Citations:theocracy


 * 2001, Marilynn Giroux Hitchens, Heidi Roupp, Barron's How to Prepare for the Sat II: World History, page 29:
 * Thus, Egyptian civilization emerged confident, tranquil, and insular. Geographical unity gave rise to political unity under the authority of one king, a pharaoh. Pharaohs of the Egyptian theocracy were not only absolute rulers and owners of the country, but were also worshipped as gods.


 * 2003, Jan Assmann, The Mind of Egypt: History and Meaning in the Time of the Pharaohs, page 300:
 * As far as the first four Egyptian dynasties are concerned, we may with some justice speak of direct theocracy because there the rule of the pharaoh was understood not as a representation but as an embodiment of god.


 * 2011, Sam Lucerne, Theocracies, page 34:
 * In ancient Egypt's theocracy, a pharaoh, who was considered divine, was the head