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I'm not asking about the oldest country, city, culture, or religion- just government please. Please rule out govenments and/or monarchies that have been overthrown, invasioned by outsiders, changes of power- the inclusion of a prime minister (i.e. from absolute monarchy to a constitutional monarchy) etc... Thanks.

2006-07-04 12:57:23 · 9 answers · asked by Amy G 3 in Arts & Humanities History

Again, I don't want the world's oldest nation- I want the world's oldest CONTINUOUS- UNCHANGED government. The Roman Empire? The United States? The United Kingom? I don't want the world's oldest culture.

2006-07-04 13:12:03 · update #1

9 answers

The Tynwald, on the Isle of Man, celebrated it's millenium in 1979.
It is the longest existing continuous Parliament in the world.

2006-07-06 21:12:19 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

THis is difficult to answer because I don't think there have been many governments that go unchanged for that long. Our system is continually evolving..that's we have the a living constitution, one that can be changed.

The British have a pretty stable system too but one that evolved with out a lot of Bloodshed (except for the British Civil War in the 1630s-40s)

Even the Chinese Dynasties experienced a great deal of change and evolution, for example the idea of a civil service and merit system rather than simply nepotism as in the Roman Republic and Roman Empire.

So, I guess my short answer to this is, I don't know. But I will say that Louis XIV ruled for like 72 years...so that was a pretty long time.

2006-07-08 10:49:58 · answer #2 · answered by mjtpopus 3 · 0 0

you have some elaborate anwsers.
i'll just venture england. it's been the same, more or less since the late 1600s.

fidel castro is the longest lived politician in some time.

2006-07-04 16:42:37 · answer #3 · answered by Stuie 6 · 0 0

Iceland poses as oldest republic. I think this is right, but I am not sure

2006-07-04 13:04:24 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

THE UK IS MY GUESS
they still got the ROYAL FAMILY thing goin on

2006-07-04 18:18:57 · answer #5 · answered by _-_-_-_-_- 1 · 0 0

i am not really sure sorry that I couldn't help
God bless you
have a great day
and remember that Jesus loves you and that he died for you OK.

2006-07-04 13:06:39 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i guess kaddafi government in Libian

2006-07-04 13:01:44 · answer #7 · answered by foryou2002tr 2 · 0 1

The despotic empires of Egypt, Sumer, Assyria, Persia, and Macedonia were followed by the rise of city-states, the first self-governing communities, in which the rule of law predominated and state officials were responsible to the citizens who chose them. The city-states of Greece, such as Athens, Corinth, and Sparta, and of that part of Asia Minor dominated or influenced by the Greeks, provided the material for the speculative political theories of Plato and Aristotle. Aristotle's system of classifying states, which influenced subsequent political thought for centuries, was based on a simple criterion: good governments are those that best serve the general welfare; bad governments are those that subordinate the general good to the good of the individuals in power. Aristotle distinguished three categories of government: monarchy, government by a single individual; aristocracy, government by a select few; and democracy, government by many. The later Greek philosophers, influenced by Aristotle, distinguished three degenerate forms of the classes of government defined by him. These were, respectively, tyranny, rule by an individual in his or her own interest; oligarchy, rule by a few people in their own interest; and ochlocracy, mob rule. Still other categories of lasting historical significance are theocracy, rule by religious leaders; and bureaucracy, the excessive domination of government by administrative officials.

Ancient Rome, which evolved from a city-republic to the seat of a world empire, also greatly influenced the development of government in the Western world. This influence was derived in part from the great Roman achievement in formulating clearly for the first time the principle that constitutional law, establishing the sovereignty of the state, is superior to ordinary law, such as that created by legislative enactments.

After the fall of Rome, the Roman concept of a universal dominion was kept alive during the Middle Ages through the formation of the Holy Roman Empire; and also, in part, by the establishment, through canon law and ecclesiastical courts with jurisdiction over secular affairs, of the ruling body of the Roman Catholic church. The effect of these influences was to retard the development of national territories and governments after tendencies in that direction had manifested themselves among the feudal principalities of Europe. On the other hand, the struggle of the feudal barons to limit the absolute power of their monarchs eventually produced many contributions to the theory and institutions of representative government. During the Middle Ages commercial city-states arose in Europe. These city-states eventually formed the Hanseatic League and the powerful Italian city-republics, or communes.

The final emergence of national governments is attributed to two principal causes. One comprises a number of underlying economic causes, including a great expansion in trade and the development of manufacturing. These conditions began to undermine the feudal system, which was based on isolated and self-sufficient economic units, and to make necessary the creation of large political units. The other cause was the Reformation, which succeeded in eliminating the restraining influence of the Catholic church on political development in a number of European countries.

The modern nation-state became a definite form of government in the 16th century. It was almost entirely dynastic and autocratic. The will of the reigning monarch, in theory and often in practice, was unlimited; the famous aphorism of King Louis XIV of France, “L'état, c'est moi” (“I am the state”), was not an idle boast, but an expression of existing reality. In time, however, the demand of the bourgeoisie for constitutional and representative government made itself felt, and the unlimited powers of monarchs began to be challenged. In England, the Glorious Revolution in 1688 restricted such powers and established the preeminence of Parliament. This tendency culminated in two events of historic importance, the American Revolution, beginning in 1775, and the French Revolution, beginning in 1789. Historians generally date the rise of modern democratic government from these events.The history of government in the 19th century and in part of the 20th is notable for the broadening of the political base of government through extension of suffrage and other reforms. A tendency that became especially marked in the 20th century was the development and implementation of the concept that government, in addition to maintaining order and administering justice, must be an instrument for administering public and social services including, among many others, conservation of natural resources, scientific research, education, and social security. Between 1945 and 1951, the Labour Party government of Britain extended the responsibilities of government to include nationalization of a number of basic industries in a need for stringent economic planning. Other outstanding developments of the 20th century were the appearance of the corporative state and of totalitarian governments in a number of countries, and the first so-called proletarian dictatorship in history, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. From the late 1940s until the end of the 1980s, most eastern European countries adjacent to or near the USSR had governments similar in many respects to that of the USSR.

2006-07-04 13:01:17 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

the chinese

2006-07-04 13:00:21 · answer #9 · answered by mountainboarding1991 3 · 0 0

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