- Government by triumvirs.
- The office or term of a triumvir.
- A body or group of triumvirs.
- An association or a group of three. Also called troika.
[Latin triumvirātus, from triumvirī, board of three. See triumvir.]
Dictionary:
tri·um·vi·rate (trī-ŭm'vər-ĭt) ![]() |
[Latin triumvirātus, from triumvirī, board of three. See triumvir.]
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The triumvirate ruled the country for several years.
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A triumvirate (from Latin, "of three men") is a political regime dominated by three powerful individuals, each a triumvir (pl. triumviri). The arrangement can be formal or informal, and though the three are usually equal on paper, in reality this is rarely the case. The term can also be used to describe a state with three different military leaders who all claim to be the sole leader.
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Originally, triumviri were special commissions of three men appointed for specific administrative tasks apart from the regular duties of Roman magistrates. The triumviri capitales, for instance, oversaw prisons and executions, along with other functions that, in the words of Roman constitutional specialist Andrew Lintott, show them to have been "a mixture of police superintendents and justices of the peace."[1] The capitales were first established around 290–287 BC.[2] They were supervised by the praetor urbanus. These triumviri, or the tresviri nocturni,[3] may also have taken some responsibility for fire control.[4]
Three-man commissions were also appointed for purposes such as establishing colonies (triumviri coloniae deducendae) or distributing land.[5] Triumviri mensarii served as public bankers;[6] the full range of their financial functions in 216 BC, when the commission included two men of consular rank, has been the subject of debate.[7] Another form of three-man commission was the tresviri epulones, who were in charge of organizing public feasts on holidays. This commission was created in 196 BC by a tribunician law on behalf of the people.[8]
In the late Republic, two three-man political alliances are called triumvirates by modern scholars, though only for the second was the term triumviri used at the time to evoke constitutional precedents:
In various municipalities under the Principate, the chief magistracy was a college of three, styled triumviri.
One of the most notable triumvirates formed in the history of China was by the Han Dynasty (202 BC – 220 AD) statesmen Huo Guang (d. 68 BC), Jin Midi (d. 86 BC), and Shangguan Jie 上官桀 (d. 80 BC), following the death of Emperor Wu of Han (r. 141–87 BC) and the installation of the child emperor Zhao.
Despite the Three Excellencies—including the Chancellor, Imperial Secretary, and irregularly the Grand Commandant—representing the most senior ministerial positions of state, this triumvirate was supported by the economic technocrat and Imperial Secretary Sang Hongyang (d. 80 BC), their political lackey. The acting Chancellor Tian Qianqiu was also easily swayed by the decisions of the triumvirate.[11]
The Three Excellencies existed in Western Han (202 BC – 9 AD) as the Chancellor, Imperial Secretary, and Grand Commandant, but the Chancellor was viewed as senior to the Imperial Secretary while the post of Grand Commandant was vacant for most of the dynasty. After Emperor Guangwu established the Eastern Han (25–220 AD), the Grand Commandant was made a permanent official while the Minister over the Masses replaced the Chancellor and the Minister of Works replaced the Imperial Secretary. Unlike the three high officials in Western Han when the Chancellor was senior to all, these new three senior officials had equal censorial and advisory powers. When a young or weak-minded emperor ascended to the throne, these Three Excellencies could dominate the affairs of state. There were also other types of triumvirates during the Eastern Han; for example, at the onset of the reign of Emperor Ling of Han (r. 168–189), the General-in-Chief Dou Wu (d. 168), the Grand Tutor Chen Fan (d. 168), and another prominent statesman Hu Guang (91–172) formed a triumvirate nominally in charge of the Privy Secretariat, when in fact it was a regent triumvirate overseeing the affairs of state and Emperor Ling.[12]
The title was revived a few times for (short-lived) three-headed political 'magistratures' in post-feudal times.
When the French revolutionaries turned to several Roman Magistrature names for their new institutions, the three-headed collective Head of State was named Consulat, a term in use for two-headed magistratures since Antiquity; furthermore it included a "First Consul" who was not an equal, but the de facto solo head of state and government- a tyrannical position Napoleon Bonaparte chose to convert openly into the First French Empire.
Prior to Napoleon and during the Terror Robespierre, Louis de Saint-Just, and Couthon, as members of the governing Committee of Public Safety, were purported by some to have formed an unofficial triumvirate. Although officially all members of the committee shared equal power the three men's friendship and close ideological base led their detractors to declaim them as 'triumvirs' which was used against them in the coup of 9 Thermidor
Eric Schmidt, CEO of Google has referred to himself, along with founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin as part of a triumvirate, stating, "This triumvirate has made an informal deal to stick together for at least 20 years".
In the early days of national struggle and before Gandhi, the Indian National Congress was known to be under Lal-Bal-Pal i.e. Lala Lajpat Rai, Bipin Chandra Pal and the leading of the three Balgangadhar Tilak often dubbed Lokmanya Tilak.
Moore, Badman, and Sutherland are three districts in English that control much of the power.
In the Roman Republic (1849), the title of two sets of three joint chiefs of state in the year 1849:
Beyond the United Kingdom, fifteen commonwealth realms of Queen Elizabeth II a non-resident yet de jure head of state who is represented by a resident Governor-General who carries out the day to day duties of the Monarch in respect to each realm and as such is defacto head of state, but whose actions are almost always under the advisement of the national Prime Minister who is head of government and who actually exercises the real powers of the crown.
After the Lisbon Treaty comes into force from 1 December 2009:
The word has been used as a term of convenience, though not an official title, for other groups of three in a similar position :
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| Translations: Triumvirate |
Dansk (Danish)
n. - triumvirat
Nederlands (Dutch)
driemanschap
Français (French)
n. - triumvirat
Deutsch (German)
n. - Triumvirat, Dreimännerherrschaft
Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - τριανδρία
Italiano (Italian)
triunvirato
Português (Portuguese)
n. - triunvirato (m), triunvirado (m)
Español (Spanish)
n. - triunvirato
Svenska (Swedish)
n. - triumvirat, tremannavälde
中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
三人执政, 三头统治, 三头政治
中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 三人執政, 三頭統治, 三頭政治
한국어 (Korean)
n. - 3두 정치, 3당 연립 정치, 3인조
日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 三頭政治, 3人委員会, 3人組
العربيه (Arabic)
(الاسم) ثلاثي, ثالوث, حكومه الثلاثه أو اعضاؤها
עברית (Hebrew)
n. - שלישיית-שליטים, טריומווירט
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