what is the difference between empire and dynasty?
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- AN EMPIRE is a collection of distinct domains under one controlling/owning power — be it an individual, a family, a city, a nation, or even a corporation. Though it derives from the Latin word imperium (jurisdiction, domain, realm, command ==> the extent of one’s authority/command, be it territorial, personal, or subject matter), it serves as the equivalent word in other languages for “super-kingdom”, i.e., many kingdoms under one king — a king of kings/great king/high king — typically called an emperor.
- A DYNASTY is a succession of rulers/leaders/owners of the same family, typically any male-line descendant of the dynastic founder, though in some countries — like France — they reckoned a new dynasty when it passed to a shirt-tail cadet branch like Bourbon or Orleans. Also, Rome considered adoption as good or even better than blood descent: Augustus, Tiberius, Caligula, Nero, Trajan, Hadrian, Antoninus, and Aurelius were all adopted by their predecessor.
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