EMPRESS - traducción al árabe
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EMPRESS - traducción al árabe

TYPE OF MONARCH
Empress; Emperors; Emporer; Head of the Imperial House; Samraj; Samrāj; Samraat; Emporers; Emperor regnant; Imperial monarch; Imperatritsa; Imperial Ruler; Grand Emperor; Emperor of Europe; European emperor; Imperial title; Grand Empress
  • [[Bảo Đại]], the last Emperor of Vietnam
  • Charles V]] in the 1550s, after [[Titian]]
  • Portrait of [[Maximilian I of Mexico]], by [[Franz Xaver Winterhalter]]
  • [[Franz Joseph I of Austria]]
  • [[Emperor Hirohito]] (裕仁), or the [[Shōwa Emperor]] (昭和天皇), the last Japanese Emperor having ruled with prerogative powers, combined with assumption of divinity (photographed 1926).
  • [[George V]], [[King of the United Kingdom]] and the [[British Dominions]], [[Emperor of India]]
  • [[Emperor Gojong]] of the [[Korean Empire]]
  • [[Haile Selassie]], [[Emperor of Ethiopia]] from 1930 to 1974.
  • mother of the Emperor]] on the balcony (a fictional addition, while she had not been present at the ceremony), the pope positioned near the altar, Napoleon proceeds to crown his then wife, [[Joséphine de Beauharnais]] as Empress.
  • King of Portugal and the Algarves]], [[Emperor of Brazil]].
  • Wilhelm II]], [[German Emperor]] and the [[King of Prussia]].
  • Emperor [[Moctezuma II]] of the Aztec Empire wearing a [[tilmàtli]]
  • regalia]] at the opening of the General Assembly, by [[Pedro Américo]]
  • Empress [[Catherine the Great]] of Russia
  • [[Qin Shi Huang]]
  • ''dictator'']] [[Julius Caesar]].
  • Under [[Justinian I]], reigning in the 6th century, parts of Italy were for a few decades (re)conquered from the [[Ostrogoths]]: thus, this famous [[mosaic]], featuring the Byzantine emperor in the center, can be admired at [[Ravenna]].
  • Serbia]] [[Dušan the Mighty]]
  • emperor]] of [[Roman Empire]], reigning from 27 BC until his death in AD 14.
  • Agostino never saw the Sultan, but probably did see and sketch the helmet in Venice.}}
  • language=en}}</ref>

EMPRESS         

ألاسم

إِمْبرَاطُورَة

empress         
N
امبراطورة زوجة امبراطور
empress         
اسْم : إمْبرَاطُورَة

Definición

empress
['?mpr?s]
¦ noun a female emperor.
?the wife or widow of an emperor.
Origin
ME: from OFr. emperesse, feminine of emperere (see emperor).

Wikipedia

Emperor

An emperor (from Latin: imperator, via Old French: empereor) is a monarch, and usually the sovereign ruler of an empire or another type of imperial realm. Empress, the female equivalent, may indicate an emperor's wife (empress consort), mother/grandmother (empress dowager/grand empress dowager), or a woman who rules in her own right and name (empress regnant). Emperors are generally recognized to be of the highest monarchic honor and rank, surpassing kings. In Europe, the title of Emperor has been used since the Middle Ages, considered in those times equal or almost equal in dignity to that of Pope due to the latter's position as visible head of the Church and spiritual leader of the Catholic part of Western Europe. The Emperor of Japan is the only currently reigning monarch whose title is translated into English as "Emperor".

Both emperors and kings are monarchs or sovereigns, but both emperor and empress are considered the higher monarchical titles. In as much as there is a strict definition of emperor, it is that an emperor has no relations implying the superiority of any other ruler and typically rules over more than one nation. Therefore, a king might be obliged to pay tribute to another ruler, or be restrained in his actions in some unequal fashion, but an emperor should in theory be completely free of such restraints. However, monarchs heading empires have not always used the title in all contexts—the British sovereign did not assume the title Empress of the British Empire even during the incorporation of India, though she was declared Empress of India.

In Western Europe, the title of Emperor was used exclusively by the Holy Roman Emperor, whose imperial authority was derived from the concept of translatio imperii, i.e. they claimed succession to the authority of the Roman Emperors, thus linking themselves to Roman institutions and traditions as part of state ideology. Although initially ruling much of Central Europe and northern Italy, by the 19th century the Emperor exercised little power beyond the German-speaking states.

Although technically an elective title, by the late 16th century the imperial title had in practice come to be inherited by the Habsburg Archdukes of Austria and following the Thirty Years' War their control over the states (outside the Habsburg monarchy, i.e. Austria, Bohemia and various territories outside the empire) had become nearly non-existent. However, Napoleon Bonaparte was crowned Emperor of the French in 1804 and was shortly followed by Francis II, Holy Roman Emperor, who declared himself Emperor of Austria in the same year. The position of Holy Roman Emperor nonetheless continued until Francis II abdicated that position in 1806. In Eastern Europe, the monarchs of Russia also used translatio imperii to wield imperial authority as successors to the Eastern Roman Empire. Their status was officially recognized by the Holy Roman Emperor in 1514, although not officially used by the Russian monarchs until 1547. However, the Russian emperors are better known by their Russian-language title of Tsar even after Peter the Great adopted the title of Emperor of All Russia in 1721.

Historians have liberally used emperor and empire anachronistically and out of its Roman and European context to describe any large state from the past or the present. Such Pre-Roman titles as Great King or King of Kings, used by the Kings of Persia and others, are often considered as the equivalent. Sometimes this reference has even extended to non-monarchically ruled states and their spheres of influence such as the Athenian Empire of the late 5th century BC, the Angevin Empire of the Plantagenets and the Soviet and American "empires" of the Cold War era. However, such "empires" did not need to be headed by an "emperor". Empire became identified instead with vast territorial holdings rather than the title of its ruler by the mid-18th century.

For purposes of protocol, emperors were once given precedence over kings in international diplomatic relations, but currently precedence among heads of state who are sovereigns—whether they be kings, queens, emperors, empresses, princes, princesses and, to a lesser degree, presidents—is determined by the duration of time that each one has been continuously in office. Outside the European context, emperor was the translation given to holders of titles who were accorded the same precedence as European emperors in diplomatic terms. In reciprocity, these rulers might accredit equal titles in their native languages to their European peers. Through centuries of international convention, this has become the dominant rule to identifying an emperor in the modern era.

Ejemplos de uso de EMPRESS
1. Related Article Remains of Empress Heading Home (Sep. 25, 2006) $ «
2. They are colleagues at Empress Travel agency in Germantown.
3. About 30 close relatives, including the emperor and empress, attended.
4. So might any Roman Empress have felt, before the fall.
5. And they concluded that the DNA of the executed empress‘ sister, the Grand Duchess Elizabeth, did not match the DNA of the woman buried in the cathedral who was supposedly the empress.