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The death of Empress Zhangsum and the revolt of Prince ChengqianLee, Sau-kwan., 李秀君. January 1995 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Chinese Historical Studies / Master / Master of Arts
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The issue of imperial succession and factional politics in Late Ming China (1586-1621)Leung, Siu-kit., 梁紹傑 January 1994 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Chinese / Doctoral / Doctor of Philosophy
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Sources of succession disputes in respect of ubukhosi / chieftainship with regard to the Cele and Amangwane chiefdoms, KwaZulu-NatalNgubane, Mlungisi January 2005 (has links)
Submitted to the Faculty of Arts in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts in the Department of Anthropology and Development Studies at the University of Zululand, 2005. / This dissertation seeks to take up the challenge of contributing to such an understanding of chieftainship by looking at the chieftainship succession disputes in the Cele clan of Phungashe and AmaNgwane clan of Bergville in the Province of KwaZulu -Natal, South Africa. The incorporation of indigenous political structures within the wider South African state has a long history, starting from the movements of people from one area to the other, the formation of smaller chiefdoms and bigger chiefdoms and to the rise of the Zulu kingdom. The entire process of Zulu state formation has been through a series of succession disputes which exist among many clans even nowadays.
Also, the role of successions runs from the arrangements of indirect rule at the latter part of the nineteen-century to the pivotal role played by traditional leaders in the homeland administration and after 1994, the recognition of the institution, status and role of traditional leadership in the country's first democratic constitution and the enactment of the Traditional Leadership and Governance Framework Act. No. 41 of 2003 which makes provision for the establishment of the Chieftainship Dispute Resolution Commission.
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The imperial succession in Tang China, 618-762Cha, Louis January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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Oath of the golden casket: the role of Chao P'u in the imperial succession of the early SungTen Harmsel, Wayne Alan January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
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1603 - the wonderfull yeare : literary responses to the accession of James ILazar, Jessica January 2016 (has links)
'1603. The Wonderfull Yeare: Literary Responses to the Accession of James I' argues that when James VI of Scotland was proclaimed James I of England on 24 March 1603, the printed verse pamphlets that greeted his accession presented him as a figure of hope and promise for the Englishmen now subject to his rule. However, they also demonstrate hitherto unrecognized concerns that James might also be a figure of threat to the very national strength, Protestant progress, and moral, cultural, and political renaissance for which he was being touted as harbinger and champion. The poems therefore transform an insecure and undetermined figure into a symbol that represents (and enables) promise and hope. PART ONE explores how the poetry seeks to address the uncertainty and fragility, both social and political, that arose from popular fears about the accession; and to dissuade dissenters (and make secure and unassailable the throne, and thereby the state of England), through celebration of the new monarch. Perceived legal, political, and dynastic concerns were exacerbated by concrete difficulties when James was proclaimed King of England, and so he was more than fifty miles from the English border (only reaching London for the first time in early May); his absence was further prolonged by plague; this plague also deferred the immediate sanction of public festivities that should have accompanied his July coronation. An English Jacobean icon was configured in literature to accommodate and address these threats and hazards, neutralizing fears surrounding the idea of the accession with confidence in the idea of the king it brings. In the texts that respond to James's accession we observe his appropriation as a figure of hope and promise. PART 2 looks to more personal hopes and fears, albeit within the national context. It considers how the poets engage with the King's own established iconography and intentions, publicly available to view within his own writing - and especially poetry. The image that is already established there has the potential either to obstruct or to enable national and personal causes and ambitions (whether political, religious, or cultural). The poetry therefore develops strategies to negotiate with and so appropriate the King's own self-fashioning.
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Succession to the caliphate in early Islamal-Kathiri, Faisal H. 01 January 1980 (has links)
This thesis will examine the succession to the Islamic Caliphate as it existed during the time of the orthodox Caliphs (632-661).
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William Cecil and the British succession crisis of the 1560sAlford, Stephen January 1997 (has links)
'William Cecil and the British succession crisis of the 1560s' reconsiders the nature of the early Elizabethan polity and Cecil's place in it. Conventional historiography maintains that as principal secretary Cecil was a moderate, cautious, and religiously neutral politician, content to follow Elizabeth I's direction in policy. More recently, Professors Patrick Collinson and John Guy have challenged this interpretation of the Elizabethan polity. Based on a thorough survey of the archives, my thesis explores Cecil's political creed in the 1560s. Three years of research have helped to paint a radically different picture of Cecil to the one traditionally represented: he was a councillor prepared to redefine his relationship with a monarch who refused to abide by the rules of monarchy and select a successor. The eight chapters of the thesis blend two complementary themes. First, that Elizabethan in the 1560s experienced a British succession crisis and not, as Professor Collinson has maintained, an English domestic succession crisis. And second, that the political situation in Britain and Europe - the determination of the continental catholic powers to use Mary Stuart's claim to the English throne as a weapon against protestant England - had a profound impact on the mentality of protestant Englishmen and debate in England. It persuaded Cecil to press for a pre-emptive strike against the French in Scotland (chapter two), which he defended by appealing to the feudal-imperial power of the English monarch; he used the same argument to justify the 'first trial' of Mary Stuart in 1568 (chapter seven). In this British context, Elizabeth's refusal to secure England's future led to parliamentary action in 1563 and a Cecil plan for interregnum by privy council in the event of Elizabeth's death, twenty-two years before its re-emergence in 1585 (chapter four). The régime could not find a diplomatic solution to the marriage between Mary and Lord Darnley in 1565 (chapter five): parliament debated the succession in 1566 and Cecil disobeyed the queen by pressing for a settlement (chapter six). Cecil's approach to the crisis was innovative, and his political creed is profoundly important to any assessment of politics in Elizabeth I's reign.
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Balancing monarchical and human rights in Southern Africa: experiences from the kingdom of EswatiniNcube, Gamelihle 20 September 2019 (has links)
MAIR / Department of Development Studies / The study investigates the issue of human rights on whether there can be a balance or
relationship between monarchical rights and human rights in Southern Africa, paying
particular attention to the small monarchical kingdom of Eswatini. The study seeks to
examine how traditional monarchies in the 21st century treats the issue of human rights
bearing in mind the fact that the current global system highly believes in upholding the
fundamental freedoms and rights of the people. As a case study, this study seeks to examine
the major reasons behind the Kingdom of Eswatini’s continued adherence to a monarchical
system and also how the regional and international bodies like the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) and the United Nations (UN) are doing in terms of
addressing the continued violation of human rights in the Kingdom of Eswatini. Qualitative
research methodology will be employed to gather data. The research will contribute to the
African studies discourse, especially on the nexus between monarchical rights and human
rights. Volunteer sampling will be used to get participants for the study and would be drawn
mainly from academics, local chiefs/political leaders and also some of the elderly citizens. / NRF
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La royauté sacrée chez les Mayas de l'époque classique (200-900 ap. J.-C.)Le Fort, Geneviève January 2000 (has links)
Doctorat en philosophie et lettres / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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