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Monarchy
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Monarchy is one of the oldest and most studied forms of government, making it a central subject in political science, history, and Western civilization courses. Students examine how monarchical systems concentrate power in a single ruler, how they gained legitimacy, and how they evolved or collapsed over time. The topic spans ancient political philosophy, including the work of Aristotle and Cicero on mixed constitutions, through medieval tensions between the papacy and monarchies, to early modern debates over kingship and sovereignty. France's role in monarchical history — from centralized royal rule to the birth of the First French Republic — gives the subject particular academic weight, as does the enduring presence of constitutional monarchies in countries like Norway today.

Student papers on this topic approach monarchy from several angles. Historical analysis is common, covering periods such as the Norman Conquest in England, the Middle Ages, and the decline of the Roman Empire. Comparative work appears frequently, contrasting monarchical governments with republican or revolutionary alternatives and examining how figures and movements transformed feudal, monarchy-based systems. Regional case studies extend the topic beyond Europe, with papers addressing contemporary monarchies in places like Saudi Arabia and Iran. Some papers take a philosophical or constitutional lens, while others focus on policy questions such as European integration.

A strong essay on monarchy should establish a clear, period-specific thesis rather than attempting to survey all monarchical history at once. Evidence drawn from primary sources, historical events, or political theory carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating monarchy as a single uniform system — successful essays distinguish carefully between absolute, constitutional, and theocratic forms of royal rule.

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Paper Undergraduate
1776: The fateful year
1776 was the year of America's birth, the year of the Declaration of Independence. But it was also very nearly the year in which Britain suppressed the colonial rebellion and returned the colonies to the British Empire.
Essay Doctorate
George Washington Took the Oath of Office
George Washington took the oath of office to become the first President of the United States of America on April 30, 1789. Yet his influence on the history and development of the United States and on its office of…
Essay Doctorate
Athens and Sparta -- Was War Inevitable?
Between 500 and 350 BC the area now known as Greece was but a collection of separate and unallied city-states. Today, we often view cultures and political conflict in terms of nations, and take the view that since city-states were geographically close, culture was the same. This, however, was untrue, particularly in the case of the two most powerful and well-known city states of Athens and Sparta. That is not to say that these two entities were completely divergent. Both had some cultural similarities in context with their history, and they cooperated – if distantly, in the years leading up to the Battle of Thermopylae and subsequent defeat of the Persian invaders at Salamis and Plataea, ending Persian aggression for a time.
Paper Doctorate
Austria and Hungary: historical relationship and regional dynamics
The Reasons for Austria-Hungary Involvement in WWI
Research Paper Doctorate
Europe and the world in global context
¶ … Enlightenment on the French and Haitian Revolutions
Research Paper Doctorate
Effects of the Post World War II Occupation on Japan\'s Government and Politics
The recent change in the American foreign policy direction which has seen the replacement of its traditional anti-colonialist tilt by the neo-conservative belief of guided nation building evokes a lot of interest in the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Carole Levin's Heart and Stomach of a King
Carole Levin extends beyond the biographical material on Queen Elizabeth I toward a frank discussion of gender and politics in the Heart and Stomach of a King. The title, words ostensibly spoken by Elizabeth in a 1588…
Research Paper Doctorate
Queen Victoria: life and historical significance
Queen Victoria's legacy was to retain the strength of the British monarchy in spite of social and political reform, to rule with conservative values in spite of a growing trend of liberalism in her country, and to…
Research Paper Doctorate
Cicero Aristotle Constitution Both Aristotle
Both Aristotle and Cicero argue the merits of mixed constitutions, a balance between monarchy, aristocracy and polity. The concept is widely attributed to the more modern resources used by the founding fathers but can…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Politics in America from 1775 to 1800
American politics began with the Revolutionary war in 1775 in which the colonists opposed British rule. Americans had developed notions of self rule and therefore invasive British policies in 1775 greatly angered the…