Brunei, UAE, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Swaziland, Vatican City.
No countries really use limited monarchy, but countries such as Canada, Australia, New Zealand and others use monarchy while also using another form of government.
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Swaziland has an absolute monarchy under Mswati III since 1986.
if you werent so supid you would know!
no
By being next in line when the monarch dies.
Absolutism: power concentrated/consolidated to one monarch/ruler/person Constitutionalism: -rulers share power/authority with representative institutions -a written constitution is not necessary -harness popular support+use it to magnify state power -recognize rights of individuals and representative institutions -claimed limited powers
Petoria
Armenia
not enough, they are still fat bastards :(
NO. This is debated, but the general consensus is that North Korea is a Dynastic Communist State, not a monarchy.A dynastic communist state is a country whose rulers are from the communist party but has succession in leadership passing along a dynastic line like a monarchy. Some consider Dynastic Communism to be a form of Absolute Monarchy, because of the key similarity between Dynastic Communism and Absolute Monarchy being the transfer of total power along hereditary lines. However, the majority argue that since the leader of a Dynastic Communist State does not use royal titles, the state is not a proper monarchy.
We would use the word "totalitarian" to describe a country in which the government has complete control of everything.