czarocracy

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English

Etymology

From czar +‎ -o- +‎ -cracy.

Pronunciation

Noun

czarocracy (countable and uncountable, plural czarocracies)

  1. A government headed by a czar or a similar autocrat.
  2. Government consisting of, or characterized by the appointment of officials with substantial autonomy, especially those commonly referred to as "czars" or "tsars".

Quotations

  • 1853, John Thomas, The Coming Struggle among the Nations of the Earth: or, the Political Events of the Next Thirteen Years, Described in Accordance with Prophecies in Ezekiel, Daniel, and the Apocalypse. Thomas MacLear, Toronto (1853).
The Austrian and its cotemporary horns, the supporters of the False Prophet, now become confederate against the Destroyer of the Czarocracy.
  • 1898, Reuben Parsons, “The Later Religious Martyrdom of Poland”, in The American Catholic Quarterly Review, volume XXIII, pages 71, 79:
In the estimation of the "Orthodox" clergy, the chief glory of the reign of Alexander II. was not the emancipation of the serfs, but rather the delivery of the Uniate Greeks of Russian Poland from the "thraldom" of Rome, and their subjection to that instrument of czarocracy, the Holy Synod.
  • 1905, John Jacob Lentz, "Thomas Jefferson: The Radical", printed in Thomas Jefferson: a Little Journey by Elbert Hubbard, and an Address by John J. Lentz: Being two attempts to perpetuate the memory & pass along the influence of the Great American, The Roycrofters, East Aurora, N.Y. (1906).
The people who have suffered under the heel of the tyrant have always been in the majority, and they are still in the majority, and they will continue to suffer under the debasing tyrannies of slaveocracy, czarocracy, and trustocracy so long as God is unable to find or create enough radicals to brave the pains and the penalties of persecution, ostracism, slander, libel and assassination.
  • 2009 September 22, Stephen Spruiell, “The Reign of the Czars”, in National Review Online:
Instead of scaling back the czarocracy, the Democrats are adding to it.

Derived terms