the babylonians
King James I, if you are talking about the royal house in England.
King William III of Britain, husband of Mary Stuart.
Spain did not exist as a single entity in 1450. What is today Spain, more or less, was divided in 4 kingdoms, whose kings were the following: - Castile, the biggest, covered most of the center and western part of Spain. It was ruled by King John II - Aragon, the second in size, covered the eastern part. It was ruled by King Alfonso V. - Navarre was a tiny kngdom in the western part of the Pyrenees. Its monarch in 1450 was John II (not the same John II of Castile), a son of the king of Aragon. - Granada (though in paper it was an emirate, not a kingdom) was the last Muslim ruled state in the Iberian Peninsula. It covered what is today the south-eastern part of Andalusia. Its king (emir) was Muhammad IX. Granada paid tribute to Castile at this time and was more or less a vassal state of her.
The king when the Compact was signed was James Stuart, James I of England and Ireland and James VII of Scotland.
Charles I signed the petition of right in 1628, and ruled from 1625-1649
we would all be ruled by a king or a queen
who ruled virginia for the king
The answer is yes, because Denmark's government is a Constitutional Monarchy.
Charles I was the second Stuart King of Great Britain and Ireland.
In the middle ages, a king basicly managed the country. Like a president would do in America. The statement above this one is for the most part true but the Kings of the middle ages were really nothing like the president today they ruled using the feudal system and also ruled with a monarchy.
The second king of the Stuart period was . . . . . . King Charles the 1st !! (i learned that in a year 8 history lesson)!!
James II and VII (Second and Seventh) was the last King of the Stuart line. He was King of England, Scotland and Ireland. The three countries were all united under the crown, but had their own governments and laws.
James I was the first Stuart to be king of England and Ireland from 1603 to 1625 and king of Scotland from 1567 to 1625.
Rameses II, The Great, reigned 1279-1213BC
Queen Elizabeth I, the last Tudor monarch, ruled England from 17th November 1558 until her death on 24th March 1603. She was replaced by King James I, the first Stuart Monarch, who reigned until his death on 27th March 1625.
A king ruled a kingdom. A kingdom is a type of monarchy, but there are others.