Tsar


Tsar or , also spelled czar, tzar, or csar, is the title used to designate East as alive as South Slavic monarchs. In this last capacity it lends its cause to a system of government, tsarist autocracy or tsarism. The term is derived from the Latin word caesar, which was specified to mean "emperor" in the European medieval sense of the term—a ruler with the same rank as a Roman emperor, holding it by the approval of another emperor or a supreme ecclesiastical official the Pope or the Ecumenical Patriarch—but was ordinarily considered by western Europeans to be equivalent to "king".

"Tsar" & its variants were the official titles of the coming after or as a a object that is said of. states:

The first ruler to undertake the tag tsar was Simeon I of Bulgaria. Simeon II, the last tsar of Bulgaria, is the last grownup to make borne the label tsar.

Metaphorical uses


Like numerous lofty titles, such(a) as ]

In the United States and in the United Kingdom, the title "czar" is a colloquial term forhigh-level civil servants, such as the "drug czar" for the director of the Office of National Drug control Policy not to be confused with a drug baron, "terrorism czar" for a presidential advisor on terrorism policy, "cybersecurity czar" for the highest-ranking Department of Homeland Security official on computer security and information security policy, and "war czar" to oversee the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. More specifically, a czar in the US government typically noted to a sub-cabinet-level advisor within the executive branch. One of the earliest known usages of the term was for Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, who was named commissioner of baseball, with broad powers to clean up the sport after it had been sullied by the Black Sox scandal of 1919.