Question:

What is the capital of the english constitutional monarchy in 1672?

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aswer snappy and easy to understand

just need a sentence or two

quickkkkkllllyyy answer

greatly appreciated.

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3 ANSWERS


  1. London.

    If you have time, there was no such thing as constitutional monarchy, and that idea did really become manifest in the French Revolution with the September 1791 Constitution. A constitutional monarchy does NOT automatically render the king as a powerless figurehead, instead implying a shift away from absolutism. It's just that most monarchies today do tend to go with the figurehead idea.


  2. The term constiutional monarchy would not have existed in 1672.  The term has its routes over a century later in revolutionary France, descrigbing a monarch as a figurehead rather than one who has true power  

    In 1692 the capital of England was, as it is now, London and the country was under a joint monarchary of William III and Mary II (also king and queen of Scots and of Ireand as they were seperateyly governed countries at the time - Wales being part of the Kingdom of England de jure at the time)

  3. The capital of England has always been London, and except for the Interregnum during the brief time England was a Republic (1649-1660), England has always been a monarchy.

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