Types of Governments
Who Has the Power?
Rights & Laws
Economics & Power
Rise & Fall of Empires
100

What is a monarchy?

It is a government ruled by a King or Queen, where political power is passed down through the family line.

100

In a pure democracy, this group of people holds the ultimate political power.

Citizens (or the People)

100

In a direct democracy, this is how citizens vote on laws, which is different from electing representatives.

Voting directly on individual laws or issues

100

In this economic system, the government controls all property and businesses, claiming to share everything equally.

Communism / Socialism

100

This was the ancient Chinese belief that the gods gave a ruler the right to lead, but would take it away if the ruler became corrupt.

The Mandate of Heaven

200

What is a Dictatorship?

This type of government is ruled by one single leader who has total control, often taking power by force.

200

This term describes a government where the leader's power is stopped or controlled by a constitution or set of laws.

Limited Government

200

This famous historical document, signed in England in 1215, was one of the first times a King's unlimited power was limited by law.

The Magna Carta

200

When an unlimited government controls or bans books, news, or websites to stop people from criticizing the leaders.


Censorship

200

This is an external cause that can bring about the sudden collapse of a major civilization or empire.

A Foreign Invasion

300

This system means "rule by a few," where a small, wealthy group of powerful elites or noble families makes all the decisions.

Oligarchy

300

In an unlimited government, this is how much power the leader has over the citizens.

Total / Absolute Power

300

This is the written document that states the basic laws of a nation and outlines the structure and limits of the government.

Constitution

300

This traditional type of economy relies on customs, hunting, and farming, where people swap goods instead of using money.

Barter System (or Traditional Economy)

300

These physical projects, like Rome building roads or Egypt building canals, help a government keep control and keep the economy moving.

Public Works

400

A government ruled by religious leaders or based entirely on religious laws, like ancient Egypt or Mesopotamia.

Theocracy

400

This term describes a complete lack of government or law, which often leads to chaos.

Anarchy

400

Empires wrote their laws down on monuments or tablets for this specific reason, so they couldn't be changed secretly by rulers.

To make the laws permanent and public for everyone to see

400

These tools, like "veto power," are used in a limited government to ensure no single branch becomes too powerful.

Checks and Balances

400

These are two internal economic problems that can cause a government to lose stability and collapse.

High Taxes and Food Shortages (Famine)

500

This is an ancient form of dictatorship where a single leader takes total power by force, often by appealing to the poor or using a military.

Tyranny

500

This type of person must strictly obey a ruler and has very few rights, compared to a citizen who has a voice in government.

Subject

500

Only this specific, exclusive group of people (free, adult, land-owning men born in the city) were allowed to vote in ancient Athens.

Citizens

500

This ancient Babylonian code is famous for its "an eye for an eye" system, which had different punishments based on social class.

Hammurabi's Code

500

This is why unlimited governments often use secret police or large militaries against their own population.

To prevent rebellions and force obedience through fear