Elective monarchy

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An elective monarchy is a monarchy whose reigning king or queen is elected in some form.


Contents

Some examples from History

In the ancient Kingdom of Rome, the kings were elected by the Assemblies. The Holy Roman Empire was another example of this, in which the Emperor was elected by a small council of nobles called prince-electors.

In Gaelic Order Ireland, a Rí, or king was elected to rule clan lands both large and small. While Rí (king) is used regardless of the size of the territory, in English, the lesser rulers are more commonly called chieftains. The Ard Rí Éireann, or High King of Ireland was also elected from among the provincial kings.

A system of elective monarchy existed in Anglo-Saxon England (see Witenagemot), Visigothic Spain, and medieval Scandinavia.

In Poland, after the death of the last Piast in 1370, Polish Kings were initially elected by a small council; gradually, this privilege was granted to all members of the szlachta (Polish nobility). Kings of Poland during the times of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (1569-1795) were elected by gatherings of crowds of nobles at a field in Wola, today the neighbourhood of Warsaw. Every one of an estimated 500,000 nobles could potentially have participated in such elections in person. During the election period, the function of the king was perfomed by an interrex (usually in person of the primate of Poland). This unique Polish election was termed the free election (wolna elekcja).

At the start of the 20th century, first monarchs of several newly-independent nations were elected by parliaments: Norway is the prime example. Previously, following precedent set in newly-independent Greece, new nations without a well-established hereditary royal family, often chose their own monarchs from among the established royal families of Europe rather than elevate a member of the local power establishment, in the hope that a stable hereditary monarchy would eventually emerge from the process. The now-deposed royal families of Greece, Bulgaria and Romania were originally appointed in this manner.

Other monarchs, such as the Shah of Iran, have been required to undergo a parliamentary vote of approval before being allowed to ascend to the throne.

When it was usual

Elective succession has been, in its various forms, the most common official system of succession in monarchies. Arguably the world's oldest method to determine succession was that for the military leader who ascended to power through some sort of election. Elective monarchies were once common, although usually only a very small portion of the population was eligible to vote.

Most kingdoms were officially elective long into historic times, though the candidates were usually, or always only from the family of the deceased monarch. Hereditary systems came into being mostly in order to avoid the instability and discontinuity which is inherent in elective systems, where a powerful leader might use violence, raise a coup d'etat or otherwise manipulate the election.

As the impact of this archaic democracy diminished, many elected monarchies eventually introduced hereditary succession, guaranteeing that the title and office stayed within the royal family. Today, almost all monarchies are hereditary monarchies in which the monarchs come from one royal family with the office of sovereign being passed from one family member to another upon the death or abdication of the incumbent.

In monarchical government, the desire to ensure continuity has resulted in having some formalized order of succession. interregna and also, for example, disputed elections have seriously effected the efficacy of the monarchical form of government, which more or less precise succession laws try to ameliorate with varying degrees of success.

Female rulers have almost never succeeded in an elective monarchy. Hereditary monarchy seem to give females more opportunities than elective monarchy.


Current

Currently, the world's only true "elective monarchies" are:

Arguably, the transfer of power in many communist states as established by Joseph Stalin shows some parallels with elective monarchies: successors are chosen from within a leadership cadre of the Communist Party, adjudged "throne-worthy" by the Politburo, approved by the Central Committee and acclaimed in open assembly by an elected elite. However, in the majority of cases there were no blood ties between a leader and his successor. Heirs were chosen according to political criteria, not family relations. One exception to this rule is North Korea, where Kim Jong-il succeeded his father Kim Il Sung as leader.

Many non-communist republics also show similarities to monarchies. The concept of a president for life, which is common in dictatorships can be regarded as a sort of defacto monarchy, and thus a defacto elected monarchy if the monarch/dictator is appointed, rather than a hereditary heir.

Elective monarchies in fiction

In the prequel trilogy of Star Wars films, there is a planet named Naboo which is an elected monarchy. Padmé Amidala, one of the series' main characters, was elected queen at the age of fourteen.

In the Lord Darcy universe, set out in a series of works by Randall Garrett, the Kings of the Anglo-French Empire are elected by Parliament from a small group of eligible members of the Royal Plantagenet family. See Michael Kurland's additions to the canon.

See also

es:Monarquía electiva pt:Monarquia eletiva