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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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Essay Doctorate
Primary sources: Paine's Common Sense and Chalmers' Plain Truth, 1776
Maintaining historical perspective is a difficult task nearly two-hundred and fifty years after the event but a reading of Thomas Paine's Common Sense (Paine, 1997) and the contradictory pamphlet, Plaint Truth…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Man in the Iron Mask
When author Alexandre Dumas wrote Man in the Iron Mask in 1850, he no doubt had a sense of the curiosity he had sparked amongst readers in his own time, but whether or not he suspected that more than 150 years later…
Essay Doctorate
Sources of violence in the Middle East: religion, nationalism, and ideology
Three major sources of violence in the Middle East are religion, nationalism and ideology. Each source contributes to some extent to the violence, depending on the conflict. Some conflicts are largely religious in…
Paper Undergraduate
Civil war causes and consequences
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Essay Doctorate
Luther / Bossuet/Hobbes Martin Luther\'s Radical Religion
When Martin Luther nailed his infamous 95 Theses to the door of the cathedral in Wittenberg, Germany in 1517, he could hardly have foreseen that the consequences of his declarations would shake the Western world for…
Paper Undergraduate
David Cameron Guiding Legislation: Human
In 2007, David Cameron, Prime Minister and leader of the conservative party, advised the necessity of doing away with the Human Rights Act in favor of a British Bill of Rights citing that the controversial law was ineffective. However, what would be the most appropriate legislation for the country to maintain? The following provides an overview of both the Human Rights Act of 1988 as well as the Bill of Rights, this writer's opinion as to both pieces of legislation, and a review of the scholarly literature with regard to both the British Bill of Rights and the Human Rights Act's impact on the country.
Paper Undergraduate
Sallust Is the Saying, \"What
Is the saying, "What comes around, goes around," correct? Just look at the times described by historian Caius Sallustius Crispus (Sallust) during the last years of the Roman Republic, and it is easy to see -- "History…
Paper Undergraduate
UK Immigration and European Convention
UK Immigration and European Convention on Human Rights (echr)
Research Paper Undergraduate
Origins and Rise of National
Since the Antiquity and until the 20th century human life or human nature has been thought to be restrained by certain imposed rules; from the Egyptians, who thought their human life was a preliminary stage of their…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Social revolution in history
Over the 20th century, a very select number of social scientists became well-known because of their concepts, theories or writings that made a major impact on both their specific field of study as well as a wider…