It would have been king Jeroboam, who would rule the 10 Northern tribes often referred to as Samariah ... See 1 Kings 11 and 12
Hatshepsut was the first women ruler of the new kingdom
Queen Anne (1701-1714). England (including the Principality of Wales) and Scotland were joined by the Act of Union in 1707. This formed the United Kingdom of Great Britain. (The term Great Britain was first used in the reign of James VI of Scotland after he became James I of England on the death of the childless Elizabeth I.) In 1801 George III became the first ruler of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. This lasted until 1922 when George V became the first ruler of the present-day United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, following Ireland's partition.
The Mughal dynasty was founded by Babur, who was a ruler of a kingdom near Persia (modern day Iran).
Do you mean Amenemhet, first ruler of the 12th Dynasty of the middle kingdom of Egypt
In the Bible 'principality' means a kingdom or empire with a ruler. It covers all sizes from a large country to a small city state. In the plural it means the rulers of the world.
Charlemagne became sole ruler of the Frankish Kingdom in 771.
No, a good ruler does not lose his/her kingdom. Cleopatra lost it all and her people lost their independence.No, a good ruler does not lose his/her kingdom. Cleopatra lost it all and her people lost their independence.No, a good ruler does not lose his/her kingdom. Cleopatra lost it all and her people lost their independence.No, a good ruler does not lose his/her kingdom. Cleopatra lost it all and her people lost their independence.No, a good ruler does not lose his/her kingdom. Cleopatra lost it all and her people lost their independence.No, a good ruler does not lose his/her kingdom. Cleopatra lost it all and her people lost their independence.No, a good ruler does not lose his/her kingdom. Cleopatra lost it all and her people lost their independence.No, a good ruler does not lose his/her kingdom. Cleopatra lost it all and her people lost their independence.No, a good ruler does not lose his/her kingdom. Cleopatra lost it all and her people lost their independence.
A monarch
Mansa Muso
The kenning for kingdom is "land of the ruler" or "realm of the crown."
Yes, and he was later the first king of the United Kingdom.
It never says that, if fact, the Bible does not concern itself with the color of a person's skin. In the New International Version, the term 'black' is used 27 times for something other than a human except in an analogy of God's sinful people in Lamentations 4:8-9. Many biblical scholars believe the 'first' great and powerful ruler of the first kingdom, Nimrod, was himself black.