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"monocracy" Definitions
  1. government by a single person

5 Sentences With "monocracy"

How to use monocracy in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "monocracy" and check conjugation/comparative form for "monocracy". Mastering all the usages of "monocracy" from sentence examples published by news publications.

These include the separation of church and state, respect for civil and human rights and a system of checks and balances through three co-equal branches of government that's designed to prevent aspirations of establishing an authoritarian monocracy.
The disaster of the campaign in Bulgaria in 986 was a blow to the consolidation of the monocracy of Basil II. Soon after the Battle of the Gates of Trajan, the nobility in Asia Minor, led by the general Bardas Phokas, rebelled against Basil II for three years.Mutafchiev, Lectures on Byzantine history, v. ІІ, pp. 272–273; Ostrogorsky, History of the Byzantine state, pp. 397–398 According to the historian Petar Mutafchiev, after the battle Samuil was in control of the Balkans.
Shortly after the Whale was filmed in 1967, the eastern Europe was shaken by the doings around the Prague Spring. So it was a very delicate moment. Of course in the direction of the Bulgarian Communist Party, which forcibly took the monocracy in the country, were aware of the bitting satire of the communist economic model represented in the film. Moreover, the authorities noticed even an allusion between the character of Parushev (Kaloyanchev) and the leader of the Bulgarian communists and President of the Republic of that time Todor Zhivkov.
231–252 from The Third Reich edited by Christian Leitz, London: Blackwill, 1999 pp. 246–247 The Israeli historian Otto Dov Kulka has praised the concept of "working towards the Führer" as the best way of understanding how the Holocaust occurred, combining the best features and avoiding the weaknesses of both the "functionalist" and "intentionalist" methods. Thus, for Kershaw Nazi Germany was both a monocracy (rule of one) and polycracy (rule of many). Hitler held absolute power but did not choose to exercise it very much; the rival fiefdoms of the Nazi state fought each other and attempted to carry out Hitler's vaguely worded wishes and dimly defined orders by "Working Towards the Führer".
In Der Staat Hitlers (The Hitler State) Broszat argued against characterizing Nazi Germany as a totalitarian regime and criticized Karl Dietrich Bracher and Ernst Nolte for advancing such a notion. With Hans Mommsen, Broszat developed a "structuralist" or "functionalist" interpretation of Nazi Germany, arguing in his 1969 book Der Staat Hitlers (The Hitler State) that the government had consisted of a welter of competing institutions and power struggles, and that this internal rivalry, not Adolf Hitler, had been the driving force behind the regime. In Broszat's view, Hitler had been a "weak dictator" (to use Mommsen's phrase) and the government of Nazi Germany a polycracy (rule by many), not a monocracy (rule by one). It was the chaos of the government that led to the collapse of the state and what Kersaw called the "accelerating progression into barbarism".

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