Quote:
Originally Posted by Breha
Just a fig leaf.
Modern monarchies are just often costly theatrical shows.
Either your estore a serious monarchy or you keep a republic.
In any case, be advised that even republics have become chaste like systems: the italian President of the Repubblica costs the italians much more than the Queen of England costs Britain.
He has a staff of first quality cooks working for him daily, also he inhabits an old roman nobility palace that belonged first to the Vatican State and then it was the seat of the italian kings ... at a lower cost.
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There is an interesting historical note here to add: the modern-day office of President was in fact invented by the USA, after their Indpendence War. They were the first ones even to use the very word ("the one who presides"). It was later that other modern republics copied the model and adopted the word (the French Revolution used the word
consul, if I am not mistaken).
If you look at the very vast powers that an American President has (of course, today only nominally, since corporations and lobbies are those that really decide on everything), he can almost be considered a democratically elected king, in a way. Maybe it was the original idea: maybe their Founding Fathers were copying their mother-country Britain, which had, since the Glorious Revolution (1688) a somehow "constitutional monarchy" (albeit without the written constitution in a proper sense of word), whereby king's power was limited by the Parliament. American idea went step further: no more king, but a man who will be elected to be a
primus inter pares, which was grounded on their premise of equality, so characteristic of modernity.
Later on, different models of republican government arose, in some of which president had very big powers (presidential system), has limited powers (half-presidential system) or is reduced almost to a merely ceremonial personality (the purely parliamentary system, like in Italy, Germany, Hunagary, in some countries the president is being elected by the parliament).
But the basic idea of president who is, in a way, embodiment of the national sovereignity, symbol of the state (though the distinction is usually being made between his persona and the function, by saying that it is his function that represents the state and not his person as such) has remained, and it bears some resemblance to the monarchical conception.