a King. (''E.g.'', the Duke of Edinburgh is not King Philip of the United Kingdom.) The normal monarch title in Europe – i.e., the one used if the monarch has no higher title – is Prince. It 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 the discretion of themselves, most often choosing King. Such titulations could cause diplomatic problems, and especially the elevation to Emperor was seen as an offensive action. During the 19th and 20th centuries most small monarchies in Europe disappeared to form larger entities, and so King has become the most common title today.| Title | !width="15%" |Female counterpartRealm | !width="15%" |''Latin''- | |Pope |n/a||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Emperor | Empress | Empire | Imperator | Roman Empire, Byzantine Empire, Holy Roman Empire, Russia (Tsar), France, Austria, German Empire (none left in Europe after 1918) |
| King | Queen | Kingdom | Rex | Common in larger sovereign states |
| Grand Duke | Grand Duchess | Grand duchy | Magnus Dux | Today: Luxembourg. Historical: Lithuania, Baden, Finland et al. |
| Duke | Duchess | Duchy | Dux | |
| Prince | Princess | Principality | Princeps |
- As popes must be Catholic priests, a celibate office forbidden to women, there is no female equivalent. Legends of female popes (see Pope Joan) refer to them as "pope." Some European languages have a feminine form of the word pope, such as the French
Other monarchical titles
In China, "king" is the usual translation for the term wang, which designated 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 Emperor of China. When a difference exists, male titles are placed to the left and female titles are placed to the right of the slash.By region
- Africa
- * Chieftain - Leader of a "primitive" people
- * Pharaoh - early Egypt
- * King - there were and are kings in Africa. The Songhai Empire is an ancient example, the Kingdom of Swaziland is a modern one.
- Americas
- * Cacique - Aboriginal Hispaniola
- * Huey Tlatoani - Aztec Empire
- * Inca - Tahuantinsuyu (Inca Empire)
- Asia
- * Chogyal — "Divine Ruler" — ruled Sikkim till 1975
- * Hwangje - States that unified Korea
- * Wang - States of Korea that do not have control over all of Korea
- * Badshah - India (emperor)
- * Huangdi - Imperial China
- * Maharaja/Maharani - India
- * Nawab, Wali - Muslim rulers of principalities or princes under Mughal (Mogul) or British Indian Empires
- * Nizam - Hyderabad, India
- * Susuhanan - the Indonesian princely state of Surakarta until its abolition
- * Tenno or Mikado - Japan
- * Wang - pre-Imperial China
- Europe
- * Germanic king
- * Vezér - Ancient Hungarian
- * Fejedelem - Ancient/Medieval Hungarian
- * Vojvod (Serbian) / Vajda (Hungarian) - Serbian / Hungarian / Romany Title
- * Kniaz'/Kniahynia - Kievan Rus'
- * Tsar/Tsarytsia - Imperial Russia
- * Kunigaikshtis(Kunigaikštis) - Lithuanian ,duke as in Grand Duchy of Lithuania.
- Middle East
- * Caliph - Islamic holy title
- * Emir - Arabic holy title
- * Khan - Mongol Emperor or Turkish, Afghan, Pashtun or other Central Asian chieftain
- * Malik/Malika - Arabic leader
- * Pharaoh - Ancient Egypt
- * Shah - Persia/Iran, Afghanistan
- * Shahenshah - Persia/Iran, "King of Kings" or emperor
- * Shaikh - Arabic leader
- * Sultan/Sultana - Arabic King
- Oceania
- * Chieftain - Leader of a "primitive" people
- * King - there were/are also kings in Oceania (i.e. Wallis and Futuna, Nauru)
General monarch titles
- Autocrat - General term for absolute monarch.
- Emperor/Empress - Empire
- Grand Duke/Grand Duchess - Grand Duchy
- King/Queen - Kingdom
- Prince/Princess - Sovereign Principality
Current monarchs
NOTE: The table comprises all sovereign monarchs of the world today, but is severely incomplete with regard to the non-sovereign monarchs.| Name | !width="4%" |BornTitle | !width="4%" |SinceSuccession | !width="22%" |Next in line
|---|
| Hereditary Prince Albert |
| The Prince of Wales |
| Crown Prince Frederik |
| Crown Princess Victoria |
| None |
| The Prince of Orange |
| Crown Prince Haakon Magnus |
| The Duke of Brabant |
| Hereditary Grand Duke Guillaume |
| The Sultan of Terengganu, if rotation is upheld |
| 2004 |
See also
External links
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