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The Chinese emperor that expanded China's territory in the mid 1600's was Qianlong. The Chinese controlled more than one third of the population under his rule.
The Chinese emperor that expanded China's territory in the mid 1600's was Qianlong. The Chinese controlled more than one third of the population under his rule.
The Chinese emperor that expanded China's territory in the mid 1600's was Qianlong. The Chinese controlled more than one third of the population under his rule.
Shogunate held all the power where as the emperor was given the title.
At the top were the Holy Roman Emperor and the Pope.
Yes. Technically speaking, the Emperor designated the Tokugawa family as shogun (general). Shogun (general) is originally supposed to fight against the northern peoples, but the position has the greatest power in the society, and it was more or less just a title for someone who controls the country. The Emperor and his family became political figureheads while the real military power lay with the Shogunate rulers.
The College of Cardinals was created under Henry IV, who was the Holy Roman Emperor in 1056. Before his reign, cardinals served simply as clergy, but under the Emperor they were given the power to elect popes.
Power shifted to the east as the west came under barbarian attack which was taken over in 396 CE.
The temple complex was constructed from 1406 to 1420 during the reign of the Yongle Emperor, who was also responsible for the construction of the Forbidden City in Beijing. The complex was extended and renamed Temple of Heaven during the reign of the Jiajing Emperor in the 16th century. The Jiajing Emperor also built three other prominent temples in Beijing, the Temple of Sun in the east (日坛), the Temple of Earth in the north (地坛), and the Temple of Moon in the west (月坛). The Temple of Heaven was renovated in the 18th century under the Qianlong Emperor.
During the republic, someone who was given complete power was called a dictator, such as Sula or Caesar. Under the principate the emperor or the "Caesar" had complete power.
In 800 AD under Charlemagne.
Julius Cesar was a good man at first, he was a military hero who seized power and made reforms, but that all changed after he had become emperor. When Julius Cesar became emperor he had all this power, soon after, Cesar started taking advantage of his power which led to his death.Just a slight correction in terms here. Julius Caesar was never an emperor. He was a dictator, which was a political office under the republican form of government. Although the powers of both emperor and dictator were identical, there was a great difference in the power structure. An emperor had supreme power and could designate his successor. A dictator (ideally) had supreme power for a limited period of time and had no authority to appoint a successor.