Even long after Rome had become an autocratic empire, the citizens of Rome continued to believe that they lived in a republic. If you had asked them what their government is they would have told you that it was a republic with no king.
Fun Fact: Allegedly during the Battle of Abritus in 251 Emperor Decius’s son, Herennius Etruscus, was killed, and upon hearing of it Decius said, “Let no one mourn. The death of one soldier is not a great loss to the Republic.”
I would go as far as to claim that the Roman Empire was NOT a monarchy at all, or at least it wasn’t at first.
I would argue that from 27 BC to AD 284, the Roman Empire was Family-Military Dictatorship.
This system combines a Military Dictatorship with a Family Dictatorship.
In this system, the state is under the complete control of the military whose leader holds absolute power with said leadership being decided by familial relation to the current leader.
It wasn’t until Diocletian came to power It wasn’t until Diocletian came to power in 284 that Rome became a true Monarchy, and it wasn’t until Constantine the Great unified the country in 324 that the Monarchy became Hereditary.
If you want a modern example of this look up the Somoza Dynasty of Nicaragua. They ruled that nation from 1936 to 1979.
Yup. At first it was the principate, where the senate still had some power and influence. It was the republic but with the princeps at the helm with a hell of a lot of power. It was a very much a benevolent dictatorship.
Then Diocletian turned it into a true military autocracy in the form of the dominate. Although I wouldn’t argue that it was Constantine that made it hereditary, dynasties had been a thing since the beginning.
I would say the Principate were a “Republic in name Only” but they were de facto dictators. The most use the senate had during the principate was providing legitimacy to the Imperator.
It was Diocletian that created the “Dominate” in which he was the divinely ordained absolute ruler of Rome. He created what we would call today an absolute monarchy, but it was one in which succession was determined by appointment not by blood.
This changed with Constantine who took the principle of the dominate and made succession de facto hereditary rather than by appointment.
Constantine’s dynasty was, after all, the first imperial dynasty of the Dominate.
Yup. At first it was the principate, where the senate still had some power and influence. It was the republic but with the princeps at the helm with a hell of a lot of power. It was a very much a benevolent dictatorship.
How so? Octavian wasn't challenged on anything, and made Caesar a god (and therefore, he was the (adopted) son of one).
and it wasn’t until Constantine the Great unified the country in 324 that the Monarchy became Hereditary.
Just because the control of it switches from different Houses doesn't mean it wasn't an empire with a monarch.
There are many Houses that have been in charge of the British crown. Same with the Chinese dynasties. Power swaps don't fundamentally change the nature of the government.
Even long after Rome had become an autocratic empire, the citizens of Rome continued to believe that they lived in a republic. If you had asked them what their government is they would have told you that it was a republic with no king.
Fun Fact: Allegedly during the Battle of Abritus in 251 Emperor Decius’s son, Herennius Etruscus, was killed, and upon hearing of it Decius said, “Let no one mourn. The death of one soldier is not a great loss to the Republic.”
Very true. And yeah I’ve heard that quote before, very sad but epic.
I would go as far as to claim that the Roman Empire was NOT a monarchy at all, or at least it wasn’t at first.
I would argue that from 27 BC to AD 284, the Roman Empire was Family-Military Dictatorship.
This system combines a Military Dictatorship with a Family Dictatorship.
In this system, the state is under the complete control of the military whose leader holds absolute power with said leadership being decided by familial relation to the current leader.
It wasn’t until Diocletian came to power It wasn’t until Diocletian came to power in 284 that Rome became a true Monarchy, and it wasn’t until Constantine the Great unified the country in 324 that the Monarchy became Hereditary.
If you want a modern example of this look up the Somoza Dynasty of Nicaragua. They ruled that nation from 1936 to 1979.
Yup. At first it was the principate, where the senate still had some power and influence. It was the republic but with the princeps at the helm with a hell of a lot of power. It was a very much a benevolent dictatorship.
Then Diocletian turned it into a true military autocracy in the form of the dominate. Although I wouldn’t argue that it was Constantine that made it hereditary, dynasties had been a thing since the beginning.
I would say the Principate were a “Republic in name Only” but they were de facto dictators. The most use the senate had during the principate was providing legitimacy to the Imperator.
It was Diocletian that created the “Dominate” in which he was the divinely ordained absolute ruler of Rome. He created what we would call today an absolute monarchy, but it was one in which succession was determined by appointment not by blood.
This changed with Constantine who took the principle of the dominate and made succession de facto hereditary rather than by appointment.
Constantine’s dynasty was, after all, the first imperial dynasty of the Dominate.
How so? Octavian wasn't challenged on anything, and made Caesar a god (and therefore, he was the (adopted) son of one).
Just because the control of it switches from different Houses doesn't mean it wasn't an empire with a monarch.
There are many Houses that have been in charge of the British crown. Same with the Chinese dynasties. Power swaps don't fundamentally change the nature of the government.