English monarchs ruled with parliament and also recognized parliament as the ultimate authority.
English monarchs ruled with parliament and also recognized parliament as the ultimate authority.
Regardless of monarchy type (absolute, semi-constitutional, constitutional):In Middle Ages - France, England, Habsburgs (ruled in different countries)In XVI-XVIII centuries - France, Spain (under Habsburgs), Austria (Habsburgs too), Poland united with Lithuania, England, Turkey (ruled on Balkans)In XIX century - France (mix of republic and monarchic periods), Prussia/Germany, Russia, Austria, EnglandIn XX century - Germany (monarchy till end of WW I), England, Russia (monarchy till 1917).(France was a republic in XX century).
its germany england and france
The Habsburgers because they ruled the mainland of Europe for centuries and America, while the Tudors only ruled England in 16e century.
Nothing.But monarchs ruled monarchies.
He was a king who ruled England! He is from France and came to England to rule the country. He won the battle of Hastings.
Europe (Spain, Portugal, France, England, the Netherlands).
The first states were mostly monarchies, as far as we can tell. They were ruled by kings or queens. The earliest monarchies that we know about are the ones in Sumer and Egypt. These both began around 3000 BC.
It is because he ruled the entire France to war with England. So its like that
both systems are ruled by one person.
In a traditional absolute monarchy the king or queen rules (eg Saudi Arabia). These days most monarchies are constitutional monarchies where the monarch is a powerful figurehead but the country is ruled by a government (eg UK, Netherlands). In a democracy the country is run by an elected government (eg France). A totalarian state is one ruled by a dictator, usually one who has seized power (eg North Korea)
In 1431, King Henry sixth of England, was crowned Henry second of France and ruled both countries until 1453 when the end of the Hundred Years War saw England expelled from all of France with the exception of Calais.