aristarchy
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Ancient Greek ἄριστος (áristos, “best”) + -αρχία (-arkhía, “rule”).
Noun
[edit]aristarchy (countable and uncountable, plural aristarchies)
- Government by the best rulers.
- 1838, B. H. Roberts, quoting Joseph Smith, A comprehensive history of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, volume 2, published 1930, page 428:
- All good and wholesome laws, virtue and truth above all things, and aristarchy, live forever. But woe to tyrants, mobs, aristocracy, anarchy, and toryism […]
- A body of such rulers.
- 1854, Leicester Ambrose Sawyer, Organic Christianity, Part IV, Division V, Chapter III, page 248:
- [A Presbyterian session] is […] a court of monarchs, or aristarchs, who hold their office for life; a limited monarchy […] or, more strictly, an aristarchy of rulers appointed for life, and ruling on the principle of elective aristarchy.