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Articles from Britannica Encyclopedias for elementary and high school students.
- republic - Children's Encyclopedia (Ages 8-11)
- republic - Student Encyclopedia (Ages 11 and up)
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Articles from Britannica Encyclopedias for elementary and high school students.
- republic - Children's Encyclopedia (Ages 8-11)
- republic - Student Encyclopedia (Ages 11 and up)
Written by
André Munro
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The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
Last Updated: •Article History
Jean Bodin
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- Key People:
- Niccolò Machiavelli
- Related Topics:
- political system
- representative democracy
- democratic peace
- republicanism
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republic, form of government in which a state is ruled by representatives of the citizen body. Modern republics are founded on the idea that sovereignty rests with the people, though who is included and excluded from the category of the people has varied across history. Because citizens do not govern the state themselves but through representatives, republics may be distinguished from direct democracy, though modern representative democracies are by and large republics. The term republic may also be applied to any form of government in which the head of state is not a hereditary monarch.
Prior to the 17th century, the term was used to designate any state, with the exception of tyrannical regimes. Derived from the Latin expression res publica (“the public thing”), the category of republic could encompass not only democratic states but also oligarchies, aristocracies, and monarchies. In Six Books of the Commonwealth (1576), his canonical study of sovereignty, the French political philosopher Jean Bodin thus offered a far-reaching definition of the republic: “the rightly ordered government of a number of families, and of those things which are their common concern, by a sovereign power.” Tyrannies were excluded from this definition, because their object is not the common good but the private benefit of a single individual.
More From Britannicademocracy: Democracy or republic?During the 17th and 18th centuries, the meaning of republic shifted with the growing resistance to absolutist regimes and their upheaval in a series of wars and revolutions, from the Eighty Years’ War (1568–1648) to the American Revolution (1775–83) and the French Revolution (1787–89). Shaped by those events, the term republic came to designate a form of government in which the leader is periodically appointed under a constitution, in contrast to hereditary monarchies.
Despite its democratic implications, the term was claimed in the 20th century by states whose leadership enjoyed more power than most traditional monarchs, including military dictatorships such as the Republic of Chile under Augusto Pinochet and totalitarian regimes such as the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea.
André Munro