 |
at Global Oneness Community.
Share your dreams and let others help you with the interpretation!
Dream Sharing Forum
|
 |
Roman dictator | A Wisdom Archive on Roman dictator |  | Roman dictator A selection of articles related to Roman dictator |  |
 | |
4th millennium BC, 4th millennium BC - Centuries, 4th millennium BC - Cultures, 4th millennium BC - Events, 4th millennium BC - External references, 4th millennium BC - Inventions, discoveries, introductions, 4th millennium BC - Significant persons
|  | | Page 1 » Page 2 « |  |
 | |
| ARTICLES RELATED TO Roman dictator |  |  |  | Roman dictator: Encyclopedia II - Dictator - Pejorative useIn modern usage, the term "dictator" is generally used to describe a leader who holds an extraordinary amount of personal power, especially the power to make laws without effective restraint by a legislative assembly. It is comparable to (but not synonymous with) the ancient concept of a tyrant, although initially "tyrant," like "dictator," was not a negative term. A wide variety of leaders coming to power in a number of different kinds of regimes, such as military juntas, single-party states, and civilian governments under perso ...
See also:Dictator, Dictator - Classical Rome, Dictator - Modern use in formal titles, Dictator - Dictator plain, Dictator - Compound titles, Dictator - Pejorative use, Dictator - The benevolent dictator, Dictator - Dictators in game theory Read more here: » Dictator: Encyclopedia II - Dictator - Pejorative use |
|  |
|  |  |  | Roman dictator: Encyclopedia II - Guerrilla warfare - TacticsGuerrilla tactics are based on intelligence, ambush, deception, sabotage, and espionage, and their ultimate objective is usually to destabilize an authority through long, low-intensity confrontation. It can be quite successful against an unpopular foreign regime: a guerrilla army may increase the cost of maintaining an occupation or a colonial presence above what the foreign power may wish to bear.
Commando operations are not guerrilla warfare (Richard Taber, “The War of the Flea : Guerrilla Warfare, Theory and Practice”. Pal ...
See also:Guerrilla warfare, Guerrilla warfare - Etymology, Guerrilla warfare - Tactics, Guerrilla warfare - Examples, Guerrilla warfare - Guerrillas in Europe, Guerrilla warfare - Guerrillas in the American Revolutionary War, Guerrilla warfare - Guerrillas in the American Civil War, Guerrilla warfare - Guerrilla warfare during the Second Sino-Japanese War, Guerrilla warfare - Guerrilla Warfare in the Chinese Civil War, Guerrilla warfare - Guerrilla Warfare in the Pacific and East Asian theatre of World War II, Guerrilla warfare - Guerrillas in Palestine and Israel 1930s to present, Guerrilla warfare - Guerrillas in Latin America, Guerrilla warfare - South African War, Guerrilla warfare - Disputed Territory of Kashmir, Guerrilla warfare - Vietnam War, Guerrilla warfare - Guerrilla warfare in Kosovo Afghanistan and Kurdish Northern Iraq, Guerrilla warfare - Guerrilla in Iraq 2003-, Guerrilla warfare - Notes Read more here: » Guerrilla warfare: Encyclopedia II - Guerrilla warfare - Tactics |
|  |
|  |  |  | Roman dictator: Encyclopedia II - Dictator - The benevolent dictatorThe benevolent dictator is a more modern version of the classical "enlightened despot," being an absolute ruler who exercises his or her political power for the benefit of the people rather than exclusively for his or her own benefit. Like many political classifications, this term suffers from its inherent subjectivity. Such leaders as Franco, Rosas, Rojas Pinilla, Sadat, Tito, and Omar Torrijos have been charac ...
See also:Dictator, Dictator - Classical Rome, Dictator - Modern use in formal titles, Dictator - Dictator plain, Dictator - Compound titles, Dictator - Pejorative use, Dictator - The benevolent dictator, Dictator - Dictators in game theory Read more here: » Dictator: Encyclopedia II - Dictator - The benevolent dictator |
|  |
| |  |  |  | Roman dictator: Encyclopedia II - Dictator - Dictators in game theoryIn game theory and social choice theory, the notion of a dictator is formally defined as a person that can achieve any feasible social outcome he/she wishes. The formal definition yields an interesting distinction between two different types of dictators.
The strong dictator has, for any social goal he/she has in mind (e.g. raise taxes, having someone killed, etc.), a definite way of achieving that goal. This can be seen as having explicit absolute power, like Franco in Spain.
The weak dictator ...
See also:Dictator, Dictator - Classical Rome, Dictator - Modern use in formal titles, Dictator - Dictator plain, Dictator - Compound titles, Dictator - Pejorative use, Dictator - The benevolent dictator, Dictator - Dictators in game theory Read more here: » Dictator: Encyclopedia II - Dictator - Dictators in game theory |
|  |
|  |  |  | Roman dictator: Encyclopedia II - Roman dictator - A new dictatorate and abolitionAfter a 120-year lapse, and the falling out of Gaius Marius and Lucius Cornelius Sulla, the latter marched on Rome and had himself appointed in 82 BC to an entirely new office, dictator rei publicae constituendae causa, which was functionally identical to the dictatorate rei gerendae causa except that it lacked any set time limit. Sulla held this office for over two years before he voluntarily abdicated and retired from public life.
Gaius Julius Caesar subsequently resurrected the dictatorate rei gerendae causa in ...
See also:Roman dictator, Roman dictator - Establishment and history, Roman dictator - Powers and abilities, Roman dictator - Magister Equitum, Roman dictator - Replacement of the dictatorate, Roman dictator - A new dictatorate and abolition, Roman dictator - Other dictatorates, Roman dictator - List of Roman dictators Read more here: » Roman dictator: Encyclopedia II - Roman dictator - A new dictatorate and abolition |
|  |
|  |  |  | Roman dictator: Encyclopedia II - Roman dictator - A New Dictatorate and AbolishmentAfter a 120 year lapse, and the falling out of Gaius Marius and Lucius Cornelius Sulla, the latter marched on Rome and had himself appointed in 82 BC to an entirely new office, dictator rei publicae constituendae causa, which was functionally identical to the dictatorate rei gerendae causa except that it lacked any set time limit. Sulla held this office for years before he voluntarily abdicated and retired from public life.
Gaius Julius Caesar subsequently resurrected the dictatorate rei gerendae causa in his firs ...
See also:Roman dictator, Roman dictator - Establishment and History, Roman dictator - Powers and Abilities, Roman dictator - Magister Equitum, Roman dictator - Replacement of the Dictatorate, Roman dictator - A New Dictatorate and Abolishment, Roman dictator - Other Dictatorates, Roman dictator - List of Roman dictators Read more here: » Roman dictator: Encyclopedia II - Roman dictator - A New Dictatorate and Abolishment |
|  |
|  |  |  | Roman dictator: Encyclopedia II - Roman dictator - Establishment and HistoryOn the establishment of the Roman republic the government of the state was entrusted to two consuls, that the citizens might be the better protected against the tyrannical exercise of the supreme power. But it was soon felt that circumstances might arise in which it was of importance for the safety of the state that the government should be vested in the hands of a single person, who should possess absolute power for a short time, and from whose decisions there should be no appeal to any other body. Thus it came to pass that in 501 BC, nine years after the expulsion of th ...
See also:Roman dictator, Roman dictator - Establishment and History, Roman dictator - Powers and Abilities, Roman dictator - Magister Equitum, Roman dictator - Replacement of the Dictatorate, Roman dictator - A New Dictatorate and Abolishment, Roman dictator - Other Dictatorates, Roman dictator - List of Roman dictators Read more here: » Roman dictator: Encyclopedia II - Roman dictator - Establishment and History |
|  |
|  |  |  | Roman dictator: Encyclopedia II - Roman dictator - Establishment and historyOn the establishment of the Roman republic the government of the state was entrusted to two consuls, that the citizens might be the better protected against the tyrannical exercise of the supreme power. But it was soon felt that circumstances might arise in which it was of importance for the safety of the state that the government should be vested in the hands of a single person, who should possess absolute power for a short time, and from whose decisions there should be no appeal to any other body. Thus it came to pass that in 501 BC, nine years after the expulsion of th ...
See also:Roman dictator, Roman dictator - Establishment and history, Roman dictator - Powers and abilities, Roman dictator - Magister Equitum, Roman dictator - Replacement of the dictatorate, Roman dictator - A new dictatorate and abolition, Roman dictator - Other dictatorates, Roman dictator - List of Roman dictators Read more here: » Roman dictator: Encyclopedia II - Roman dictator - Establishment and history |
|  |
|  | | Page 1 » Page 2 « |  |
 | |
|
|
Search the Global Oneness web site |
|
|
|