How Did A Royal Family Start? Who Are They? Why Do We Have Royals I Some Countrys????

2015-09-08 8:24 am
You how theres royal families in some countrys. I was wondering how they started?

Why Are They so rich and live in a big palace? Why do they have gaurds and servants? Do royals have money? Do they pay taxes or any thing? How come royals dont have to have passports or go through security?

I heard once that royals a like palace prisoners. Which i mean kept inside the palace with no freedom. Do you think being a royal can be tough?? Would you want to be born as a royal?

Anyway can anyone tell me anyhting about how royals came to the world and why do we have royals!

回答 (11)

2015-09-08 8:33 am
Some are started because the country decided they would have a monarchy as their form of government. Some have the monarch as ruler, others are constitional monarchs. The countries that have them do so because that is what the people prefer. They are usually wealthy in their own right, but much of what they own is for their use as Head of State, which reflects the wealth of the country they represent.
2015-09-08 8:28 am
by inbreeding haha
2015-09-08 8:32 am
They all got out of their mom's vag.
參考: PhD in biology.
2015-09-08 6:22 pm
According to the posthumous novel by Zechariah Sitchin, "The Book of Enki", which, although fiction, is backed by the many serious works of scholarship Sitchin wrote and published during his lifetime, humans were seeded from outer space by aliens. A key ancestress named Nin-Puabi, who was a pure alien princess, was a pure alien from outer space and was the ancestress of the royal families. Her tomb in Ur was discovered in the 1920s by a British archaeologist named Wooley who brought her mummy back to the British Museum, where it now resides.
2015-09-08 8:42 am
It's so far back it's not entirely clear. For England, I suggest reading the Wikipedia page on Ida of Bernicia. Also worth reading is the much earlier Book of Samuel, which describes how the first Jewish King, Saul, got his position.
2015-09-10 11:34 pm
why do we still have royals
2015-09-09 4:34 pm
Basically the 'King' was able to deliver Law and protect the people from attack.

If he couldn't do that he stopped being King.

Being able to protect his people from attack, was the first responsibility, if he was unable to do this he was likely to be out, the next was dispensing good Law.

If he was unable to deliver either he was gone.

Many were tyrants who didn't dispense good Law but were good at defending the people.

The ability to do both put them head and shoulders above the majority.

Hence Queen Elizabeth can trace her ancestry back to 'Alfred the Great', who both defended his Country and dispensed 'Good Law'. Plus he re-introduced Literacy to England, and had a series of Books translated into English from Latin which set out the Philosophy of Good Government.

If it hadn't been for Alfred, England would not have had the Literacy which allowed Magna Carta, no Magna Carta, no US constitution?

The Royals in England today are stripped of all power and merely figureheads, but the legacy is in the Laws.
2015-09-08 3:48 pm
Some countries had hereditary royal families in verny ancient times, like Egypt for instance. Sometimes a monarch was elected, like the saxon kings of England for instance. I think probably it started with tribes having chiefs, and then gradually one chief would become more powerful and rule over all the other tribes, and then his son would grow up to be chief after him etc.
royalty are not prisoners. it is true that the monarch generally has a lot of security etc, but then so do other heads of state, presidents etc. they tend to have big residences because they do a lot of entertaining, have receptions, receive ambassadors, other heads of state etc. they have to put on a show for their guests.
they generally do a lot of travelling, so they are hardly prisoners. also, if a person doesn't want the responsiblity of being royal, they can always abdicate.
I would not care to be a royal myself, too much responsibily, and always being on show, having to meet so many people etc. But i think our Queen for instance enjoys it.
2015-09-08 11:47 am
Just about all countries started this way in the dim and distant past... someone won out to be leader of their tribe because they were strongest, tribes joined together and made countries, and for some reason the leader became hereditary, passing from father to son. Most countries, over the years, have become republics with a president instead, or just started later as a republic, but some haven't changed and like to keep their royal family.

inevitably royals tend to have inherited wealth. Most of the other questions would be exactly the same if you asked them about a president. In the UK, at any rate, the Queen does not pay tax or need a passport because she IS the head of the country. Tax is collected in her name, and passports are issued in her name so if she had a passport, she would have to issue it to herself!

It is kind of like being a prisoner, in that royalty are always in the public eye and get commented about all the time. If you are born a prince or princess, that is there right from when you are born. Everyone knows all about you and you have no private life. It can't be nice.
2015-09-08 10:40 am
Top dog begins way back with the man who can gather the biggest army and have the best weapons and strategy in battle to win.

It has not always been easy being a royal - as this story of Richard III will explain.
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=richard+iii+documentary
2015-09-08 8:40 am
Sayuri San, mukashi no mukashi, It all started with the man who had the biggest weapon and was a little smarter than the rest. People would naturally gravitate to the strongest and smartest for protection. That person would become chief and their sons would learn from the father, making them, again, the best equipped. The chief became richer and more powerful and then it became an hereditary title, with the chief becoming King
Edit Sometimes, for protection against their enemies, the king would indeed stay in the palace and I suppose that they would seem like prisoners but, back then it was to protect the King, more recently however, they are kept in their palaces by the Palace advisers and in Japan, The Imperial Household Agency does indeed, control every aspect of their lives, right down to what they wear.


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