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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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Case Study Undergraduate
Henry of Huntingdon Kings Are Weak
Kings are weak: this is the impression one gets from reading the twelfth century English historian Henry of Huntingdon, particularly in his astonishing summary of the troubled reign of King Stephen -- for which, Diana…
Essay Masters
Shakespeare Final Opportunity for Reflection and Writing
This quote comes from Shakespeare's Hamlet. Francisco and Bernardo are two guards standing watch in the middle of the night at the castle Elsinore. This is the second line of the play, spoken by Francisco in response to…
Research Paper Doctorate
America Was a Wonderful Experiment in Freedom
America was a wonderful experiment in freedom and democracy which had never before been attempted by any nation. Nations either tried to give power to the people in order to prevent monarchies from rising to despotic…
Thesis Undergraduate
Propaganda in the Russian Revolution and Civil War
All parties involved in the Russian Revolution and civil war used black, gray and white (open) propaganda constantly during this period to rally supporters to their cause and denounce enemies, including the Germans,…
Paper Doctorate
French civilization and cultural history
This paper contains the answers to 35 multiple choice questions and then it contains some short paragraph answers to 8 questions. These questions were extensive in nature and the customer asked for three pages, so there isn't much detail to any of the answers, which are about French history and art.
Research Paper Doctorate
R.R. Tolkien: The Lord of the Rings
The Lord of the Rings forms a significant part of the substantial canon of works written by the English author and academic J.R.R. Tolkien (1892-1973) set in his invented world of Middle Earth.
Paper Undergraduate
American global hegemony and international influence
To state that there are no fundamental differences between international politics in 1900-45 and afterwards would be to carry the argument to an extreme, even though the continuities are greater than the discontinuities. Above all else, the liberal, democratic states and empires in the U.S. and Western Europe were highly interventionist and aggressive in the developing world and Global South long before World War II, and this did not change in the Cold War and post-Cold War eras. Even governments that were democratically elected were sometimes overthrown and replaced by more pliable regimes, such as the ‘friendly' dictators of Central America and the Caribbean. At the same time, though, there has also been far more harmony and cooperation between the Great Powers since 1945 than in the previous fifty years, especially through NATO and the European Union. America's alliance with Japan, Britain, France and Germany has survived various stresses and strains over the decades, and even the collapse of the Soviet Union, and this requires an explanation. None of the imperial powers has fought a major war since the invention of nuclear weapons, even though they have intervened frequently against the non-nuclear states of the developing world. Perhaps this alliance is explained by political and ideological affinities, as liberals maintain, or by cultural affinities as opposed to Muslim and Orthodox civilizations, as Samuel Huntington explains—although admittedly Japan is left as quite an outlier here.
Paper Doctorate
Historiographical Debate Into the Effects of Santa Anna\'s Reign in Mexico
In his self-described revisionist biography Santa Anna of Mexico (2007), Will Fowler has courageously taken up the defense of the Mexico caudillo, fully aware that he is all but universally reviled in the historiography of the United States and Mexico. From the beginning, he made his intention clear to vindicate the reputation of a dictator whose "vilification has been so thorough and effective that the process of deconstructing the numerous lies that have been told and retold" is almost impossible. He is the tyrant that "all Mexicans (and Texans) love to hate", blamed for losing the Mexican War for a "fistful of dollars" and selling another large part of it for personal gain with the Gadsden Purchase in 1853. Timothy J. Henderson asserted that "Mexicans ever since have blamed him for many, if not most, of the misfortunes their country suffered." He had a great talent for exploiting and manipulating political divisions but none for governing a country. In U.S. history and popular culture, he has always been portrayed as a corrupt megalomaniac, the ‘Napoleon of the West', responsible for the massacres at the Alamo and Goliad. As John Chasteen and James Wood put it, even his autobiography was an "extraordinary work of self-dramatization" by a dictator who put on a show of being a "vulnerable, introspective protagonist" but was in reality a power-hungry tyrant with "unmitigated vanity" and "obvious self-absorption."
Research Paper Doctorate
Was the Russian Revolution of 1917 Inevitable?
This work will first address the idea that the Russian Revolution of 1917 was inevitable given the charged events that had occurred in and around Russia preceding the event and then it will go on to look at the issue…
Paper Undergraduate
Primary Source Analysis Two
The American response to the British rule under King George III was not swayed by traditional pieties toward monarchy. For example, the official portrait of George III as reflected in the 1770 woodcut illustration from…