usually dictators of self rulers
they both have governments and have a ruler
where the ruler get and keep their power
king
kish
Kings
communism
He would be replaced by a finer ruler. -APEX
there was no true ruler of all of Greece because a lot of the city states had different governments so they had democracies, monarchies, and oligarchies.
In the Russian Empire, power typically passed from ruler to ruler through hereditary succession, often within the same royal family, primarily the Romanovs. However, this succession was occasionally marked by political intrigue, coups, or the influence of powerful nobles and the military. The ruling monarch could also be overthrown or replaced through revolutions, as seen in the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution, which ended centuries of imperial rule. Additionally, the Tsar's legitimacy was often reinforced by religious endorsement from the Orthodox Church.
napoleon Bonaparte crowned himself Emperor
Sejong the great
Governments with the most power are often referred to as authoritarian or totalitarian regimes. In these systems, a single ruler or a small group holds significant control over political, social, and economic life, often limiting individual freedoms and suppressing dissent. Examples include dictatorships and absolute monarchies, where the power is concentrated and centralized, leaving little room for democratic processes.