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Deposed by Pope Innocent IV in the bull Grandi non immerito: 1279 Zhao Bing: Southern Song dynasty: Emperor of China: Mongol conquest of China: 1298 Adolf, King of the Romans: Holy Roman Empire: King of the Romans: Deposed by prince-electors of the Holy Roman Empire 1327 Edward II of England [1] England: King of England: Forced to abdicate by ...
Deposed by Date Operation Notes Ref Emilio Aguinaldo Philippines: President of Philippines United States: 23 March 1901 Philippine–American War [2] Paul Kruger South African Republic: State President United Kingdom: 31 May 1902 Second Boer War
Monarchs deposed in the 18th century This page has the monarchs who either lost their thrones through deposition by a coup d'état , by a referendum which abolished their throne, or chose to abdicate between 1700 and 1800
He was deposed again during the communist revolution in 1975. King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy, also Emperor of Ethiopia, renounced his claim to the Ethiopian throne in 1943. Emperor Amha Selassie I, briefly emperor 1974–1975, was deposed by the abolition of the monarchy.
Restored 24 March 1800 but was then deposed for the sixth and last time. Demetros, Emperor of Ethiopia, installed 1799 and deposed 1800, reinstated 1800, deposed again 1801. Yohannes III, Emperor of Ethiopia, installed 1840, deposed 1841, reinstated and deposed again 1845, reinstated again 1850, and deposed again 1851.
Mile upon mile of concrete balustrades are daubed with caricatures of the deposed autocrat with fangs and devil horns, slogans extolling “Gen-Z, the real heroes,” and vows to “flush sh-ts ...
Sharif Ahmad bin Zeid, Grand Sharif of Mecca, deposed 1671, reinstated 1684. Sharif Ahmad bin Ghalib, Grand Sharif of Mecca, deposed 1690. Sharif Muhsin bin Ahmad, Grand Sharif of Mecca, deposed 1668, restored 1689, re-deposed 1690. Sharif 'Abdu'llah II bin Hashim, Grand Sharif of Mecca, deposed 1694.
Monarchs' actual powers vary from one monarchy to another and in different eras; on one extreme, they may be autocrats (absolute monarchy) wielding genuine sovereignty; on the other they may be ceremonial heads of state who exercise little or no direct power or only reserve powers, with actual authority vested in a parliament or other body ...