The monarch has suspended civil liberties, supposedly to enable the government to defeat the Maoists. |
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These coins were handed out as talismans by the monarch at a special ceremony to sufferers of the skin disease, scrofula. |
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He sees the red and black-winged monarch butterflies hanging thickly on the branches. |
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Take the oft-cited classic case of Batesian mimicry involving the dead-ringer resemblance between monarch and viceroy butterflies. |
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The alternative is to look upon the monarch as a mere figurehead, a focal point for tradition, pomp and ritual on the great occasions of state. |
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The chiefs of state are the British monarch and the New Zealand high commissioner. |
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Thus, a monarch with absolute power must take coercive control over an otherwise savage society either by mutual consent or by force. |
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Saudi Arabia remains a kingdom with a monarch as its active chief of state. |
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But there are also plenty of away-from-the-computer projects, such as drawing monarch butterflies and minting your own coins. |
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The monarch butterfly can discern tastes 12,0000 times more subtle than those perceivable by human taste buds. |
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The monarch is chief of state and the prime minister is head of government. |
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Critics have said the Vatican had no business honouring a monarch who commanded troops who used poison gas in the conflict. |
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Milkweed provides food for monarch butterfly larvae and stinging nettles host caterpillars of the red admiral butterfly. |
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Stamboliiski boldly opposed Bulgaria's entry into the First World War in the face of the monarch Tsar Ferdinand. |
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They found eggshells as evidence of monarch oviposition on black swallow-wort in uncaged field populations of swallow-wort and milkweed. |
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Centuries after the city famously locked out the reigning monarch King Charles I, it was a time to forgive and forget. |
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Recently, the museum had the good fortune to acquire the portraits of the monarch and his queen illustrated here. |
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The last time the monarch refused to give Royal Assent was in 1707 with Queen Anne. |
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They called themselves the king and supreme monarch of their respective monarchies by the mandate of heaven. |
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Since then I have described the Queen as our monarch or sovereign, and the governor-general as our head of state. |
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Honey-bees glided over the roses and a monarch butterfly flew over the fence to land on a wing of the cherub. |
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The responsibility of the monarch extends beyond what one commentator recently termed the frivolously enjoyable practice of buying art. |
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Some insects, like the monarch butterfly, migrate to warmer climes in winter. |
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No sooner had gold asserted itself as an absolute monarch than it was dethroned. |
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White-bellied sea eagle, Blue-throated flycatcher and black-naped monarch flycatcher were some of the birds that could be sighted in the city. |
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Designer Chris Levine's blue monochrome portrait shows the monarch wearing a crown, pearls and an ermine cape. |
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It's symbolic of the acceptance by the people of the new monarch and acceptance of the new monarch to serve. |
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Thus, Anselm's God is not an arbitrary monarch or a tyrant with no accountability and with a bloodthirsty desire for punishment or payment. |
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The filmmakers' desire to create an unstuffy, modern version of the Renaissance monarch merely turns him into a boorish, violent plug-ugly. |
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The anti-monarchy lobby insist that the monarch is a burden on the taxpayer and undemocratic. |
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The monarch plans to put himself at the head of the enemies of the revolution to attempt a counter-revolution. |
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To think that the absence of the monarch and her consort would mean so much less attention at the Guildhall is ridiculous. |
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If you see no monarch eggs, caterpillars or chrysalises, trim the plants back now and treat with jets of water or a little insecticidal soap. |
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Some studies have shown that monarch larva die when fed Bt pollen, although other studies of swallowtail butterflies show little effect. |
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He is a constitutional monarch with the power to dissolve the legislative assembly, which is known as the Fono. |
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This single amino acid substitution has already been shown to confer such insensitivity in the monarch butterfly. |
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It is said to be a reminder of how important a female monarch was in popularising the sport. |
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The pharaoh was a sacrosanct monarch who served as the intermediary between the gods and man. |
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They can explain at length why the bird they saw was definitely a white-eared monarch which no-one could possibly confuse with a pied. |
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Spain was ruled by an absolute monarch and was dominated by the church, whose Inquisition was still proscribing books and works of art. |
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A king's day had to be perfectly timed so that the officers serving the monarch knew exactly what they should do, when, and how. |
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The death means the Queen, who acceded to the throne in 1952, becomes the longest-serving monarch in Europe. |
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One might think that the political monarch and the social monocrat belong together. |
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Fewer than 10 percent of monarch caterpillars make it to adulthood each year. |
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Agreement could not subsequently be reached as to which hero or monarch should be depicted and the plinth therefore remained empty for 158 years. |
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This set of furniture was, therefore, certainly not made for a reigning monarch or consort, as has usually been assumed. |
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It is widely agreed that the monarch must generally agree to a request from the Prime Minister to dissolve Parliament. |
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A strong monarch could control the Parlement de Paris but a minor supported by a regent rarely could. |
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However, in June 1548 the young monarch was poisoned by his mother, the queen regent, who then placed her lover Khun Worawongse on the throne. |
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Then he grasped the greasy neck of the flinching little monarch and proceeded to strangle him. |
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The monarch reigns, but does not rule the nation per se, acting only with the approval of Parliament. |
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The first and most important prerogative of a reigning monarch was the power of judgment and pardon. |
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Of course we do think first of the King, the magnificent monarch of a glorified or idealized medieval realm. |
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For the first time in the history of Europe, a monarch was not only dethroned by the masses, but also executed. |
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In the interests of good government it is essential that the monarch be revered, but not genuinely loved. |
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The former calypso monarch is widely regarded as a superb showman, one of the best at extemporaneous renditions while onstage. |
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A monarch would attempt to arrogate power to himself, as do all the current Middle Eastern kings. |
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The bill is then sent to the monarch for royal assent, which is invariably given. |
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By convention, the monarch will not refuse her assent to a Bill passed by Parliament and she will act on the advice of her ministers. |
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Purple asters bloom in fall, attracting monarch butterflies and providing one last blast of color when many blooms have faded. |
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In the seventeenth century, the country was ruled by a monarch with a severe speech impediment and a fragile ego. |
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For about five decades, he had been the uncrowned monarch of Tamil film music, working with all the leading music directors and lyricists. |
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Despite enduring a sickly childhood Charles matured into a strong-willed Stuart monarch and an advocate of the divine right of kings. |
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These are decorations awarded by the monarch only to female members of the Royal Family. |
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Perhaps there should be a rule that princes only become monarch if there are no princesses, and that all Governors General be female? |
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It had become conventional for the panegyrist to condemn flattery and, usually in the same breath, to urge the monarch to accept good advice. |
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Now the monarch himself is increasingly alone before the people, and reliant more than ever before on foreign support. |
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After all, in opening the gallery in 1962, she had been the first British monarch to let her subjects give the family silverware to the Antiques Roadshow once-over. |
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While the faithful friends of his cause were assembling, and ready to shed the last drop of blood on his behalf, the unhappy monarch was prevailed upon by the reptile members of his Scottish council. |
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Shortly thereafter, the government proposed conversion from a monarchy to a republic with an elected president replacing the British monarch as chief of state. |
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But he is a traditionalist and is said to have opposed the constitutional changes which reduced the role of the monarch to that of a ceremonial head of state. |
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Denmark is a constitutional monarchy in which succession to the throne is hereditary and the ruling monarch must be a member of the national church. |
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There's no sign that any monarch would have recognised the concept, given that throughout history they'd a habit of claiming dominion over many nations. |
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The rule of male primogeniture, by which the eldest son of a monarch becomes king even if he has an elder sister, will end if a bill published today is passed. |
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My first glimpse of a snow buttercup flowering beneath a thin pane of ice was not unlike my first experience of watching a monarch butterfly emerge from its cocoon. |
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Around a million people are expected to descend on the Dutch capital for a huge street party to celebrate the first new Dutch monarch in 33 years. |
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This is a rare example of a once popular print and presents a traditional representation of the monarch with crown, orb and sceptre, the instruments of monarchical power. |
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After the disintegration of the Carolingian empire, Athelstan, who involved himself with foreign dynasties and politics, was perhaps the most powerful monarch in the West. |
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Juan Carlos is the second European monarch to abdicate in just over a year. |
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As a royal heirloom, the brooch is technically owned by the Queen, and was returned to the monarch after Diana's death. |
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They accepted, in other words, that the king of France was an absolute monarch who shared his power with nobody, and was only answerable to God for its exercise. |
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He faced the prospect of losing his position, and might be motivated to ensure his long-term power and status beyond the point of the rightful monarch coming of age. |
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Being monarch brings with it overwhelming duties and obligations, not the least of which is that your people must find you worthy enough to bow and curtsy to. |
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One of the weaknesses of a hereditary monarchy is the possibility of having a monarch who is too young to rule, requiring a regency or protectorate to govern in his name. |
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For a monarch caterpillar, ingesting milkweed poisons is not a surefire defense against a predatory stinkbug, which harpoons its victims before sucking up the body fluids. |
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Each coin has one side smoothed down flat and in theory this should be the tails side of the coin since it is illegal to deface an image of the monarch in England. |
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The Tory revolutionary was so punctilious and respectful of her monarch it was almost embarrassing. |
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Versailles was the working interface between the divinely appointed monarch and his elite subjects, and kept them occupied, under the king's eye and out of mischief. |
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He was the first of a line of hereditary prime ministers who, although they kept the monarch as a ceremonial figurehead, ruled the country themselves for more than a century. |
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None exemplified the younger spirit more than Eliud Kipchoge who in a near blanket finish in the 5000m edged Hicham El Guerrouj, the monarch of the metric mile. |
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I need information on the milkweed that attracts monarch butterflies. |
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The Bill of Rights of 1689 established that only a Protestant could become king and a new coronation oath required the monarch to uphold Protestantism. |
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Frey predicts that butterfly watchers in the rest of the country may be able to see more monarch drinking binges in hot spells and during mating periods. |
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Recently the French treated her virtually as their own monarch while simultaneously jeering their own president. |
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Pro that she is the monarch didn't get distracted but carried right on with her speech. |
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Ministers will be put under pressure to scrap the law that bans the eldest daughter of a British monarch from becoming queen if she has a brother. |
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Conservationists and others concerned about the fate of the monarch butterfly may be heartened by a recent survey of milkweed distribution in the major U.S. corn-growing area. |
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During its final growth stage, the constantly feeding larva of a monarch butterfly consumes an amazing 2.25 times its own weight in milkweed per day. |
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The series follows the life of the musketeers as they train at the musketeer's academy in order to protect France's Sun King, who became monarch at the age of five. |
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In olden days and on the old continent, criticizing the monarch might limit your life chances. |
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Serbia did not survive the war, but King Peter did, emerging in 1918 as monarch of the new kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, soon to be Yugoslavia. |
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Yet, far from panicking over this influx, the Jordanian monarch may actually have turned it to an advantage. |
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The dukedom of Cornwall can only be held by the oldest living son of the monarch who is also heir apparent. |
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In recent decades it has become the tradition for the monarch to abdicate. |
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By the middle of the 17th century, under their monarch King Houegbadja, the first palace of the Dahomey kingdom was built at Abomey. |
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Put simply, the 91-year-old consort of the monarch is not looking well. |
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Swans were the table preserve of the monarch but Liz graciously granted two City livery companies the right to eat a few. |
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The painting itself measures 9ft by 11ft and depicts the monarch in the Sacrarium of Westminster Abbey, also known as the Coronation Theatre. |
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Webbs soon earned the highest seal of approval by being appointed seedsmen to Queen Victoria and every monarch since. |
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The earliest monarch butterflies arose in North America and were migratory. |
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Recent studies have shown that the monarch butterfly population has suffered a loss of around 90 percent in the past two decades. |
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As a result of these factors, the world's monarch butterfly population now fits into an area smaller than four football fields. |
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The Council is appointed by the monarch in accordance with the will of the Storting, to which the Council is responsible. |
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Meanwhile, a King collage of a house has the structure sitting under a roof of monarch butterfly wings. |
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The last Earl of Wessex was the luckless King Harold, the cyclopic monarch who came out second best at the Battle of Hastings. |
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He said no goonda raj or so called monarch in the name of democracy would be allowed to flourish. |
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The British Prime Minister isn't a monarch by any stretch of the imagination. |
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England and Scotland now shared the same monarch under what was known as a union of the crowns. |
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Before the union England was ruled by its monarch and the Parliament of England. |
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The Administrator is officially appointed by the British monarch on the advice of the Ministry of Defence. |
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In this case, the prime minister serves at the pleasure of the monarch and holds no more power than the monarch allows. |
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Similarly, the monarch will perform ceremonial duties in the Commonwealth realms to mark historically significant events. |
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When money needed to be raised, the treasure could be pawned by the monarch. |
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No monarch has since withheld royal assent on a bill passed by the British parliament. |
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The monarch promulgates the law, meaning that he or she formally orders that the law be officially published and executed. |
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The constitution of Jordan grants its monarch the right to withhold assent to laws passed by its parliament. |
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If the monarch fails to act within six months of the bill being presented to him, it becomes law without his signature. |
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The Parliament of New Zealand is made up of the monarch and the unicameral House of Representatives. |
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This originally meant that the British monarch decided when to dissolve Parliament. |
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The British monarch was originally to have been represented in both Northern Ireland and Southern Ireland by the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. |
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The position of the Danish monarch as the head of the military is deeply rooted in tradition. |
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This initial royal favour has continued, and since then every monarch has been the patron of the Society. |
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When in Scotland, the British monarch simply attends church, as opposed to her role in the English Church as Supreme Governor. |
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It claimed that in 2011 at Windsor Castle, while having lunch with Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, the monarch criticised the union. |
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Traditionally and in most cases, the post of the monarch is inherited, but there are also elective monarchies where the monarch is elected. |
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Liechtenstein has a constitutional monarch as Head of State, and an elected parliament which enacts the law. |
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The monarch of England held the crowns of England and Ireland in a personal union. |
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As a Dominion, the Free State was a constitutional monarchy with the British monarch as its head of state. |
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From 1921 until 1973, the British monarch was officially represented in Northern Ireland by the Governor of Northern Ireland. |
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Scottish communities granted Royal Burgh status by the monarch guarded the honour jealously and with vigour. |
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The name indicated that they stood so close to the monarch as to be brushed by his sleeve. |
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James IV was killed in the battle, becoming the last monarch from the island of Britain to suffer such a death. |
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She also did not ratify the treaty because it officially declared Elizabeth the monarch of England, a position Mary desired for herself. |
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Since Queen Victoria's time, the reigning monarch has been the patron of the Braemar Royal Highland Society. |
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These arms are used by the Queen in her official capacity as monarch of the United Kingdom. |
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However, when used by the government and not by the monarch personally, the coat of arms is often represented without the helm. |
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The monarch grant Royal Warrants to select businesses and tradespeople which supply the Royal Household with goods or services. |
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When the monarch is not in residence the Union Flag, or in Scotland the ancient Royal Standard of Scotland, is flown. |
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Queens consort and the wives of sons of the monarch also have their own personal coat of arms. |
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Prior to the establishment of Parliament, the monarch ruled absolutely by the issuing of his personal written orders, open or closed. |
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They frequently appear in this uniform, when accompanying the monarch in royal ceremonies whilst she is in Scotland. |
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The Prince of Wales is the heir apparent of the monarch of the United Kingdom. |
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Henry's coronation, on 13 October 1399, may have marked the first time since the Norman Conquest when the monarch made an address in English. |
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Henry's first major problem as monarch was what to do with the deposed Richard. |
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Charles has held titles throughout his life, as the grandson of the monarch, the son of the monarch and in his own right. |
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Since that Act came into force in May 2007, however, the First Minister is appointed by the monarch and represents the Crown in Wales. |
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A royal charter is a formal document issued by a monarch as letters patent, granting a right or power to an individual or a body corporate. |
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Today, Sweden is a constitutional monarchy and parliamentary democracy, with a monarch as head of state, like its neighbour Norway. |
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Joseph Bonaparte was seen as a puppet monarch and was regarded with scorn by the Spanish. |
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Since the beginning, the new monarch was forced to deal with constant Viking raids, with little success. |
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Soon the new monarch showed his ambition to conquer Lotharingia, the main objective of all the monarchs of West Francia since Charles the Bald. |
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The meetings were a show of strength on behalf of the monarch and a way for him to retain loyalty among his troops. |
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John was incensed about what he perceived as an abrogation of his customary right as monarch to influence the election. |
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Sometimes called The Virgin Queen, Gloriana or Good Queen Bess, Elizabeth was the last monarch of the House of Tudor. |
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Edward spent large amounts on expensive status symbols to show off his power and wealth as legitimate monarch of England. |
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Canada had established complete sovereignty as an independent country, although the Queen retained her role as monarch of Canada. |
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The sovereign is Queen Elizabeth II, who is also monarch of 15 other Commonwealth countries and each of Canada's 10 provinces. |
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The governor general or monarch may, though, in certain crisis situations exercise their power without ministerial advice. |
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This was the first and only time in history that a Moroccan monarch had married away from his capital. |
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If the monarch has no male children, the rights and responsibilities of the duchy belong to The Crown and there is no duke. |
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Until 1689, mutiny was regulated in England by Articles of War instituted by the monarch and effective only in a period of war. |
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Since 1714, Britain had shared a monarch with Hanover in Germany, but under Salic law women were excluded from the Hanoverian succession. |
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The monarch would also be subject to both natural and divine law, as well, and also be subject to the Church in matters of religion. |
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This usually means that the heir to the throne is known well in advance of becoming monarch to ensure a smooth succession. |
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Primogeniture, in which the eldest child of the monarch is first in line to become monarch, is the most common system in hereditary monarchy. |
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In complex cases, this can mean that there are closer blood relatives to the deceased monarch than the next in line according to primogeniture. |
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This is the only instance in the world where the monarch of a state is elected by the citizens of a different country. |
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In this system, the monarch chooses the successor, who is always his relative. |
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Currently there are 44 nations in the world with a monarch as head of state. |
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In Historia Gothorum, the Visigoth Suinthila appears as the first monarch where Hispania is dealt with as a Gothic nation. |
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Usually privileges were granted or recognised by the monarch in association with possession of a specific title, office or estate. |
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This ensured for the first time that all the realms of what is now Spain would be united by one monarch under one nascent Spanish crown. |
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The Danish monarchy was also officially elective, although the eldest son of the reigning monarch was usually elected. |
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Consequently, the church was favorably inclined to reach an agreement with the new monarch upon his accession to the throne. |
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Isabella had proven herself to be a fighter and tough monarch from the start. |
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Isabella also saw the need to provide a personal relationship between herself as the monarch and her subjects. |
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The crown agreed to pay a sum of money as a concession from monarch to subject. |
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In the year of 1455, having graduated with honors, he was awarded a study fellowship from the monarch himself. |
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Sri Vikrama Rajasinha, the last native monarch of Sri Lanka, was exiled to India. |
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The Sakdina system was similar to, but not the same as feudalism, under which the monarch does not own the land. |
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Although New Spain was a dependency of Spain, it was a kingdom not a colony, subject to the presiding monarch on the Iberian Peninsula. |
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Pizarro, meanwhile, continued receiving the same accounts of a powerful monarch who ruled over the land they were exploring. |
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With Bruges, the city led two revolts against Maximilian of Austria, the first monarch of the House of Habsburg to rule Flanders. |
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He or she is a member of the parliament and is elected by its deputies and then formally named by the monarch of Spain. |
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Jamaica is a Commonwealth realm, with Queen Elizabeth II as its monarch and head of state. |
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Notable North American fauna include the bison, black bear, prairie dog, turkey, pronghorn, raccoon, coyote and monarch butterfly. |
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They also endorse an Episcopal polity, appointing the English monarch as Supreme Governor of the Church of England to replace the Bishop of Rome. |
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Coke rejected this, stating that while the monarch was not subject to any individual, he was subject to the law. |
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The monarch was subject to God, to the law of the land, and to his feudal court. |
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Furthermore, in 1698 parliament created the Civil List, a financial arrangement that left the monarch reliant on parliament for income. |
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At this point Sobhuza II had ruled Swaziland for 83 years, making him the longest lived monarch in history. |
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The Life Peerages Act 1958 established the modern standards for the creation of life peers by the monarch of the United Kingdom. |
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Receiving government advice does not necessarily bind the monarch into executing the advice, except where prescribed by the constitution. |
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However, the British monarch often undertakes visits and speaks to the devolved bodies in a less official capacity. |
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Formally, the motion that follows the speech merely calls on parliament to thank the monarch or viceroy via an Address in Reply. |
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The monarch and his retinue leave and the joint session is declared to be closed. |
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The monarch returns to the palace in the coach and, along with other members of the royal house, appears on the palace balcony. |
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The monarch delivers the speech before parliamentarians in the chamber of the Storting. |
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The monarch is handed the speech by the prime minister who delivers the speech while all remain standing. |
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After the monarch and his retinue have left, the meeting is adjourned and the speech and report are first debated at the subsequent sitting. |
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Prior to 1907, the monarch and his sons present would also wear ceremonial robes and their crowns. |
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After the abolition of the old opening of state, the opening is now held in the Riksdag but in the presence of the monarch and his family. |
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The monarch gives a speech but the speech does not focus or direct government policy. |
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In Thailand, the monarch makes a speech at a joint session in the Ananta Samakhom Throne Hall, advising the National Assembly in their work. |
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Prior to 1918, it was the Cabinet who collectively sought permission from the monarch in order for Parliament to be dissolved. |
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Adhering unwaveringly to legal and institutional arrangements, the average monarch is numinous. |
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The British Poet Laureate is an honorary position appointed by the monarch of the United Kingdom on the advice of the Prime Minister. |
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The islands and Jutland together constituted the kingdom, whereas the monarch held the duchies in personal union with the kingdom. |
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But recipients were expected to give works to the monarch, at New Year or on their birthday. |
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It asserts that a monarch is subject to no earthly authority, deriving the right to rule directly from the will of God. |
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It asserts that a monarch is subject to no earthly authority, deriving his right to rule directly from the will of God. |
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A coronation anthem is a piece of choral music written to accompany the coronation of a monarch. |
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George personally accompanied them, leading them to victory, thus becoming the last British monarch to lead troops into battle. |
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Following that, the monarch is anointed with holy oil, invested with regalia, and crowned, before receiving the homage of his or her subjects. |
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A monarch, however, accedes to the throne the moment their predecessor dies, not when they are crowned. |
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Once this prayer is finished, the monarch rises and sits again in the Coronation Chair. |
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In addition to the oath, the monarch may take what is known as the Accession Declaration if he or she has not yet made it. |
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After being anointed, the monarch rises from the Coronation Chair and kneels down at a faldstool placed in front of it. |
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In contrast to the history and tradition which surround the regalia, it is customary for most coronation robes to be newly made for each monarch. |
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During the appearance, the monarch wears the Imperial State Crown and, if there is one, the queen consort wears her consort crown. |
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A herald would then make a proclamation of the readiness of the champion to fight anyone denying the monarch. |
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In another first this was the first rugby league match to be attended by the reigning monarch, King George VI, who presented the trophy. |
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Early thinkers believe sovereignty should be vested in the hands of a single person, a monarch. |
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They reigned together until her death on 28 December 1694, after which William ruled as sole monarch. |
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Despite his conversion to Anglicanism, William's popularity plummeted during his reign as a sole monarch. |
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Sixteen Commonwealth realms voluntarily continue to share the British monarch, Queen Elizabeth II, as their head of state. |
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Prime Ministers of Commonwealth countries which retain the British monarch as their sovereign continue to be sworn as Privy Counsellors. |
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The Queen is also the monarch of 16 members of the Commonwealth, known as Commonwealth realms. |
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The monarch is regarded as a separate legal personality in each realm, even though the same person is monarch of each realm. |
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However, when the monarch dies, the successor to the crown does not automatically become Head of the Commonwealth. |
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The British monarch, currently Queen Elizabeth II, is the chief of state of the United Kingdom. |
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Historically, the British monarch was the sole source of executive powers in the government. |
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A government is not formed by a vote of the House of Commons, it is a commission from the monarch. |
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Queen Victoria was the last monarch to exercise real personal power but this diminished over the course of her reign. |
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Today, the role of the British monarch is by convention effectively ceremonial. |
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With few exceptions, the monarch is bound by constitutional convention to act on the advice of the Government. |
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In nearly all cases, the monarch is still the nominal chief executive, but is bound by convention to act on the advice of the Cabinet. |
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In both the United Kingdom and elsewhere, a frequent debate centers on when it is appropriate for a monarch to use his or her political powers. |
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For instance, the monarch of the United Kingdom can theoretically exercise an absolute veto over legislation by withholding royal assent. |
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In the Kingdom of Great Britain, the monarch, in theory, chaired cabinet and chose ministers. |
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During the 13th and 14th centuries, the kings began to call Knights of the Shire to meet when the monarch saw it as necessary. |
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From Edward's reign onwards, the authority of the English Parliament would depend on the strength or weakness of the incumbent monarch. |
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From 1265 onwards, when the monarch needed to raise money through taxes, it was usual for knights and burgesses to be summoned too. |
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During the reign of the next monarch, Richard II, the Commons once again began to impeach errant ministers of the Crown. |
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Consequently, the monarch would have to make his or her feelings known to Parliament through his or her supporters in both houses. |
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When the House of Commons was unhappy it was the Speaker who had to deliver this news to the monarch. |
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Bills supported by the monarch were often proposed by members of the Privy Council who sat in parliament. |
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When the last Tudor monarch, Elizabeth I, died in 1603, King James VI of Scotland came to power as King James I, founding the Stuart monarchy. |
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The palace is owned by the monarch in right of the Crown and for ceremonial purposes, retains its original status as a royal residence. |
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It was designed for the use of the monarch, who travels from Buckingham Palace by carriage every year for the State Opening of Parliament. |
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Black Rod has to strike the door three times with a staff, to be admitted and issue the summons from the monarch to the MPs to attend. |
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This custom has its roots in the Speaker's original function of communicating the Commons' opinions to the monarch. |
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Historically the ultimate source of all justice in England was the monarch. |
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The right to nominate and select high sheriffs in Lancashire is vested in the monarch in right of the Duchy of Lancaster. |
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The monarch and his or her immediate family undertake various official, ceremonial, diplomatic and representational duties. |
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The United Kingdom and fifteen other Commonwealth monarchies that share the same person as their monarch are called Commonwealth realms. |
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The monarch has a similar relationship with the devolved governments of Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. |
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The monarch alone appoints members of the Order of the Garter, the Order of the Thistle, the Royal Victorian Order and the Order of Merit. |
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The reigns of most of the Angevin monarchs were marred by civil strife and conflicts between the monarch and the nobility. |
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The next monarch, Edward Longshanks, was far more successful in maintaining royal power and responsible for the conquest of Wales. |
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The monarch became separately monarch of the United Kingdom, monarch of Canada, monarch of Australia, and so forth. |
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The independent states within the Commonwealth would share the same monarch in a relationship likened to a personal union. |
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Member states of the Commonwealth that share the same person as monarch are known as Commonwealth realms. |
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The monarch is usually crowned in Westminster Abbey, normally by the Archbishop of Canterbury. |
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The last monarch involuntarily removed from power was James VII and II, who fled into exile in 1688 during the Glorious Revolution. |
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The Regency Acts allow for regencies in the event of a monarch who is a minor or who is physically or mentally incapacitated. |
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The monarch stays at Holyrood for at least one week each year, and when visiting Scotland on state occasions. |
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In Scotland, the monarch uses an alternative form of the arms in which quarters I and IV represent Scotland, II England, and III Ireland. |
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The park opened in 1886 and was named Queen's Park in honour of the reigning monarch, who celebrated her Golden Jubilee the following year. |
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Tancred, King of Sicily, the last Norman monarch, made Malta a fief of the kingdom and installed a count of Malta. |
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Every subsequent British monarch until Edward VII in the twentieth century would take a German spouse. |
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The 1956 Constitution ended dominion status with Queen Elizabeth II as the last monarch of the country. |
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British coronations are held in Westminster Abbey, a royal peculiar under the direct jurisdiction of the monarch. |
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In the past, degrees have also been directly issued by authority of the monarch or by a bishop, rather than any educational institution. |
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In the absence of the monarch, the Constable of the Tower is in charge of the castle. |
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A common modern definition of a republic is a government having a head of state who is not a monarch. |
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Early states were characterized by highly stratified societies, with a privileged and wealthy ruling class that was subordinate to a monarch. |
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The monarch is not answerable for his or her actions, and the monarch's person is sacrosanct. |
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The British monarch, currently Queen Elizabeth II, is the head of state and the sovereign, but not the head of government. |
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The monarch takes little direct part in governing the country, and remains neutral in political affairs. |
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In each Crown dependency, the monarch is represented by a Lieutenant Governor, but this post is largely ceremonial. |
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Elizabeth II reigns over the Channel Islands directly, and not by virtue of her role as monarch of the United Kingdom. |
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These monarchies are united by the personal union of their monarch, but they are separate as states. |
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The monarch is the living embodiment of the Crown and, as such, is regarded as the personification of the state. |
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Some colonies became Commonwealth realms, retaining the British monarch as their own head of state. |
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The head of state in the overseas territories is the British monarch, Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom. |
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Each overseas territory has been granted its own flag and coat of arms by the British monarch. |
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Safe conduct documents, usually notes signed by the monarch, were issued to foreigners as well as English subjects in medieval times. |
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The Secretary of State signed all passports in place of the monarch from 1794 onwards, at which time formal records started to be kept. |
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In October 2016, she became the longest currently reigning monarch and head of state following the death of King Bhumibol Adulyadej of Thailand. |
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