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kingship

[ US /ˈkɪŋʃɪp/ ]
[ UK /kˈɪŋʃɪp/ ]
NOUN
  1. the dignity or rank or position of a king

How To Use kingship In A Sentence

  • As Milton argues in A Defence of the People of England, kingship originates from the Fall, and kings issue ‘not from blessings but from curses [and] maledictions cast upon fallen mankind’ .
  • He should be a man of accomplishments, of unblemished body, presumably of royal kin (peasant-birth is considered a bar to the kingship), usually a son or a nephew, or brother of his foregoer (though no strict rule of succession seems to appear in The Danish History, Books I-IX
  • The title Rex Magnus usually implies kingship over a number of territories, supporting Tacitus. Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
  • Following the division of the Carolingian Empire in 843, the Ottonian rulers united their German kingship with the imperial crown.
  • In the 750s, Pepin assumed the kingship of the Franks and introduced a completely new silver coinage, using the Latin term ‘denarius’.
  • After James's convenient flight to France, only a minority in the convention parliament so much as expressed scruples about the form in which the transfer of kingship was to take place.
  • Confined by illness and death-threats to Whitehall, Cromwell wrestles with Parliament's offer of kingship.
  • Thereafter, the Sang Dynasty stopped the struggle for the kingship and never moved the capital again.
  • Except for two expeditions to Sicily, where he went at the request of Dionysius to help try to establish a philosophical kingship in Syracuse, he remained in Athens teaching and writing.
  • The robe is a richly patterned 7-by-10-foot cotton cloth whose abstract symbols represent the powers and obligations of kingship.
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