Queen: Difference between revisions

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m (Robot: Cosmetic changes)
(Removed "apparently" since it was explicit within the audio.)
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* [[Mary I]] - [[16th century]] [[England]] and [[Wales]]
* [[Mary I]] - [[16th century]] [[England]] and [[Wales]]
* [[Elizabeth I]] - [[16th century]] [[England]] and [[Wales]]. ''Romantic liaison of the Doctor's.''
* [[Elizabeth I]] - [[16th century]] [[England]] and [[Wales]]. ''Romantic liaison of the Doctor's.''
* [[Anne (Queen of France)|Anne]] - [[17th century]] [[France]] (apparently a dead ringer for [[Peri Brown]])
* [[Anne (Queen of France)|Anne]] - [[17th century]] [[France]] (a dead ringer for [[Peri Brown]])
* [[Victoria]] - [[19th century]] [[United Kingdom]] of [[Great Britain]] and [[Ireland]]
* [[Victoria]] - [[19th century]] [[United Kingdom]] of [[Great Britain]] and [[Ireland]]
* [[Elizabeth II]] - [[20th century|20th]]/[[21st century]] [[United Kingdom]] of [[Great Britain]] and [[Northern Ireland]]
* [[Elizabeth II]] - [[20th century|20th]]/[[21st century]] [[United Kingdom]] of [[Great Britain]] and [[Northern Ireland]]

Revision as of 12:16, 2 March 2013

You may be looking for the band.

Queen was the title of the female Head of State under a monarchical system of government, or that of the consort if the Head of State was a king.

The fact that a society was ruled by a Queen sometimes indicated that society was matriarchal in nature (though not always, as in the case of late 16th and 20th century Earth).

"Queen" was also often used to denote the key member and progenitor of insect colonies, potentially leading to confusion when dealing with sentient insectoid races. However the hierarchical nature of many of these species and their cultures effectively makes them monarchies.

Queens and their Domains

Spiders do not normally form colonies or have queens, thus the Queen Spider appears to have been a queen in the political rather than biological sense.

Insectoid Races led by Queens

Queen