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the answer is king
It convinced them to declare their independence from the king and set up new republics in all the states.
A constitutional monarchy is a form of government in which a monarch acts as head of state within the parameters of the constitution, whether it be a written, uncodified or blended constitution,
Trade made Great Zimbabwe's rulers wealthy and powerful.
The persians had pledged their allegiance to their king and obeyed their ruler where the greeks had a democratice government and the people had a say in things.
It was minted by sovereign rulers of countries and city-States and the money usually sported the ruler's head on the back of the coins.
Since the head on New Zealands coins are the current king or Queen of England it would have been George V King of England who was king from 1910-1936.
Yes
When the Queen dies, the next reigning monarch will have their portrait on coins and stamps. In the case of Great Britain, that will likely be Prince Charles, once he becomes King.
Henry-VIII King of England (1534)making all further rulers the supreme head of the Church of England
king
British/English coins and coins of the ancient world have never shown the country name. The country/empire was indicated by the head of the king on the coin. In more recent times, the Royal Mint decided to continue the tradition for British/English coins.
There is no ruler of Islam, it is a religion. the head may be called a caliph.
king sargon II and king hammurabi
Pravin Parikh has written: 'Akbar & his coins' -- subject(s): Biography, Indic Coins, Kings and rulers
what rulers have almost absolute power
King William IV features on the obverse of all British coins from 1831 to 1837 inclusive. The inscriptions on these coins, including the name, was written in Latin. GULIELMUS = WILLIAM