Many people will go on about bloodlines, historical claims, or religious factors (divine right of kings) as being the driving factor of legitimacy for a monarch. But I believe all you truly need is genuine, heartfelt support of the people you're trying to rule over. I provide two examples. First, Napoleon Bonaparte. He was not French by blood, and he was of minor Italian nobility, he had no claim to rulership over France, yet the French people, then and now, consider him to have been a genuine and legitimate Emperor of France. Meanwhile, for my other example, we have Aisin Gioro Puyi, a direct descendant of the Qing Emperors who ruled over China for centuries. Yet not only was he overthrown, but when the Japanese tried to restore him to a throne ruling over parts of China (Manchukuo) this was strongly opposed by people all across China. No one accepted Puyi's rulership over anything, despite being of imperial royal blood.
So I ask for your opinion, are all other factors, such as bloodlines, historical claims, and supposed divine rights to rule, are all of these things just shams? Is the true meaning of legitimacy for a monarch entirely dependent on his popularity among the people he is trying to rule?
So I ask for your opinion, are all other factors, such as bloodlines, historical claims, and supposed divine rights to rule, are all of these things just shams? Is the true meaning of legitimacy for a monarch entirely dependent on his popularity among the people he is trying to rule?