「Monarchy」の共起表現一覧(1語左で並び替え)
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nservative trying to turn the republic into a | monarchy. |
ommon constitution, was difficult enough in a | monarchy which included two nationalities, one of whic |
sture of "accidentalism": whether Spain was a | monarchy or republic was less important than the law's |
public was a pretence on which he had built a | monarchy based on personal relationships and the ambit |
the Batavian Republic had been replaced by a | monarchy, the first king being Louis Bonaparte, a brot |
obin from the 1790s, and his partiality for a | monarchy led him to be unjust to the Athenians. |
back from direct administration and create a | monarchy to head Iraq while they maintained the mandat |
Hence, the Empire is constituted by a | monarchy (the United States and the G8, and internatio |
perhaps too ambitious to be a good queen in a | monarchy without power, as Sweden was during the Age o |
should declare itself a republic or remain a | monarchy. |
part of monarchical states as a sub-unit of a | monarchy based outside Finland proper. |
to whether a democratic republican model or a | monarchy should be the objective. |
nvert the Gambia from a republican state to a | monarchy. |
om of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves was a | monarchy consisting of the kingdoms of Portugal, Brazi |
British and the Netherlands is reverted to a | monarchy. |
s held to decide whether Italy would remain a | monarchy or become a republic. |
The Church of England was located in a | monarchy, so the church should adopt an episcopal styl |
leader can change Gambia from a republic to a | monarchy without first going to a referendum. |
a of the Ottoman Empire and replace it with a | monarchy under Sultan Abdul Hamid II. |
Manchukuo was proclaimed a | monarchy on 1 March 1934, with former Qing dynasty emp |
and the Consolidation of the French Absolute | Monarchy in the Early Seventeenth Century. |
d'Aiguillon favoured a more absolute | monarchy than Choiseul did, and was strongly connected |
by writing a treatise in support of absolute | monarchy called The Tree of Commonwealth. |
stablishment, and the Unhappiness of Absolute | Monarchy |
demands representation and an end to absolute | monarchy in the country. |
d as a more general argument against Absolute | monarchy (particularly as espoused by Robert Filmer an |
ford to a scheme of his to establish absolute | monarchy in England. |
g support for the restoration of the absolute | monarchy. |
overnment would pose a threat to the absolute | monarchy that they held over Arabia, quickly defeated |
d as an 'absolutist', a supporter of absolute | monarchy. |
ablishing an oligarchy as opposed to absolute | monarchy: a possible cause of political instability th |
theorist who defended Divine rights absolute | monarchy. |
nge it to "Ecclesiastical sacerdotal absolute | monarchy" as the website of the Vatican state says it |
hat the country can be considered an absolute | monarchy. |
t democracies like Indonesia with an absolute | monarchy, two communist one-party states, and everythi |
hat the country can be considered an absolute | monarchy. |
afrancada, declaring his support for absolute | monarchy |
, idea of republicanism replaced the absolute | monarchy of the Ottoman Dynasty, and establishment of |
man takes place in a framework of an absolute | monarchy whereby the Sultan of Oman is not only head o |
im that it was possible to fight the absolute | monarchy of Ferdinand VII in his own colonies. |
ulture and Commerce under the Danish absolute | monarchy and filled various other posts, such as being |
he Estates in 1680, that established absolute | monarchy in Sweden and reduced the privileges of the S |
Movement, and was oppposed by both the Afghan | monarchy and by the leftist People's Democratic Party |
After | monarchy was abolished in 1918, the Church of Brunswic |
He was against | monarchy and tithes, with views close to the Levellers |
e ideology in support of republics or against | monarchy; the opposite of monarchism, obviously. |
new elite snatched control from the Iron Age | monarchy which had formerly held sway and retained pow |
y released their debut, Monarchie und Alltag ( | Monarchy and everyday life), an album recognized then |
lden Lion of Judah, the symbol of the ancient | monarchy, to which his ancestors had long owed allegia |
te Serpent Salve, a defence of episcopacy and | monarchy against the attacks of the Puritan presbyteri |
These represent democracy, aristocracy, and | monarchy respectively. |
ost crown of glory, obtaining the sceptre and | monarchy of earth and sea" and elaborates with allusio |
monumentalist commissions for university and | monarchy. |
the police, the armed services, judiciary and | monarchy, we are about dismantling them and replacing |
Main article: | Monarchy in the Canadian provinces |
He described the Catholic Church as "an Asian | monarchy: nothing but one giddy height of despotism, a |
he became known as ‘The Atlas of the Austrian | monarchy'. |
of the largest establishments of the Austrian | monarchy, and in 1841 the emperor Ferdinand conferred |
y Antoine Cardon, Consolation of the Austrian | Monarchy on the death of emperor Leopold II |
, diplomat/politician in the Austro-Hungarian | monarchy |
Geppersdorf, near Opava, in Austro-Hungarian | Monarchy to a Jewish family. |
the ruin of the multi-ethnic Austro-Hungarian | Monarchy and the Habsburg dynasty in World War I, new |
uring its affiliation to the Austro-Hungarian | Monarchy as the capital of the crown land Bukovina. |
age, and the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian | Monarchy. |
took place in 1849, when the Austro-Hungarian | monarchy, during an attempt to suppress an Italian rev |
in the Austrian part of the Austro-Hungarian | Monarchy. |
greb, Croatia, (at that time Austro-Hungarian | Monarchy), to a Croatian Jewish family. |
s and societies all over the Austro-Hungarian | Monarchy. |
ct became effective until the end of Bavarian | monarchy in 1918. |
Green and Pleasant, winner of the BBC | Monarchy 1000 prize in 1973. |
blican government, the "Commonwealth", before | monarchy was restored in the shape of Charles' son, Ch |
s compensation and to strengthen the Bohemian | monarchy. |
used for large public events of the Bohemian | monarchy and the modern Czech state. |
occupiers wished to again restore the Bourbon | monarchy. |
Napoleon was finally defeated and the Bourbon | monarchy restored. |
of the overthrow of Charles X and the Bourbon | monarchy in the July Revolution. |
the 1830 revolution that toppled the Bourbon | monarchy and brought House of Orleans pretender Louis- |
on in 1815 and the restoration of the Bourbon | monarchy in France, all members of the Bonaparte dynas |
First French Empire and restoring the Bourbon | monarchy to France. |
ished to win over to the cause of the Bourbon | Monarchy. |
he liberates southern Italy from the Bourbon | monarchy. |
I ruled Brazil until 1889, when the Brazilian | monarchy was toppled by angry landed aristocrats disag |
the functioning of Parliament and the British | monarchy and the contrasts between British and America |
Isn't it a requirement of the British | monarchy? |
'Revolution: The Great Crisis of the British | Monarchy, 1685-1720' (London, 2006) |
ear old constitutional links with the British | Monarchy, and later Fijian Monarchy, and ushered in a |
The cost of the British | Monarchy is five times more the cost of the Spanish Ro |
f Republic, a campaign to replace the British | Monarchy with an elected head of state. |
Corps in the Great War, and with the British | Monarchy. |
longstanding tense relations between British | monarchy and Parliament, The Nineteen Propositions can |
the type of American governments; in Canada ( | Monarchy), the United States (Republic) and the Empire |
ngements of the Canadian federation, Canada's | monarchy operates in New Brunswick as the core of the |
ents of the Canadian federation, the Canadian | monarchy operates in Saskatchewan as the core of the p |
While the Capetian | monarchy began as one of the weakest in Europe, drasti |
nterparts, particularly the Castilian-Leonese | monarchy, and had to submit to them, paying tributes k |
e prelude to a revolt during which a Catholic | monarchy would be restored to the English throne. |
That's not the same as celebrating | monarchy as an institution, and to say it does is inac |
linger) and strengthening the French central | monarchy forming one of the base underpinnings of mode |
p their mediaeval privileges to a centralised | monarchy. |
The existence of a strong centralized | monarchy encouraged the nobility to form ties with the |
During the rule of the chera | monarchy in southern Kerala, Kollam was the focal poin |
ian Union, thus ending the era of the Chogyal | monarchy. |
Also, the UK being a Constituational | Monarchy, it is incorrect to say that the Cabinet "rul |
cribed strong supporter of the constitutional | monarchy, "traditional marriage," free speech, freedom |
tate organization (Republic or Constitutional | monarchy) Brazil should have. |
uld be a federal republic or a constitutional | monarchy. |
The Constitutional | Monarchy in France, 1814-48 (1999) |
r own ideas of nationalism and constitutional | monarchy, which they could to a large extent implement |
and a stalwart defender of the constitutional | monarchy, but was also in favour of the nationalisatio |
ing member of 'Australians for Constitutional | Monarchy' and who was a delegate at the 1998 Constitut |
crowned since Denmark became a constitutional | monarchy in 1849. |
dheads appear to have sought a constitutional | monarchy, in place of the absolutist monarchy sought b |
ivil and naval ensign from the Constitutional | Monarchy (1830-1910) period, which was 1:2 (Light Blue |
er to convert the state from a constitutional | monarchy under Sultan Muhammad Fareed Didi, to a presi |
24 July 1974 and the pre-junta constitutional | monarchy was never restored. |
anco era and turn Spain into a constitutional | monarchy with a parliament system based on representat |
ve member of Australians for a Constitutional | Monarchy, and is on the committee of a new Liberal Par |
hag in western Bhutan, a small constitutional | monarchy in the Himalayas. |
obrists, who were committed to constitutional | monarchy from the start, the Kadets were at first ambi |
ng on the legal authority of a constitutional | monarchy. |
port for retaining Australia's Constitutional | monarchy. |
52, which changed Egypt from a constitutional | monarchy into a republic. |
ublic Affairs, Australians for Constitutional | Monarchy and Australian Monarchist League criticised w |
f the king, it also demanded a constitutional | monarchy to be set up in Portugal. |
ls who strove to overthrow the constitutional | monarchy and establish a communist republic. |
heory might have preserved the constitutional | monarchy and averted a vast series of calamities, whic |
and larger kingdom would be a constitutional | monarchy, one with a parliament, elected by the citize |
plementing the transition from constitutional | monarchy to a Crowned Democracy. |
al reformist campaigning for a constitutional | monarchy in China. |
ceeded, ushering the period of constitutional | monarchy in Greece. |
al posts during the Portuguese constitutional | monarchy, namely as leader of the Cartists and later o |
er to convert the state from a constitutional | monarchy under a Sultan, to a presidential system. |
declared Brazil an independent constitutional | monarchy with himself as monarch. |
tle as decisive in achieving a constitutional | monarchy in the United Kingdom.Modern historians also |
document which formalised the constitutional | monarchy that had resulted from the restoration of Alf |
governmental structure under a constitutional | monarchy in which the sultan would exercise an active |
e conventional stipulations of constitutional | monarchy, with most related powers entrusted for exerc |
ce of Liang Qichao's theory of constitutional | monarchy. |
e conventional stipulations of constitutional | monarchy, with most related powers entrusted for exerc |
a known radical who advocated constitutional | monarchy and supported Wu Luzhen's mutiny during the X |
party, and vaguely promoted a constitutional | monarchy, it never made its political program clear, a |
I and Mary II as monarch and a constitutional | monarchy established, was described by Whig historians |
rliament to achieve a balanced constitutional | monarchy in Britain, and laws were made that pointed t |
e conventional stipulations of constitutional | monarchy. |
ing in the country remaining a constitutional | monarchy. |
ion Council of Australians for Constitutional | Monarchy. |
e conventional stipulations of constitutional | monarchy. |
t supported the principle of a constitutional | monarchy and elections conducted through the Single Tr |
ng the period encompassing the Constitutional | Monarchy and the First Republic there were also electi |
ick Augustus II to recognize a constitutional | monarchy. |
gue and its UK subsidiary, the Constitutional | Monarchy Association. |
irfax, remained a supporter of constitutional | monarchy, as did many other roundhead leaders such as |
1961 alongside a referendum on the country's | monarchy. |
coup later in the year, ending the country's | monarchy. |
e of the Eastern Orthodox Church, the Czarist | Monarchy, and the domination of the economy by the Boy |
d Sonderborg there on one hand and the Danish | monarchy on the other. |
rwegian Ynglings and that of the early Danish | monarchy (who may have claimed descent from Ragnar Lod |
In fact, the Danish | monarchy - although the oldest in the world - is only |
The Danube | monarchy has formed an alliance with the France and Gr |
alogical hope of the restoration of a Davidic | monarchy. |
d would be superior to the liberal democratic | monarchy. |
After 1814, when the double | monarchy of Denmark-Norway was abolished, very few Nor |
art in the vexed internal affairs of the Dual | Monarchy, and he came little before the public except |
a more aggressive foreign policy of the Dual | Monarchy. |
The dual | monarchy dissipated any sense of allegiance to a singl |
later Austrian-Hungarian empire when the dual | monarchy was introduced in Austria). |
at at the time most Germans regarded the Dual | Monarchy as a "brother empire" and viewed the prospect |
ted his credentials as Ambassador of the Dual | Monarchy at the Court of St. James's, a promotion over |
, the heir apparent to the throne of the Dual | Monarchy. |
s of 1867 in the Austrian portion of the dual | monarchy. |
akuria and Nobatia," which might imply a dual | monarchy for at least some periods. |
e voted for the continuation of a Grand Ducal | monarchy with Charlotte as head of state. |
ange-Nassau" has no legal status in the Dutch | monarchy however. |
Politicized Economies: | Monarchy, Monopolies, and Mercantilism with R. Ekelund |
Budny supported the limited educated | monarchy concept of the state (with Andrzej Frycz Modr |
Although the Egyptian | monarchy was abolished in 1953, the title continues to |
ity was often a device to control an elective | monarchy. |
the country apart, and to save the embattled | monarchy, King Leopold III of the Belgians abdicated i |
rsed following the Restoration of the English | monarchy; in 1660 he was hanged, drawn and quartered a |
After the Restoration of the English | monarchy, Barker became a nonconformist, forming his o |
and Philip's heirs could not risk the English | monarchy recovering any land in that area, since it mi |
d the structure to the history of the English | monarchy (the head of the Church which Hale served) wh |
he origin and the progressions of the English | Monarchy. |
Even the English | monarchy encountered the severe succession crisis that |
In 1624, the English | Monarchy took control from the Virginia Company and ma |
and, while delaying the return of the English | monarchy for two more years and at the same time neces |
Ireland, and its personal link to the English | monarchy, was recognized from 1555 by the Holy See. |
ews that Magna Carta implied that the English | monarchy did not have absolute power, but that it had |
Discussing debut EP | Monarchy, Mayhem, and Fishpaste, writer John Corbett d |
this idea in the then most powerful European | monarchy. |
r criticized Bagshaw as "an Anabaptist, Fifth | Monarchy man, and a Separatist". |
1661, parliament was challenged by the Fifth | Monarchy men under the command of Vavasor Powell and T |
re an expression of strong latent support for | monarchy and the English traditional constitutional li |
the Civil War, there was a brief attempt for | monarchy. |
In the French | monarchy, one of the official explanations for the Sal |
from Pharamond, reputed founder of the French | monarchy in 420. |
ntfort claimed his rights as Duke, but French | monarchy supported the Blois faction, triggering the B |
in his covert attempts to restore the French | monarchy. |
Louis's death saw the French | monarchy at its nadir, in political, financial and mor |
His associations with the French | monarchy and aristocracy made him a likely target. |
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