An oligarchy has a religious foundation, but a monarchy is governed by a king or queen.
Oligarchies and monarchies differ in power distribution and governance structures. In an oligarchy, power is held by a small group of individuals or families, while in a monarchy, power is held by a single ruler, usually a king or queen. Oligarchies often have more shared power among the ruling elite, while monarchies have a centralized power structure with the monarch at the top. Additionally, oligarchies may have more complex governance structures with multiple decision-makers, whereas monarchies typically have a more hierarchical system with the monarch making final decisions.
Greece began by having monarchies, then oligarchies, then tyrannies and then democracies. The Greek Government is currently a democracy, but modern democracy finds it's roots in ancient Greece.
In democracies, the assembly of the people. of the city-state In oligarchies, the council of the city-state. In tyrannies, the tyrant. In monarchies, the king.
UNVA....?
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.
The aristocrats replaced them, sometimes called oligarchs. Oligarchies replaced monarchies - in Greek oligarchy means 'rule by the few'.
Monarchies disappeared and oligarchies took over. Culture dwindled. Strong city-states began to appear at the latter stages.
Theocracies Oligarchies Dictatorships Absolute monarchies Communism International corporations The EU commission The United Nations
European countries had many different political systems throughout history. There were oligarchies, monarchies, tyrants/dictators, democracies, etc.
Rome was late in the peiece - governments of various types - monarchies, oligarchies and democracies had been developed long before Rome emerged from being a loose confederation of hill villages,
Aristotle divided Greek governments into monarchies, oligarchies, tyrannies and democracies - terms we still use today.
In a monarchy, power is held by a single ruler, usually a king or queen, who inherits their position. In an oligarchy, power is held by a small group of people, often wealthy or influential individuals. Monarchies tend to have centralized power and are often hereditary, while oligarchies have power distributed among a select few who may or may not be elected. Monarchies typically have a more hierarchical governance structure, while oligarchies may have a more decentralized or informal power structure.