Line of succession to the former Ethiopian throne : From (deleted) Wikipedia’s articles.

note:
As of March 2014.
That Wikipedia’s article has deleted by Wikipedians.

See also:
Line of succession to the former Monarchical throne and others : From (deleted) Wikipedia’s articles.


The line of succession to the Ethiopian throne is described in the first section of the 1955 Revised Constitution of Ethiopia. Traditionally the succession was limited to descendants of Makeda Queen of Sheba and King Solomon of the Israelites. The 1931 and 1955 Constitutions formally established a legal order of succession that placed the Imperial throne in the reigning Shewan branch of the Imperial dynasty, giving precedence to the line of Emperor Haile Selassie I.
In brief, the title of Emperor may pass only through male descendants of Haile Selassie I, through the oldest male line before the younger. Other qualifications are that they be born in lawful wedlock, be an Orthodox Christian, and not be married to a foreigner or against consent of the Imperial Family.
In the event that there were no qualifying male descendants of Haile Selassie, the nearest male relative who is descended from Sahle Selassie, King of Shewa, would then be heir. According to most interpretations this would place the throne in line of Emperor Haile Selassie’s brother Dejazmatch Yilma Makonnen, followed by the family of his cousin Ras Imiru Haile Selassie.
In March 1975, the monarchy was abolished by the Derg, the military junta that had forcibly taken over during a Communist revolution. The Derg by its own authority abolished all royal and noble titles by proclamation at that time. The current Constitution of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia makes no provisions for a monarchy. The Crown Council of Ethiopia considers Crown Prince Zera Yacob Amha Selassie to be Head of the Imperial House. Although the current Ethiopian government regards members of the Imperial family as private citizens, they do recognize their royal and noble titles as a matter of courtesy, effectively rescinding the abolition of those titles by Derg regime. Foreign royal courts have continued to accord members of the Ethiopian Imperial family their titles throughout the period following the fall of the Ethiopian monarchy in 1974.

Line of succession

According to the 1955 orders of succession and with the assent of the Imperial Crown Council, the current order of succession among the living male descendants of Haile Selassie I is as follows:
Crown Prince Zera Yacob b. 1953 (son of Amha Selassie I, grandson of Haile Selassie I)

  1. Prince Paul Wossen Seged Makonnen, 2nd Duke of Harrar b. 1947 (grandson of Haile Selassie I)
  2. Prince Mikael Amde Yesus Makonnen b. 1950 (grandson of Haile Selassie I)
  3. Prince Yokshan Dawit Makonnen b. 1978 (great-grandson of Haile Selassie I)
  4. Prince Joel Dawit Makonnen b. 1982 (great-grandson of Haile Selassie I)
  5. Prince Philip Tafari Makonnen b. 1954 (grandson of Haile Selassie I)
  6. Prince Mikael Tafari Makonnen b.1980 son of Prince Phillip Makonnen (great-grandson of Haile Selassie l)
  7. Prince Nahshon Tafari Gizaw Makonnen b.1982 son of Prince Phillip Makonnen (great-grandson of Haile Selassie l)
  8. Prince David Tafari Makonnen b.1992 son of Prince Philip Makonnen (great-grandson of Haile Selassie I)
  9. Prince Isaiah Tafari Makonnen b.1998 son of Prince Philip Makonnen (great-grandson of Haile Selassie I)
  10. Prince Baeda Maryam Makonnen b. 1957 (grandson of Haile Selassie I)
  11. Prince Ermias Sahle Selassie b. 1960 (grandson of Haile Selassie I)
  12. Prince Christian Sahle Selassie Ermias b. 1992 (great-grandson of Haile Selassie I)
  13. Prince Rufael Fiseha Tsieon Ermias b. 1992 (great-grandson of Haile Selassie I)

Line of succession to the former Egyptian throne

note:
As of July 2020.

See also:
Line of succession to the former Monarchical throne and others : From (deleted) Wikipedia’s articles.


Under the Muhammad Ali dynasty, the line of succession to the former Egyptian throne was subject to a number of changes during its history. From its founding in 1805 until 1866, the dynasty followed the imperial Ottoman practice of agnatic seniority, whereby the eldest male in any generation would succeed to the throne. In 1866, however, the then Khedive of Egypt Isma’il Pasha obtained a firman from the Ottoman Emperor which restricted the succession to the male-line descendants of Isma’il Pasha. The resulting succession remained in force until the abolition of the Egyptian monarchy in 1953, following the 1952 Egyptian Revolution.

In 1914, however, the British government deposed Khedive Abbas II, the senior descendant of Isma’il, and proclaimed a protectorate over Egypt. His son Muhammad Abdel Moneim lost his place as heir apparent,[1] and the throne passed to the lines of Abbas II’s uncles Hussein Kamel and Fuad I. A Royal Edict of 13 April 1922 specifically excluded Abbas II from the succession, though it stated that “this exception shall not apply to his sons and their progeny.”[2] As a result, the descendants in the male line from Prince Muhammad Abdel Moneim remained eligible for the throne and retained a senior position in the order of precedence of the Kingdom of Egypt.[3]

Present line of succession

  • Isma’il Pasha (1830-1895)
    • Muhammad III Tawfiq Pasha (1852-1892)
      • Abbas II Hilmi Pasha (1874-1944)
        • Muhammad Abdul Moneim, Prince Regent of Egypt and the Sudan (1899-1979)
          • (4) Prince Abbas Hilmi (born 1941)
            • (5) Prince Daoud Abdul-Moneim (born 1979)
    • Sultan Hussein Kamil (1853-1917)
    • King Fu’ad I (1868-1936)
      • King Faruq I (1920-1965)
        • King Fu’ad II (born 1952)
          • (1) Muhammad Ali, Prince of the Sa’id (born 1979)
            • (2) Prince Fuad Zaher (born 2017)[4]
          • (3) Prince Fakhr ud-din (born 1987)[citation needed]

 

 

Line of succession in June 1953

  • Isma’il Pasha (1830-1895)
    • Muhammad III Tawfiq Pasha (1852-1892)
      • Abbas II Hilmi Pasha (1874-1944)
        • (2) Muhammad Abdul Moneim, Prince Regent of Egypt and the Sudan (born 1899)
          • (3) Prince Abbas Hilmi (born 1941)
      • (1) Prince Mohammed Ali Tewfik (born 1875)
    • Sultan Hussein Kamil (1853-1917)
    • Prince Hassan Ismail (1854-1888)
      • Prince Aziz Hassan (1873-1925)
        • (4) Prince Ismail Aziz Hassan (born 1918)
        • (5) Prince Hassan Aziz Hassan (born 1924)
      • Prince Muhammad Ali Hassan (1884-1945)
        • (6) Prince Muhammad Iz ud-din Hassan (born 1914)
        • (7) Nabil Ismail Izzat Hassan (born 1920)
    • King Fu’ad I (1868-1936)
      • King Faruq I (born 1920)
        • King Fu’ad II (born 1952)