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Definition of Dyarchy
1. Noun. A form of government having two joint rulers.
Definition of Dyarchy
1. Noun. (alternative spelling of diarchy) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Dyarchy
1. diarchy [n -CHIES] : DYARCHIC [adj] - See also: diarchy
Lexicographical Neighbors of Dyarchy
Literary usage of Dyarchy
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Roman Public Life by Abel Hendy Jones Greenidge (1901)
"In matters of religion and worship the dyarchy is again apparent. ... illustration of
the principle of the dyarchy. From the year 15 BC the Princeps ..."
2. A Constitutional and Political History of Rome: From the Earliest Times to by Thomas Marris Taylor (1899)
"... CHAPTER XIX THE CHANGE FROM dyarchy TO MONARCHY THE great constitutional
innovation of Tiberius was the Elections transference of the elections from the ..."
3. Classical Quarterly by Classical Association (Great Britain) (1908)
"Then comes the question, How far is Mommsen's term ' dyarchy ' appropriate to
the system of government under the first emperor? ..."
4. Studies of Roman Imperialism by William Thomas Arnold, Charles Edward Montague (1906)
"If the Senate had had that exclusive power, the much talked of " dyarchy " would
have been a very real thing. As it had not, any more than it had any hold ..."
5. The Student's Roman Empire: A History of the Roman Empire from Its by John Bagnell Bury (1893)
"The dyarchy instituted by Augustus has set a long way in the direction of pure
... The dyarchy will be subverted, and the Princeps will become an absolute ..."
6. Mental Culture in Burmese Crisis Politics: Aung San Suu Kyi and the National by Gustaaf Houtman (1999)
"Sayagyi pointed out the head and tail of the fish as dyarchy, the good middle
portion as Home rule. The fox couple (Indians) ended up as the ones who took ..."