Definition of "decoronation"
decoronation
noun
countable and uncountable, plural decoronations
The deprivation of a crown; the deprivation of the status of monarch or of authority.
Quotations
The State Tinkers is one of many recoronations or even decoronations of George III that appeared in response to the unprecedented threats to the monarchy during the closing decades of the century.
1990, Vincent Carretta, George III and the Satirists from Hogarth to Byron, Athens, Ga., London: The University of Georgia Press, page 251
Perhaps the Farsa served as the first step in a concrete political action by creating the dramatic space in which Alfonso could make his challenge effective, a space already imprinted with his presence and with the violent decoronation of an extant king.
1999, William Egginton, Theatricality and Presence: A Phenomenology of Space and Spectacle in Early Modern France and Spain, Stanford University, page 80
[…] it celebrated the ‘decoronation’ of the Communist party and the promise of free elections. / Yet, in spite of the NP’s supposed ‘decoronation’, the outgoing party was not as marginalized as some might have expected.
2014, Martha Evans, “The Televised Birth of the Rainbow Nation: The Election and Mandela’s Inauguration”, in Broadcasting the End of Apartheid: Live Television and the Birth of the New South Africa, London, New York, N.Y.: I.B. Tauris, page 191
Then a passage at the end of the sack of Musasir is interpreted as a kind of decoronation of King Rusâ: “one statue of Rusâ, with two of his horsemen, (and) his charioteer, with their shrine, cast in bronze, on which was engraved his own haughty (inscription), ‘With my two horses and one charioteer, my hand attained to the kingdom of Urartu’; (these things) together with his great wealth, which was without calculation, I carried off.”
2017, Josette Elayi, Sargon II, King of Assyria, Atlanta, Ga.: SBL Press, page 142