There are more than four. The United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland, Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Denmark, Norway and Sweden all have monarchs and are in Northern Europe.
There are eleven constitutional monarchies in Europe:
Andorra
Belgium
Denmark
Luxembourg
Monaco
Norway
Spain
Sweden
England, United Provinces (Netherlands), and Sweden
There are different types of governments in Europe. Some are monarchies, constitutional monarchies, and republics.
bismillahi alrahman alrahim
Monarchy was a major form in government in olden Europe. Monarchy could still be a considered a major form in government in Europe, though most are constitutional monarchies.
The underlying assumption of this question, which is that constitutional monarchies are considered democracies by dint of being constitutional monarchies, is false. "Constitutional Monarchy" simply means that the power of the monarch (king) is limited by a constitution. This constitution can be enforced by some kind of oligarchy, aristocracy, or the common gentry. If the constitution is enforced by an oligarchy or aristocracy, the resulting state is not a democracy, whereas if it is enforced by the common gentry, it is democratic.Now, since almost all current constitutional monarchies are of this latter variety (monarchies with a constitution enforced by common people), people generally drop the intermediate step of separating non-democratic constitutional monarchies from democratic constitutional monarchies and refer to constitutional monarchies as a form of democracy.
Why are you asking dozens and dozens of questions about constitutional monarchies? And why ask a stupid question like this one? France and US both kicked their monarchies out and then wrote a constitution. There has not been a constitutional monarch in either country.
All the absolute monarchies in Europe have dissolved into some form of a democracy. Most of them transformed into Constitutional Monarchies, in which there is still a monarch that rules but they are accompanied by a parliament. There is one country in Europe that can still be considered a monarchy: the Vatican. The Pope is the ruler and thus labels the Vatican as an absolute monarchy, although the "monarch" is elected.
There are currently four reigning kings in Europe;- King Harald V of Norway King Carl Gustav of Sweden King Albert of Belgium King Juan Carlos of Spain There are two reigning princes (Liechtenstein and Monaco) There is one reigning Grand Duke (Luxembourg) There are three reigning Queens (UK, Netherlands and Denmark)
France and England?
Jamaica
i don't know the way that they are alike, but the absolute the ruler can legally do whatever he/she wants, but as the constitutional, the ruler is bound by the constitution and it's laws.
Southern Europe is almost fully composed of democracies (most of which are republics along with two constitutional monarchies). However, there is one country in Europe that is considered a theocracy or absolute monarchy: Vatican City.
The similarities between a monarchy and constitutional monarchy are that their are both monarchies.