Oligarchy Essay

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    The city-states of Ancient Greek provide examples of different types of government structures that, even a few thousand years later, are relevant to governance today. In this assignment a number of them— monarchy, aristocracy, tyranny, oligarchy, and democracy—will be compared and contrasted in their usage within these city-states and briefly looked at, in conclusion, regarding their similarity to today’s world. As K.E. Carr points out in his article “Government in Ancient Greece”, it was Aristotle

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    This assignment is concerning the comparison and contrasting of monarchy, aristocracy, tyranny, oligarchy, and democracy as forms of government in Ancient Greek city-states (UoPeople, 2017). The ancient Greek city-states which I will discuss in this assignment are Athens and Sparta. A monarchy is a type of government that is ruled by a king and a person becomes a king by inheriting the throne because he comes from a loyal clan. A person can become a king because his father was a king or because his

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    Ancient Greece underwent many political changes and therefore experienced various forms of government including monarchy, aristocracy, tyranny, oligarchy and democracy. First, I will be defining each form of government. Then, I will explain how Athens alone was affected by each of these. A monarchy could be compared to a kingdom, in which one person has the sole leadership through birth to the royal family (Cartwright, 2018). Depending on the monarch, political power may have been shared with the

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    Compare and contrast monarchy, aristocracy, tyranny, oligarchy, and democracy as forms of government in Ancient Greek city-states. The government of these two city-states were not much similar because each of them has its own strict and severe policies to which nobody might escape. According to the kings who have governed a set of loyalty decree belong to their assembly must be respected by the population. That is the reason why many type of political hierarchies of government exist in order to

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    were considered citizens. Women were also citizens but it did not give them any rights. They were just citizens for religious and reproductive reasons. Anyone who wasn’t a citizen was either a slave or a foreigner and had no political voice. Greek Oligarchies were run by small circles. They were much more prefered because of how much political stability they had. The polis model was a large reason behind Greece’s wealth and population growth. The increase in population created a higher demand for food

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    In the centuries of rule among the ancient Greek polis, we can see examples of monarchy, aristocracy, tyranny, oligarchy, and democracy. As no city-state is alike, there are differences in how these forms existed from polis to polis. Scholars may still argue over the appropriate label for some of the forms of rule. Martin notes that word aristocracy translates to "rule of the best" whereas we commonly use the term to indicate rule of wealthy families in which power is passed down but not formalized

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    Comparing and contrasting monarchy, aristocracy, tyranny, oligarchy, and democracy as forms of government in Ancient Greek city-states. In time the greek states have seen different forms of government that affected in many ways how those societies functioned. Here we have contrasted 5 of them: Aristocracy as a form of government is ruled by a philosopher king, and has it its base wisdom and reason. Ideal state is composed of 3 casts like parts: ruling cast made of kings, auxiliaries cast made

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    Assignment Unit 2 Compare and contrast monarchy, aristocracy, tyranny, oligarchy, and democracy as forms of government in Ancient Greek city-states. Monarchy: A monarchy is a governmental system that has one person as the permanent head of state until he or she dies or gives up his or her position. Typically, the position of monarch is hereditary, as is the case with famous monarchies in the Greek period. The term is often used to refer to a system of government, in which the monarch such as

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    The Thirty Tyrants was the name for the small group of men who overthrew the Athenian democracy to replace it with their own oligarchy form of government, where the few ruled over the many. While Athenian men had previously enjoyed many rights within their city-state, under the rule of the Thirty Tyrants a council of 500 men were assembled to fulfill government roles, while the rest of the citizens were stripped of their rights. While it was clear toward the end of Socrates’ life when

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    In this essay I will be comparing and contrasting monarchy, aristocracy, tyranny, oligarchy, and democracy in Ancient Greece. Monarchy. There are two types of monarchy one is a constitutional monarchy and the other is absolute monarchy. Absolute monarchs are really all powerful, they are able to pass laws and veto any law passed or suggested by politicians, a constitutional monarch has less power and is really only a figurehead as a head of state. In Ancient Greece there were not really a lot

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