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Administration of territory in dynastic China

The administration of territory in dynastic China is the history of practices involved in governing the land from the Qin dynasty (221–206 BC) to the Qing dynasty (1644–1912).

Funerary figurines of Tang dynasty officials

Administrative divisions in imperial China edit

 
Song dynasty officials

County edit

The only level at which state officials actually governed the common people was the county level. Counties were coordinated by prefectures which had on average, about ten counties. Overseeing inspectors were sent out from the central government to oversee the work of the prefectures. During the Yuan (1271–1368) and Ming (1368–1644) dynasties, these arrangements were solidified into permanent provinces. Funding for the local administration came from taxes collected while a portion was set aside for the central government.[1]

Counties (xian) originally meant "dependencies" ruled by vassals of royal blood. During the Qin dynasty (221–206 BC), they were coordinated by commanderies (jun) and expanded throughout the entire empire, but the Han (202 BC–220 AD) returned them to indirect rule by vassals. However, after 100 years, the dependencies were gradually converted into counties or incorporated by 100 BC. In practice, most dynasties started out with some combination of the county and dependency dichotomy and trended towards greater centralization through the county/prefectural system over time.[1]

The county was headed by a "court-appointed official" (chaoting mingguan) responsible for collecting taxes, hearing trials, public order, education, examinations, morality, and religious customs. Counties in politically important areas were assigned to jinshi degree holders while counties in remote areas were assigned to provincial exam graduates (juren). During the Ming dynasty, the percentage of jinshi degree holding magistrates could range from 71% to 5% depending on their assigned area's importance. In theory, each local magistrate's office (yamen) was divided into six sections corresponding to the Six Ministries. By Qing times, additional sections were also added for taxes, document receipt and distribution, and salt. On average, each Qing county had 20-30 clerks working these sections. They were selected by the magistrate and received a government stipend. Working under the clerks were a variety of subofficials and support personnel. The yamen also had runners (yanyi) doing menial work. In the late 19th century the total number of people employed by the yamen in a county could range from 200 to over 500.[2]

Village edit

Below the county were villages and city wards governed by a combination of magistrates, city governments, local families, and local militia. During Qin and Han times, counties were separated into five rural villages or townships (xiang). Below rural districts were villages (li) that contained squads (wu). Security in these rural districts were handled by a tingzhang (ex. Emperor Gaozu of Han). Later dynasties had security institutions composed of several households such as the baojia system.[3]

Provincial administration edit

Regional governments were introduced by the Qin dynasty after it destroyed the last independent hereditary kingdoms. The Qin empire was divided into commanderies (jun), each of which was led by three officials. The Han dynasty identified the rapid concentration of central power as one of the reasons for the Qin downfall and therefore only adopted the commandery/prefectural system for half its territory and installed hereditary kingdoms in the other half. They were gradually brought under Han control and as a result, there were 103 commanderies by the end of Eastern Han (25–220). Thirteen regional inspectorates (cishi) were established over them. Most of them were named after the Nine Regions and were thus called zhou (province). These provinces, circuits, or inspectorates did not function as provincial governorships. Both the Tang and Song saw these regions as broad areas for Commissioners to coordinate government activity. Each circuit (dao or lu) was assigned four Commissions, each tasked with a different administrative activity: military, fiscal, judicial, and supply.[4]

Permanent provincial administrations developed under the Yuan and Ming dynasties.[3] The Yuan province, called a Branch Secretariat (xing zhongshu sheng), was governed by two Managers of Governmental Affairs (pingchang zhengshi). Sometimes a Grand Chancellor (chengxiang) was in charge of an entire province. It's uncertain how much central authority the government had over these provinces since they were essentially ruled by Mongol nobles. Between the provinces and the central government were two agencies: the Branch Bureau of Military Affairs (xing shumi yuan) and the Branch Censorate (xing yushi tai).[5] The Ming provincial government consisted of three cooperating agencies: the Provincial Administration Commission (chengxuan buzheng shisi), the Provincial Surveillance Commission (tixing ancha shisi), and the Regional Military Commission (du zhihui shisi). They were directed by a Grand Coordinator, whose tenure was indefinite, and a Supreme Commander. Executive officials of the Three Provincial Commissions were called Regional Overseers.[6] The Qing dynasty expanded the number of provinces to 18 by 1850 and did away with the tripartite provincial administration. Qing provinces were governed by a single Governor (xunfu) who answered to a Governors-general (zongdu).[7]

Metropolitan edit

The metropolitan area, the capital and its hinterlands, was directly subordinate to the central court and often named as such. During the Yuan dynasty, Khanbaliq and its surroundings were named fuli (lit. abdomen). The Ming court called Nanjing Yingtian fu (lit. responsive to heaven prefecture) and the surrounding area Zhili (lit. directly attached) from 1378 to 1403. After 1403, Beiping and its surrounding region was called Bei zhili (northern zhili), and when it became the capital in 1423, Nanjing's metropolitan area was called Nan zhili (southern zhili). Shuntian and Yingtian prefectures were referred to as Jingfu (capital prefectures). During the Qing dynasty, the Shuntian prefect was allowed to directly memorialize the emperor, but the subprefectures and counties were jointly governed with the governor of Zhili. The capital usually had a higher concentration of military personnel. The Qing settled them just outside Beijing with their own farmland and the parks to the north were also strewn with Banner villages.[8]

Table of administrative divisions edit

Historical Administrative Divisions in China
Dynasty Primary Secondary Tertiary Quaternary
Qin Commandery (, jùn) County (縣/县, xiàn)    
Han, Jin Province (, zhōu) Commandery County  
Sui "Prefecture" (many smaller ) County    
Tang, Liao Circuit (, dào) Prefecture
(smaller: ; larger: , )
County  
Song and Jin Circuit (, ) Prefecture
(smaller: ; larger: ; military: /, jūn); industrial: 監/监, jiān
County  
Yuan Province (, shěng) Circuit (, dào) Prefecture
(larger: , ; smaller: , zhōu)
County
Ming Directly administered province Zhílì (直隸/直隶)
Province ()
Prefecture (, ) Department () County
Qing Directly administered province (直隸/直隶)
Province ()
Prefecture (府, )
Independent department (直隸州/直隶州)
Independent subprefecture (直隸廳/直隶厅)
County (/)
Department ()
Subprefecture (/, Tīng)

Qin dynasty (221–206 BC) edit

 
Borders of the commanderies of the Qin Empire.

After the state of Qin conquered China in 221 BC, the "First Emperor of Qin", Qin Shi Huang, divided the Qin dynasty into 36, and then ultimately, 40 commanderies, which were divided into counties, which were further divided into townships (xiang). The imperial capital was excluded from the normal administrative units and was administered by a Chamberlain (neishi). Administrative control of a commandery was divided between a Governor (shou), who handled general administration, and a Defender (wei), who supervised military garrisons. Counties were administered by a Magistrate (ling). Control of a township was divided between an Elder (sanlao), the moral authority, a Husbander (sefu), who handled fiscal affairs, and a Patroller (youjiao), who kept the local peace. Below townships were even smaller divisions of a thousand households, which constituted a neighborhood (ting), and a hundred households, which constituted a village (li).[9]

There was no formal system of recruitment for personnel during Qin times. All appointments down to the county level were based on recommendation and decided by the Grand Chancellor and emperor. Tenures were indefinite. Officials could obtain titles graded from 20 to 1 for meritorious service, but such titles were not hereditary, and did not confer a fief to the holder.[10]

Han dynasty (202 BC–220 AD) edit

 
Han provinces, c. 190

The founder of the Han dynasty, Emperor Gaozu of Han (r. 28 February 202 – 1 June 195 BC), separated the dynasty's territory between the western half directly controlled by the imperial capital, and the eastern half, ruled by Kings of the Han dynasty. In the areas controlled by the central government, regional hierarchy followed the Qin model of commandery and county. The eastern nobility ruled kingdoms (wangguo) or marquisates (houguo) that were largely autonomous until 154 BC when a series of imperial actions gradually brought them under central control. By the end of the millennium they differed from commanderies and counties only in name and were controlled by a Counselor-delegate (guoxiang) appointed by the central government.[11]

Until 106 BC, the central government supervised the commanderies through touring Censors, but in that year, Emperor Wu of Han formally divided the commanderies into 13 provinces. These provinces were governed by Regional Inspectors (cishi) or Regional Governors (zhoumu).[12] Regional Inspectors and Governors were not allowed to serve in their native commandery.[13]

After 104 BC, the imperial capital was governed by the Three Guardians (sanfu): Metropolitan Governor (jingzhaoyin), Guardian of the Left (zuopingyi), and Guardian of the Right (youpingyi). After 89 BC, these three positions were subordinated by the Military Commandant (sili xiaowei) who reported directly to the emperor.[12]

Recruitment edit

Han officialdom was ruled by an aristocracy down to the county level. Candidates for offices recommended by the provinces were examined by the Ministry of Rites and then presented to the emperor. Some candidates for clerical positions would be given a test to determine whether they could memorize nine thousand Chinese characters.[14] The tests administered during the Han dynasty did not offer formal entry into government posts. Recruitment and appointment in the Han dynasty were primarily through recommendations by aristocrats and local officials. Recommended individuals were also primarily aristocrats. In theory, recommendations were based on a combination of reputation and ability but it's not certain how well this worked in practice. Oral examinations on policy issues were sometimes conducted personally by the emperor himself during Western Han times.[15]

Although executive officials were appointed by the central government, they were allowed to freely appoint their own sons and favored friends. An appointed official first served one year in probationary status and then obtained indefinite tenure with three year intervals, at which point they were assessed by their supervisors for promotion, demotion, or dismissal. During the reign of Emperor Wu (r. 9 March 141 BC – 29 March 87 BC), every commandery and kingdom was called on to nominate one or two men for appointment each year. Later the number of nominations was fixed to one per 200,000 people. From 165 BC onward, nominees were given written examinations to confirm their literacy and learning. In 124 BC, Emperor Wu established the Taixue with a faculty of five Erudites (boshi) and student body of 50, recommended by Commandery Governors, that grew to 3,000 by the end of the millennium. Students studied the classics at the Taixue for one year and then sat a written graduation exam, after which they were either appointed or returned home to seek positions on the commandery staff. Officials were paid on a monthly basis in both grain and coin corresponding to their rank.[16] The number of graduates who went on to hold office were few. The examinations did not offer a formal route to commissioned office and the primary path to office remained through recommendations.[17]

Sui dynasty (581–618) edit

 
Sui provinces, ca. 610

The period of dynastic turmoil between the Han and Sui dynasties led to proliferation of counties, commanderies, and regions, often set up to administer the large refugee populations moving across China.[19] In 586, Emperor Wen of Sui abolished commanderies and left provinces in direct control of counties. In 605, Emperor Yang of Sui revived the commandery. In the early years of the Sui dynasty, Area Commanders-in-chief (zongguan) ruled as semi-autonomous warlords, but they were gradually replaced with Branch Departments of State Affairs (xing taisheng).[20]

In 587, the Sui dynasty mandated every province to nominate three "cultivated talents" (xiucai) per year for appointment. In 599, all capital officials of rank five and above were required to make nominations for appointment in several categories.

Imperial examinations edit

Examination categories for "classicists" (mingjing ke) and "cultivated talents" (xiucai ke) were introduced. Classicists were tested on the Confucian canon, which was considered an easy task at the time, so those who passed were awarded posts in the lower rungs of officialdom. Cultivated talents were tested on matters of statecraft as well as the Confucian canon. In AD 607, Emperor Yang established a new category of examinations for the "presented scholar" (jinshi ke 进士科). These three categories of examination were the origins of the imperial examination system that would last until 1905. Consequently, the year 607 is also considered by many to be the real beginning of the imperial examination system. The Sui dynasty was itself short lived however and the system was not developed further until much later.[21]

The imperial examinations did not significantly shift recruitment selection in practice during the Sui dynasty. Schools at the capital still produced students for appointment. Inheritance of official status was also still practiced. Men of the merchant and artisan classes were still barred from officialdom. However the reign of Emperor Wen (r. 4 March 581 – 13 August 604) did see much greater expansion of government authority over officials. Under Emperor Wen, all officials down to the county level had to be appointed by the Department of State Affairs in the capital and were subjected to annual merit rating evaluations. Regional Inspectors and County Magistrates had to be transferred every three years and their subordinates every four years. They were not allowed to bring their parents or adult children with them upon reassignment of territorial administration. The Sui did not establish any hereditary kingdoms or marquisates of the Han sort. To compensate, nobles were given substantial stipends and staff. Aristocratic officials were ranked based on their pedigree with distinctions such as "high expectations", "pure", and "impure" so that they could be awarded offices appropriately.[22]

Tang dynasty (618–907) edit

 
Tang circuits, ca. 660
 
Tang circuits, ca. 742

At the beginning of the Tang dynasty, Emperor Taizong introduced "circuits" to help monitor the operation of prefectures (rather than a new primary level of administration).[23] The circuit was assigned a Surveillance Commissioner (ancha shi), who functioned as an overall coordinator rather than a governor, and visited prefectures and checked up on the performance of officials.[24] In 639, these 10 circuits were oversaw 43 commanderies, themselves subdivided into 358 prefectures.[24][25] A normal prefecture was administered by a Prefect. Sometimes a prefecture could be designated an Area Command (dudu fu) under an Area Commander (dudu) and a few prefectures could be grouped together into a Superior Area Command (da dudu fu) under a Commander-in-chief (da dudu). There were three Superior Prefectures known as Jingzhao (in the Chang'an area), Henan (in the Luoyang area), and Taiyuan (in modern Shanxi Province). Each Superior Prefecture was nominally administered by an Imperial Prince but usually another official was actually in charge. Area Commands were later replaced by Defense Commands (zhen) under Military Commissioners (jiedushi). After the An Lushan Rebellion (16 December 755 – 17 February 763), the role of the Surveillance Commissioner shifted to that of a more direct civil governor while many Military Commissioners became autonomous warlords in all but name. Sometimes borderlands were designated a Protectorate (duhu fu) under a Protector (duhu).[24]

In 733, Emperor Xuanzong expanded the number of circuits to 15 by establishing separate circuits for the areas around Chang'an and Luoyang, and by splitting the large Shannan and Jiangnan circuits into 2 and 3 new circuits respectively. He also established a system of permanent inspecting commissioners, though without executive powers.[26]

Expansion of the imperial examinations edit

During the Tang dynasty, candidates were either recommended by their schools or had to register for exams at their home prefecture.[21] In 693, Wu Zetian expanded the examination system by allowing commoners and gentry previously disqualified by their non-elite backgrounds to take the tests.[27]

Six categories of regular civil-service examinations were organized by the Department of State Affairs and held by the Ministry of Rites: cultivated talents, classicists, presented scholars, legal experts, writing experts, and arithmetic experts. Emperor Xuanzong of Tang also added categories for Daoism and apprentices. The hardest of these examination categories, the presented scholar jinshi degree, became more prominent over time until it superseded all other examinations. By the late Tang the jinshi degree became a prerequisite for appointment into higher offices. Appointments by recommendation were also required to take examinations.[14] However candidates who passed the exams were not automatically granted office. They still had to pass a quality evaluation by the Ministry of Rites, after which they were allowed to wear official robes.[21]

Successful candidates reported to the Ministry of Personnel for placement examinations. Unassigned officials and honorary title holders were expected to take placement examinations at regular intervals. Non-assigned status could last a very long time especially when waiting for a substantive appointment. After being assigned to office, a junior official was given an annual merit rating. There was no specified term limit, but most junior officials served for at least three years or more in one post. Senior officials served indefinitely at the pleasure of the emperor.[28]

The Tang emperors placed the palace exam graduates, the jinshi, in important government posts, where they came into conflict with hereditary elites. During the reign of Emperor Xuanzong of Tang (713-56), about a third of the Grand Chancellors appointed were jinshi, but by the time of Emperor Xianzong of Tang (806-21), three fifths of the Grand Chancellors appointed were jinshi. This change in the way government was organized dealt a real blow to the aristocrats, but they did not sit idly by and wait to become obsolete. Instead they themselves entered the examinations to gain the privileges associated with it. By the end of the dynasty, the aristocratic class had produced 116 jinshi, so that they remained a significant influence in the government. Hereditary privileges were also not completely done away with. The sons of high ministers and great generals had the right to hold minor offices without taking the examinations. In addition, the number of graduates were not only small, but also formed their own clique in the government based around the examiners and the men they passed. In effect the graduates became another interest group the emperor had to contend with.[29]

Liao dynasty (916–1125) edit

 
The Five circuits of Liao in 1111 AD

The Khitan-led Liao dynasty was divided between a nomadic tribal Northern Administration and a sedentary Chinese Southern Establishment. They were each headed by a Prime Minister, the northern one appointed by the Xiao consort clan, and the southern one appointed by the ruling Yelü clan. The Southern Establishments were divided into five "circuits", each with a capital city. Each circuit except for the one dominated by the Supreme Capital (shangjing) was ruled by a Regent (liushou). Under the Regent were Governors (yin') of prefectures who ruled below them Magistrates of counties. Under the Northern Administration, Khitans were organized around an ordo, the moving camp of a chief. Throughout the duration of the Liao dynasty, the number of ordos fluctuated between 10 and 44. The tribal vassals of the Liao were organized into territories known as routes (lu) headed by a tribal chief.[30]

The southern commissioners were usually members of the Yelü royal clan, the northern commissioners mostly members of the Xiao consort clan. The administration of the Northern Region was mainly, though not exclusively, staffed by Khitan holding traditional Khitan titles. Its most powerful officers were the Khitan commissioners for military affairs, the prime ministers of the Northern and Southern administrations (Beifu zaixiang, Nanfu zaixiang), the Northern and Southern Great Kings (Bei Dawang, Nan Dawang), both of whom were members of the royal clan, and the commander in chief (yuyue). These men controlled all military and tribal affairs, the selection of military commanders, the disposition of the tribal herds, and the allocation of pastures. Beneath them was a bewildering array of tribal officials, an office for the royal clan of the former Bohai state, and a range of offices providing services to the imperial house: artisans, physicians, huntsmen, and commissioners responsible for the royal herds, stud farms, and stables.

The government of the Southern Region was designed in imitation of a Tang model. It was based, as was the government of the Northern Region, at the Supreme Capital, where it had its main offices. It had the traditional groups of elder statesmen, the Three Preceptors (san shi) and the Three Dukes (san gong) to act as imperial advisers, and a complex bureaucracy at the head of which were three ministries similar to the three central ministries (san sheng) of early Tang... but only the Secretariat played any significant role in political decisions. ... the Southern Administration was essentially an executive organization for the southern areas and their settled population. The high-sounding titles of its officers should not conceal the fact that routine decision making and all military authority (southern officials were specifically excluded from decisions on military affairs at court) were concentrated in the emperor's Khitan entourage drawn from the Northern Administration.[31]

— Denis Twitchett and Klaus-Peter Tietze

Imperial examinations were only held for the Southern Establishments until the last decade of the dynasty when Khitans found it an acceptable avenue for advancing their careers. The examinations focused primarily on lyric-meter poetry and rhapsodies. Recruitment through examinations was irregular and all offices of note were hereditary in nature and held by Khitans.[32]

Song dynasty (960–1279) edit

 
Circuits of Northern Song dynasty (as of 1111 AD)

The Song dynasty continued the Tang system of circuit, prefecture, and county. The Military Prefecture was called an "army" (jun) and a handful of prefectures containing mines and salterns were designated Industrial Prefectures (jian). The prefectures were nominally administered by a Prefect, but in practice the central government appointed another Manager of the Affairs to administer groups of prefectures. Actions by Prefects also had to be signed off by a prefectural supervisor.[33] Like the Tang before them, the Song used circuits not as provincial governorships but regions for Commissioners to coordinate government activity. Four Commissions were assigned to every circuit, each tasked with a different administrative activity: military, fiscal, judicial, and supply.[4]

Scholar bureaucracy edit

The imperial examinations became the primary method of recruitment for official posts. More than a hundred palace examinations were held during the dynasty, resulting in a greater number of jinshi degrees rewarded.[34] The examinations were opened to adult Chinese males, with some restrictions, including even individuals from the occupied northern territories of the Liao and Jin dynasties.[35] Many individuals of low social status were able to rise to political prominence through success in the imperial examination. The process of studying for the examination tended to be time-consuming and costly, requiring time to spare and tutors. Most of the candidates came from the numerically small but relatively wealthy land-owning scholar-official class.[36]

Successful candidates were appointed to office almost immediately and waiting periods between appointments were not long. Annual merit ratings were taken and officials could request evaluation for reassignment. Officials who wished to escape harsh assignments often requested reassignment as a state supervisor of a Taoist temple or monastery. Senior officials in the capital also sometimes nominated themselves for the position of Prefect in obscure prefectures.[37]

Although quite a few Northern Song families or lineages succeeded in producing high officials over several generations, none could begin to rival the great families of the Six Dynasties and Tang in longevity, prestige, or perhaps even power. Most important, the promise of the examinations transformed learning from an elite concern to a preoccupation. Education became less the domain of scholarly families comprising one portion of elite society and more an activity urged upon academically promising boys and young men throughout elite society.[38]

— John W. Chaffee

Hereditary prefectures edit

When Emperor Taizu of Song expanded southwest he encountered four powerful families: the Yang of Bozhou, the Song of Manzhou, the Tian of Sizhou, and the Long of Nanning. Long Yanyao, patriarch of the Long family, submitted to Song rule in 967 with the guarantee that he could rule Nanning as his personal property, to be passed down through his family without Song interference. In return the Long family was required to present tribute to the Song court. The other families were also offered the same conditions, which they accepted. Although they were included among the official prefectures of the Song dynasty, in practice, these families and their estates constituted independent hereditary kingdoms within the Song realm.[39]

In 975, Emperor Taizong of Song ordered Song Jingyang and Long Hantang to attack the Mu'ege kingdom and drive them back across the Yachi River. Whatever territory they seized they were allowed to keep. After a year of fighting, they succeeded in the endeavor.[40]

Jin dynasty (1115–1234) edit

 
Circuits of Jurchen Jin dynasty, as of 1142 A.D.

The Jurchen-led Jin dynasty was divided into 19 routes, five of which were governed from capitals under the control of Regents. The 14 routes not controlled by capitals were under the administration of Area Commands (zongguanfu). Under the routes were prefectures. The Jurchens adopted a more Chinese administration than the Khitans. They instituted an examination system in 1123 and adopted the triennial examination cycle in 1129. Two separate examinations were held to accommodate their former Liao and Song subjects. In the north, examinations focused on lyric-meter poetry and rhapsodies while in the south, Confucian Classics were tested. During the reign of Emperor Xizong of Jin (r. 1135–1150), the contents of both examinations were unified and examinees were tested on both genres. Emperor Zhangzong of Jin (r. 1189–1208) abolished the prefectural examinations. Emperor Shizong of Jin (r. 1161–1189) created the first examination conducted in the Jurchen language, with a focus on political writings and poetry. Graduates of the Jurchen examination were called "treatise graduates" (celun jinshi) to distinguish them from the regular Chinese jinshi.[21]

Posts were regularly filled by examination graduates and it was not uncommon for one in three candidates to pass. An average of 200 Metropolitan Graduate Degrees were handed out per year. Although Chinese subjects were able to obtain offices through the examinations, a regional quota assured that northerners (principally Jurchens) passed more consistently and were more quickly promoted upon obtaining office. Often Jurchen examinees had to demonstrate little more than literacy to pass. Chinese officials also faced discrimination, at times physical, while Jurchens retained all final decision-making powers within the Jin government.[41]

Yuan dynasty (1271–1368) edit

 
Yuan provinces in 1330 AD.

Under the Mongol-led Yuan dynasty, the largest administrative division was the province, also known as a Branch Secretariat (xing zhongshu sheng). A province was governed by two Managers of Governmental Affairs (pingchang zhengshi). Occasionally a Grand Chancellor (chengxiang) was put in charge of an entire province. It is questionable how much authority the central government had over the provinces as they were essentially the administrative bases of Mongol nobles. Between the provinces and the central government were two agencies: the Branch Bureau of Military Affairs (xing shumi yuan) and the Branch Censorate (xing yushi tai). The Military Branch handled military affairs and had jurisdiction over vaguely defined territories known as Regions (chu). There were three Branch Censorates that handled overseeing the provincial affairs of the Yuan dynasty.[5]

Below the provinces were circuits with agencies headed by Commissioners who coordinated matters between the provincial level authorities and lower-level routes, prefectures, and districts. The route was governed by an Overseer and a Commander. Below routes were prefectures headed by an Overseer and a Prefect. At the lowest level, below the prefectures, were counties headed by an Overseer and a Magistrate. The capital Khanbaliq was governed by the Dadu Route under the administration of two Police Commissions, while the summer capital Shangdu was under another Police Commission.[42]

All residents of the Yuan dynasty were grouped into four categories: Mongols, Semu, Han, and Manzi. Semu were subjects of the Yuan coming from the west of China, Han were the former subjects of the Jin dynasty, and the Manzi were all former subjects of the Song dynasty. All important government positions were held by Mongols and Semu, with some minor offices held by Han, while Manzi were relegated to local offices in their own area. Mongol Overseers were assigned to every office down to the county level.[43]

Imperial examinations were ceased for a time with the defeat of the Song in 1279 by Kublai Khan. One of Kublai's main advisers, Liu Bingzhong, recommended restoring the examination system, however Kublai distrusted the examinations and did not heed his advice.[44] Kublai believed that Confucian learning was not needed for government posts and was opposed to such a commitment to the Chinese language and to the Chinese scholars who were so adept at it, as well as its accompanying ideology. He wished to appoint his own people without relying on an apparatus inherited from a newly conquered and sometimes rebellious country.[45][46]

The examination system was revived in 1315 with significant changes during the reign of Ayurbarwada Buyantu Khan. The new examination system organized its examinees into regional categories in a way which favored Mongols and severely disadvantaged the Manzi. A quota system both for number of candidates and degrees awarded was instituted based on the classification of the four groups, those being the Mongols (and Semu), Han, and Manzi, with further restrictions by province favoring the northeast of the empire (Mongolia) and its vicinities.[47] A quota of 300 persons was fixed for provincial examinations with 75 persons from each group. The metropolitan exam had a quota of 100 persons with 25 persons from each group. Candidates were enrolled on two lists with the Mongols and Semu located on the left and the Han and Manzi on the right. Examinations were written in Chinese and based on Confucian and Neo-Confucian texts but the Mongols and Semu received easier questions to answer than the Chinese. Successful candidates were awarded one of three ranks. All graduates were eligible for official appointment.[21]

Under the revised system the yearly averages for examination degrees awarded was about 21.[47] The way in which the four regional categories were divided tended to favor the Mongols, Semu, and Han, despite the Manzi being by far the largest portion of the population. The 1290 census figures record some 12,000,000 households (about 48% of the total Yuan population) for South China, versus 2,000,000 North Chinese households, and the populations of Mongols and Semu were both less.[47] While South China was technically allotted 75 candidates for each provincial exam, only 28 Han Chinese from South China were included among the 300 candidates, the rest of the South China slots (47) being occupied by resident Mongols or Semu, although 47 "racial South Chinese" who were not residents of South China were approved as candidates.[48]

Recruitment by examination during the Yuan dynasty constituted a very minor part of the Yuan administration. Hereditary Mongol nobility formed the elite nucleus of the government. Initially the Mongols drew administrators from their subjects but in 1261, attempts were made by Kublai to increase Mongol personnel by ordering the establishment of Mongolian schools to draw officials from. The School for the Sons of the State was established in 1271 to give two or three years of training for the sons of Imperial Bodyguards so that they might become suitable for official recruitment.[49] Officials serving in the capital were nominally supposed to receive merit ratings every 30 months, for demotion or promotion, but in practice government posts were inherited from father to son.[50]

Tusi edit

Southwestern tribal chieftainships were organized under the tusi system. The tusi system was inspired by the Jimi system (Chinese: 羈縻制度) implemented in regions of ethnic minorities groups during the Tang dynasty.[51] It was established as a specific political term during the Yuan dynasty[52] and was used as a political institution to administer newly acquired territories following their conquest of the Dali Kingdom in 1253.[53]

Members of the former Duan imperial clan were appointed as governors-general with nominal authority using the title "Dali chief steward" (Chinese: 大理總管, p Dàlǐ Zǒngguǎn), and local leaders were co-opted under a variety of titles as administrators of the region.[54] Some credit the Turkoman governor Sayyid Ajjal Shams al-Din Omar with introducing the system into China.[54] Duan Xingzhi, the last king of Dali, was appointed as the first local ruler, and he accepted the stationing of a pacification commissioner there.[55] Duan Xingzhi offered the Yuan maps of Yunnan and led a considerable army to serve as guides for the Yuan army. By the end of 1256, Yunnan was considered to have been pacified.

Under the Yuan dynasty, the native officials, or tusi, were the clients of a patron-client relationship. The patron, the Yuan emperors, exercised jurisdictional control over the client, but not his/her territory itself.[56]

The tusi chieftains in Yunnan, Guizhou and Sichuan who submitted to Yuan rule and were allowed to keep their titles. The Han Chinese Yang family ruling the Chiefdom of Bozhou which was recognized by the Song and Tang dynasties also received recognition by the subsequent Yuan and Ming dynasties. The Luo clan in Shuixi led by Ahua were recognized by the Yuan emperors, as they were by the Song emperors when led by Pugui and Tang emperors when led by Apei. They descended from the Shu Han era king Huoji who helped Zhuge Liang against Meng Huo. They were also recognized by the Ming dynasty.[57][58]

Ming dynasty (1368–1644) edit

 
Administrative divisions of Ming dynasty in 1409
 
Regional Military Commissions (Du Zhihui Shisi) of Ming dynasty
 
Ming dynasty official, Yang Hong, 1451

The lowest administrative unit during the Ming dynasty was the county which was supervised by a prefecture through a subprefecture. Prefectures were organized into provinces and administered by three cooperating agencies: the Provincial Administration Commission (chengxuan buzheng shisi), the Provincial Surveillance Commission (tixing ancha shisi), and the Regional Military Commission (du zhihui shisi). The three agencies were directed by a Grand Coordinator and Supreme Commander. The post of Grand Coordinator was indefinite and could last as long as 10 or even 20 years. A Supreme Commander handled military affairs. Neither posts were governorships and were considered special-purpose representatives of the government.[59] The Provincial Administration Commission was in general charge of all civil matters, especially fiscal matters. The Provincial Administration kept three to eight branch offices in each province. Each branch office was headed by an Intendant (daotai) to exercise administrative authority. Each province also had a Tax Intendant (duliang dao). The Provincial Surveillance Commission was headed by a single Surveillance Commissioner, under whom were various vice and assistant commissioners who held censorial and judicial powers. Regional Military Commissioners were responsible for military garrisons in the provinces. Executive officials of the Three Provincial Commissions were collectively known as Regional Overseers. The purpose of this tripartite administration of provinces was so that no one had supreme power in one region.[6]

Recruitment by examination flourished after 1384 in the Ming dynasty. Provincial graduates were sometimes appointed to low-ranking offices or entered the Guozijian for further training, after which they might be considered for better appointments. Before appointment to office, metropolitan graduates were assigned to observe the functions of an office for up to one year. The maximum tenure for an office was nine years, but triennial evaluations were also taken, at which point an official could be reassigned. Magistrates of counties submitted monthly evaluation reports to their prefects and the prefects submitted annual evaluations to provincial authorities. Every third year, provincial authorities submitted evaluations to the central government, at which point an "outer evaluation" was conducted, requiring local administration to send representatives to attend a grand audience at the capital. Officials at the capital conducted an evaluation every six years. Capital officials of rank 4 and above were exempted from regular evaluations. Irregular evaluations were conducted by censorial officials.[60]

Gaitu guiliu edit

The Ming dynasty continued the Yuan tusi chiefdom system. The Ming tusi were categorized into civil and military ranks.[61] The civilian tusi were given the titles of Tu Zhifu ("native prefecture"), Tu Zhizhou ("native department") and Tu Zhixian ("native county") according to the size and population of their domains. Nominally, they had the same rank as their counterparts in the regular administration system[61] The central government gave more autonomy to those military tusi who controlled areas with fewer Han Chinese people and had underdeveloped infrastructure. They pledged loyalty to the Ming emperor but had almost unfettered power within their domains.  

All the native chieftains were nominally subordinate to Pacification Commissioners (Xuanfushi, Xuanweishi, Anfushi). The Pacification Commissioners were also native chieftains who received their title from the Ming court. As a way of checking their power, Pacification Commissioners were put under the supervision of the Ministry of War.[62]

Throughout its 276-year history, the Ming dynasty bestowed a total of 1608 tusi titles, 960 of which were military-rank and 648 were civilian-rank,[63] the majority of which were in Yunnan, Guizhou and Sichuan. In Tibet, Qinghai and Sichuan, the Ming court sometimes gave both tusi titles and religious titles to leaders. As a result, those tusi had double identities. They played both the role of political leaders and religious leaders within their domains. For example, during the reign of the Yongle Emperor, the leader of the Jinchuan monastery assisted the Ming army in a battle against the Mongols. The leader was later given the title Yanhua Chanshi (演化禅师), or "Evolved Chan Master", and the power to rule 15 villages as his domain as a reward.[64]

Under Ming administration, the jurisdictional authority of tusi began to be replaced with state territorial authority. The tusi acted as stop gaps until enough Chinese settlers arrived for a "tipping point" to be reached, and they were then converted into official prefectures and counties to be fully annexed into the central bureaucratic system of the Ming dynasty. This process was known as gaitu guiliu (simplified Chinese: 改土归流; traditional Chinese: 改土歸流), or "turning native rule into regular administration".[53] The most notable example of this was the consolidation of southwestern tusi chiefdoms into the province of Guizhou in 1413.[53]

Building upon the Yuan precedent, the Ming began its colonization of the southwest in the 1370s, and though its military strength waxed and waned, it was able to eliminate the largest autonomous kingdoms in the southwest by the early decades of the seventeenth century. By the time of the Ming-Qing transition, what remained in the southwest were only a few small autonomous polities, and the Rebellion of the Three Feudatories (sanfan zhi luan; 1673-81) did much to erase these from the landscape. In short, the Yongzheng Emperor's appointment of his trusted Manchu official Ortai (1680-1745) and the aggressive campaign against tusi offices they initiated in the 1720s in the southwest should be seen as the end point, not the beginning, of China's colonization of the southwest.[65]

— John E. Herman

In sum, gaitu guiliu was the process of replacing tusi with state-appointed officials, the transition from jurisdictional sovereignty to territorial sovereignty, and the start of formal empire rather than informal.[66]

Qing dynasty (1644–1912) edit

 
The Qing dynasty and its provinces, near its greatest extent. (1820)
 
Governorships of the Qing dynasty
 
Official map of the Qing Empire published in 1905.

The Qing dynasty kept the Ming province system and expanded it to 18 provinces by 1850. However unlike the Ming tripartite provincial administration, Qing provinces were governed by a single Governor (xunfu) who held substantial power. Although all provincial agencies communicated with the central government through him, he himself was subordinate to a Governors-general (zongdu). While nominally superior to a Governor, usually the Governors-general cooperated closely with the Governor and acted jointly in reporting to the central government. Governors and Governors-generals did not have to have a Manchu-Han Chinese balance, unlike in the central government.[7]

Subordinate to Governors were two kinds of agencies: Provincial Administration Commissions (chengxuan buzheng shisi) and Provincial Surveillance Commissions (tixing ancha shisi). The Provincial Administration Commissioner was a lieutenant-general who bore fiscal responsibilities. The Provincial Surveillance Commissioner was responsible for the administration of judicial and censorial matters. There was also an unofficial Provincial Education Commissioner (tidu xuezheng) in every province who supervised schools and certified candidates for the civil service examinations. Under the provincial administration were Circuit Intendants (daotai) who served as intermediaries between prefectures and provincial administration.[67]

Lifan Yuan edit

Peripheral territories such as Mongolia, Xinjiang, and Tibet were supervised by the Lifan Yuan (Court of Colonial Affairs). The people living in these areas were generally able to keep their own way of life so long as they kept the peace and showed deference to the Qing emperor. Many of the Mongols were organized into Manchu-style banners or leagues and it was not until the 19th century that Mongolia was brought under tighter control under a Manchu general or Grand Minister Consultant (canzan dachen) and several Judicial Administrators (banshi siyuan). The people of Xinjiang were treated as tributary vassals and their leaders used Chinese titles. Tibet's religious leaders were relatively autonomous and treated as tributary princes until the 1720s when rebelliousness prompted the Qing government to place the area under the administration of two Grand Minister Residents (zhuzang dachen), who were supported by Qing military garrisons.[68]

See also edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Wilkinson 2012, p. 260.
  2. ^ Wilkinson 2012, p. 262.
  3. ^ a b Wilkinson 2012, p. 264.
  4. ^ a b Hucker 1987, p. 45-46.
  5. ^ a b Hucker 1987, p. 63-64.
  6. ^ a b Hucker 1987, p. 77.
  7. ^ a b Hucker 1987, p. 88.
  8. ^ Wilkinson 2012, p. 259.
  9. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 9.
  10. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 9-10.
  11. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 13-14.
  12. ^ a b Hucker 1987, p. 14.
  13. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 16.
  14. ^ a b Autocratic Tradition and Chinese Politics – Zhengyuan Fu
  15. ^ Yu, 57
  16. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 15-16.
  17. ^ Kracke, 253
  18. ^ Wai Kit Wicky Tse (2012). Dynamics of Disintegration: The Later Han Empire (25–220CE) & Its Northwestern Frontier (PhD thesis). University of Pennsylvania.
  19. ^ Xie 2013, p. 92.
  20. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 25-26.
  21. ^ a b c d e "The Chinese Imperial Examination System (WWW.chinaknowledge.de)".
  22. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 27.
  23. ^ Twitchett 1979, p. 203.
  24. ^ a b c Hucker 1987, p. 32-33.
  25. ^ Twitchett 1979, pp. 203, 205.
  26. ^ Twitchett 1979, p. 404.
  27. ^ Paludan, Ann (1998). Chronicle of the Chinese Emperors: The Reign-by-Reign Record of the Rulers of Imperial China. Thames and Hudson. ISBN 0-500-05090-2. p. 97
  28. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 37.
  29. ^ Miyazaki 1976, p. 112.
  30. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 55.
  31. ^ Twitchett & Tietze 1994, pp. 78–79.
  32. ^ Crossley 1997, p. 22.
  33. ^ Theobald, Ulrich. "Song Empire Government, Administration, and Law (www.chinaknowledge.de)". www.chinaknowledge.de. Retrieved 9 April 2023.
  34. ^ Zhengyuan, Fu. Autocratic Tradition and Chinese Politics.
  35. ^ Kracke, 257 (Table 2, which shows 26 doctoral degrees awarded in 1184 to individuals from Occupied North China, and 1 in 1256)
  36. ^ Gernet, Jacques (1962). Daily Life in China on the Eve of the Mongol Invasion, 1250–1276. Translated by H.M. Wright (Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-0720-0, p. 65).
  37. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 52.
  38. ^ Chaffee 1995, p. 182-183.
  39. ^ Cosmo 2003, p. 251.
  40. ^ Cosmo 2003, p. 252.
  41. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 57.
  42. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 65.
  43. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 67.
  44. ^ Rossari 1988, 30
  45. ^ Rossari 1988, 71
  46. ^ Wendy, Frey. History Alive!: The Medieval World and beyond. Palo Alto, CA: Teacher's Curriculum Institute, 2005.
  47. ^ a b c Kracke, 263
  48. ^ Kracke, 263 & p. 391, n. 17
  49. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 69.
  50. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 68.
  51. ^ 中国土司制度 - 云南民族出版社 - 1992年出版 (作者: 龚荫) - ISBN 7-5367-0509-3: nulog.cn or sfyey.net
  52. ^ 土司制度基本概念辨析 - 《云南师范大学学报:哲学社会科学版》2014年1期(作者:李世愉): mzb.com.cn, cssn.cn or wenku (baidu)
  53. ^ a b c Dardess 2012, p. 6.
  54. ^ a b Bin Yang. Between Winds and Clouds: The Making of Yunnan, Ch. 4. Columbia University Press.
  55. ^ Atwood, C. P. Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongols. p. 613.
  56. ^ Herman 2007, p. 11.
  57. ^ Herman, John. E. (2005). Di Cosmo, Nicola; Wyatt, Don J (eds.). Political Frontiers, Ethnic Boundaries and Human Geographies in Chinese History (illustrated ed.). Routledge. p. 260. ISBN 1135790957.
  58. ^ Crossley, Pamela Kyle; Siu, Helen F.; Sutton, Donald S., eds. (2006). Empire at the Margins: Culture, Ethnicity, and Frontier in Early Modern China. Vol. 28 of Studies on China (illustrated ed.). University of California Press. p. 143. ISBN 0520230159.
  59. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 75-76.
  60. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 81-82.
  61. ^ a b Pamela Kyle Crossley, Helen F. Siu, Donald S.Sutton (2006). Empire at the Margins: Culture, Ethnicity, and Frontier in Early Modern China. (Berkeley: University of California Press,2006), pp. 136.
  62. ^ Shin, The making of the Chinese state, p. 61.   
  63. ^ Crossley, Empire at the Margins, p. 137.   
  64. ^ 邹, 立波 (2010). "从土司封号看嘉绒藏族土司与宗教的关系". 西南民族大学学报(人文社科版). 31 (02): 11–15, p. 11.
  65. ^ Herman 2007, p. 12.
  66. ^ Herman 2007, p. 16.
  67. ^ Hucker 1987, p. 89.
  68. ^ Hucker 1987, pp. 90–91.

References edit

  • Chaffee, John (1995), The Thorny Gates of Learning in Sung [Song] China, State University of New York Press
  • Cosmo, Nicola di (2003), Political Frontiers, Ethnic Boundaries, and Human Geographies in Chinese History
  • Crossley, Pamela Kyle (1997). The Manchus. Cambridge, Mass.: Blackwell. ISBN 1557865604.
  • Dardess, John (2012), Ming China 1368-1644 A Concise History of A Resilient Empire, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
  • Herman, John E. (2007), Amid the Clouds and Mist China's Colonization of Guizhou, 1200-1700, Harvard University Asia Center
  • Hucker, Charles (1987), A Dictionary of Official Titles in Imperial China
  • Kracke, E. A., Jr. (1967 [1957]). "Region, Family, and Individual in the Chinese Examination System", in Chinese Thoughts & Institutions, John K. Fairbank, editor. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press.
  • Miyazaki, Ichisada (1976), China's Examination Hell: The Civil Service Examinations of Imperial China, translated by Conrad Schirokauer, Weatherhill; reprint: Yale University Press, 1981, ISBN 9780300026399
  • Twitchett, D. (1979), Cambridge History of China, Sui and T'ang China 589-906, Part I, vol. 3, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-21446-7
  • Twitchett, Denis; Tietze, Klaus-Peter (1994). "The Liao". In Franke, Herbert; Twitchett, Denis (eds.). The Cambridge History of China, Volume 6, Alien Regime and Border States, 907-1368. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 43–153. ISBN 0521243319.
  • Wilkinson, Endymion (2012), Chinese History: A New Manual, Harvard University Asia Center for the Harvard-Yenching Institute
  • Xie, Baocheng (2013). A Brief History of the Official System in China. Translated by Chen, Mirong. Social Sciences Academic Press. ISBN 978-1-84464-153-6.
  • Yu, Pauline (2002). "Chinese Poetry and Its Institutions", in Hsiang Lectures on Chinese Poetry, Volume 2, Grace S. Fong, editor. (Montreal: Center for East Asian Research, McGill University).
  • Yu, Jianfu (2009), "The influence and enlightenment of Confucian cultural education on modern European civilization", Front. Educ. China, vol. 4, no. 1, pp. 10–26, doi:10.1007/s11516-009-0002-5, S2CID 143586407

administration, territory, dynastic, china, administration, territory, dynastic, china, history, practices, involved, governing, land, from, dynasty, qing, dynasty, 1644, 1912, funerary, figurines, tang, dynasty, officials, contents, administrative, divisions,. The administration of territory in dynastic China is the history of practices involved in governing the land from the Qin dynasty 221 206 BC to the Qing dynasty 1644 1912 Funerary figurines of Tang dynasty officials Contents 1 Administrative divisions in imperial China 1 1 County 1 1 1 Village 1 2 Provincial administration 1 3 Metropolitan 1 4 Table of administrative divisions 2 Qin dynasty 221 206 BC 3 Han dynasty 202 BC 220 AD 3 1 Recruitment 4 Sui dynasty 581 618 4 1 Imperial examinations 5 Tang dynasty 618 907 5 1 Expansion of the imperial examinations 6 Liao dynasty 916 1125 7 Song dynasty 960 1279 7 1 Scholar bureaucracy 7 2 Hereditary prefectures 8 Jin dynasty 1115 1234 9 Yuan dynasty 1271 1368 9 1 Tusi 10 Ming dynasty 1368 1644 10 1 Gaitu guiliu 11 Qing dynasty 1644 1912 11 1 Lifan Yuan 12 See also 13 Citations 14 ReferencesAdministrative divisions in imperial China edit nbsp Song dynasty officialsSee also List of current and former capitals of subnational entities of China County edit The only level at which state officials actually governed the common people was the county level Counties were coordinated by prefectures which had on average about ten counties Overseeing inspectors were sent out from the central government to oversee the work of the prefectures During the Yuan 1271 1368 and Ming 1368 1644 dynasties these arrangements were solidified into permanent provinces Funding for the local administration came from taxes collected while a portion was set aside for the central government 1 Counties xian originally meant dependencies ruled by vassals of royal blood During the Qin dynasty 221 206 BC they were coordinated by commanderies jun and expanded throughout the entire empire but the Han 202 BC 220 AD returned them to indirect rule by vassals However after 100 years the dependencies were gradually converted into counties or incorporated by 100 BC In practice most dynasties started out with some combination of the county and dependency dichotomy and trended towards greater centralization through the county prefectural system over time 1 The county was headed by a court appointed official chaoting mingguan responsible for collecting taxes hearing trials public order education examinations morality and religious customs Counties in politically important areas were assigned to jinshi degree holders while counties in remote areas were assigned to provincial exam graduates juren During the Ming dynasty the percentage of jinshi degree holding magistrates could range from 71 to 5 depending on their assigned area s importance In theory each local magistrate s office yamen was divided into six sections corresponding to the Six Ministries By Qing times additional sections were also added for taxes document receipt and distribution and salt On average each Qing county had 20 30 clerks working these sections They were selected by the magistrate and received a government stipend Working under the clerks were a variety of subofficials and support personnel The yamen also had runners yanyi doing menial work In the late 19th century the total number of people employed by the yamen in a county could range from 200 to over 500 2 Village edit Below the county were villages and city wards governed by a combination of magistrates city governments local families and local militia During Qin and Han times counties were separated into five rural villages or townships xiang Below rural districts were villages li that contained squads wu Security in these rural districts were handled by a tingzhang ex Emperor Gaozu of Han Later dynasties had security institutions composed of several households such as the baojia system 3 Provincial administration edit Regional governments were introduced by the Qin dynasty after it destroyed the last independent hereditary kingdoms The Qin empire was divided into commanderies jun each of which was led by three officials The Han dynasty identified the rapid concentration of central power as one of the reasons for the Qin downfall and therefore only adopted the commandery prefectural system for half its territory and installed hereditary kingdoms in the other half They were gradually brought under Han control and as a result there were 103 commanderies by the end of Eastern Han 25 220 Thirteen regional inspectorates cishi were established over them Most of them were named after the Nine Regions and were thus called zhou province These provinces circuits or inspectorates did not function as provincial governorships Both the Tang and Song saw these regions as broad areas for Commissioners to coordinate government activity Each circuit dao or lu was assigned four Commissions each tasked with a different administrative activity military fiscal judicial and supply 4 Permanent provincial administrations developed under the Yuan and Ming dynasties 3 The Yuan province called a Branch Secretariat xing zhongshu sheng was governed by two Managers of Governmental Affairs pingchang zhengshi Sometimes a Grand Chancellor chengxiang was in charge of an entire province It s uncertain how much central authority the government had over these provinces since they were essentially ruled by Mongol nobles Between the provinces and the central government were two agencies the Branch Bureau of Military Affairs xing shumi yuan and the Branch Censorate xing yushi tai 5 The Ming provincial government consisted of three cooperating agencies the Provincial Administration Commission chengxuan buzheng shisi the Provincial Surveillance Commission tixing ancha shisi and the Regional Military Commission du zhihui shisi They were directed by a Grand Coordinator whose tenure was indefinite and a Supreme Commander Executive officials of the Three Provincial Commissions were called Regional Overseers 6 The Qing dynasty expanded the number of provinces to 18 by 1850 and did away with the tripartite provincial administration Qing provinces were governed by a single Governor xunfu who answered to a Governors general zongdu 7 Metropolitan edit The metropolitan area the capital and its hinterlands was directly subordinate to the central court and often named as such During the Yuan dynasty Khanbaliq and its surroundings were named fuli lit abdomen The Ming court called Nanjing Yingtian fu lit responsive to heaven prefecture and the surrounding area Zhili lit directly attached from 1378 to 1403 After 1403 Beiping and its surrounding region was called Bei zhili northern zhili and when it became the capital in 1423 Nanjing s metropolitan area was called Nan zhili southern zhili Shuntian and Yingtian prefectures were referred to as Jingfu capital prefectures During the Qing dynasty the Shuntian prefect was allowed to directly memorialize the emperor but the subprefectures and counties were jointly governed with the governor of Zhili The capital usually had a higher concentration of military personnel The Qing settled them just outside Beijing with their own farmland and the parks to the north were also strewn with Banner villages 8 Table of administrative divisions edit Historical Administrative Divisions in ChinaDynasty Primary Secondary Tertiary QuaternaryQin Commandery 郡 jun County 縣 县 xian Han Jin Province 州 zhōu Commandery County Sui Prefecture many smaller 州 County Tang Liao Circuit 道 dao Prefecture smaller 州 larger 府 fǔ County Song and Jin Circuit 路 lu Prefecture smaller 州 larger 府 military 軍 军 jun industrial 監 监 jian County Yuan Province 省 sheng Circuit 道 dao Prefecture larger 府 fǔ smaller 州 zhōu CountyMing Directly administered province Zhili 直隸 直隶 Province 省 Prefecture 府 Fǔ Department 州 CountyQing Directly administered province 直隸 直隶 Province 省 Prefecture 府 Fǔ Independent department 直隸州 直隶州 Independent subprefecture 直隸廳 直隶厅 County 縣 县 Department 州 Subprefecture 廳 厅 Ting Qin dynasty 221 206 BC edit nbsp Borders of the commanderies of the Qin Empire After the state of Qin conquered China in 221 BC the First Emperor of Qin Qin Shi Huang divided the Qin dynasty into 36 and then ultimately 40 commanderies which were divided into counties which were further divided into townships xiang The imperial capital was excluded from the normal administrative units and was administered by a Chamberlain neishi Administrative control of a commandery was divided between a Governor shou who handled general administration and a Defender wei who supervised military garrisons Counties were administered by a Magistrate ling Control of a township was divided between an Elder sanlao the moral authority a Husbander sefu who handled fiscal affairs and a Patroller youjiao who kept the local peace Below townships were even smaller divisions of a thousand households which constituted a neighborhood ting and a hundred households which constituted a village li 9 There was no formal system of recruitment for personnel during Qin times All appointments down to the county level were based on recommendation and decided by the Grand Chancellor and emperor Tenures were indefinite Officials could obtain titles graded from 20 to 1 for meritorious service but such titles were not hereditary and did not confer a fief to the holder 10 Commanderies of the Qin EmpireCommandery Chinese Name Counties amp CircuitsTrad Simp Neishi 內史 41 Longxi 隴西郡 陇西郡 21Shang 上郡 21Beidi 北地郡 15Yunzhong 雲中郡 云中郡 12Jiuyuan 九原郡 8Sanchuan 三川郡 22Yingchuan 潁川郡 颍川郡 23Dang 碭郡 砀郡 22Dong 東郡 东郡 26Xue 薛郡 22Donghai 東海郡 东海郡 18Sichuan 四川郡 25Huaiyang 淮陽郡 淮阳郡 27Nanyang 南陽郡 南阳郡 27Linzi 臨淄郡 临淄郡 10Jibei 濟北郡 济北郡 9Taishan 泰山郡 9Langxie 琅邪郡 6Jiaodong 膠東郡 胶东郡 8Jiaoxi 膠西郡 胶西郡 8Chengyang 城陽郡 城阳郡 5Hedong 河東郡 河东郡 19Henei 河內郡 19Shangdang 上黨郡 上党郡 21Taiyuan 太原郡 13Dai 代郡 11Yanmen 雁門郡鴈門郡 雁门郡 17Handan 邯鄲郡 邯郸郡 11Julu 鉅鹿郡 巨鹿郡 10Hengshan 恆山郡 恒山郡 22Qinghe 清河郡 4Hejian 河間郡 河间郡 10Guangyang 廣陽郡 广阳郡 9Youbeiping 右北平郡 16Shanggu 上谷郡 12Yuyang 漁陽郡 渔阳郡 12Liaoxi 遼西郡 辽西郡 7Liaodong 遼東郡 辽东郡 3Hanzhong 漢中郡 汉中郡 12Shu 蜀郡 18Ba 巴郡 11Nan 南郡 20Jiujiang 九江郡 13Lujiang 廬江郡 庐江郡 5Hengshan 衡山郡 5Guiji 會稽郡 会稽郡 27Changsha 長沙郡 长沙郡 6Dongting 洞庭郡 11Cangwu 蒼梧郡 苍梧郡 13Xiang 象郡 2Nanhai 南海郡 5Guilin 桂林郡 5Minzhong 閩中郡 闽中郡 1Han dynasty 202 BC 220 AD edit nbsp Han provinces c 190Main article Government of the Han dynasty The founder of the Han dynasty Emperor Gaozu of Han r 28 February 202 1 June 195 BC separated the dynasty s territory between the western half directly controlled by the imperial capital and the eastern half ruled by Kings of the Han dynasty In the areas controlled by the central government regional hierarchy followed the Qin model of commandery and county The eastern nobility ruled kingdoms wangguo or marquisates houguo that were largely autonomous until 154 BC when a series of imperial actions gradually brought them under central control By the end of the millennium they differed from commanderies and counties only in name and were controlled by a Counselor delegate guoxiang appointed by the central government 11 Until 106 BC the central government supervised the commanderies through touring Censors but in that year Emperor Wu of Han formally divided the commanderies into 13 provinces These provinces were governed by Regional Inspectors cishi or Regional Governors zhoumu 12 Regional Inspectors and Governors were not allowed to serve in their native commandery 13 After 104 BC the imperial capital was governed by the Three Guardians sanfu Metropolitan Governor jingzhaoyin Guardian of the Left zuopingyi and Guardian of the Right youpingyi After 89 BC these three positions were subordinated by the Military Commandant sili xiaowei who reported directly to the emperor 12 Recruitment edit Han officialdom was ruled by an aristocracy down to the county level Candidates for offices recommended by the provinces were examined by the Ministry of Rites and then presented to the emperor Some candidates for clerical positions would be given a test to determine whether they could memorize nine thousand Chinese characters 14 The tests administered during the Han dynasty did not offer formal entry into government posts Recruitment and appointment in the Han dynasty were primarily through recommendations by aristocrats and local officials Recommended individuals were also primarily aristocrats In theory recommendations were based on a combination of reputation and ability but it s not certain how well this worked in practice Oral examinations on policy issues were sometimes conducted personally by the emperor himself during Western Han times 15 Although executive officials were appointed by the central government they were allowed to freely appoint their own sons and favored friends An appointed official first served one year in probationary status and then obtained indefinite tenure with three year intervals at which point they were assessed by their supervisors for promotion demotion or dismissal During the reign of Emperor Wu r 9 March 141 BC 29 March 87 BC every commandery and kingdom was called on to nominate one or two men for appointment each year Later the number of nominations was fixed to one per 200 000 people From 165 BC onward nominees were given written examinations to confirm their literacy and learning In 124 BC Emperor Wu established the Taixue with a faculty of five Erudites boshi and student body of 50 recommended by Commandery Governors that grew to 3 000 by the end of the millennium Students studied the classics at the Taixue for one year and then sat a written graduation exam after which they were either appointed or returned home to seek positions on the commandery staff Officials were paid on a monthly basis in both grain and coin corresponding to their rank 16 The number of graduates who went on to hold office were few The examinations did not offer a formal route to commissioned office and the primary path to office remained through recommendations 17 Provinces of the Han and Western Jin dynastiesName TraditionalChinese SimplifiedChinese Pinyin Capital Approximate extent in terms of modern locationsAncient name Modern locationBingzhou 并州 并州 Bingzhōu Jinyang southwest of Taiyuan ShanxiJiaozhou 交州 交州 Jiaozhōu Longbian East of Hanoi northern VietnamJingzhou 荆州 荆州 Jingzhōu Jiangling Hubei HunanJizhou 冀州 冀州 Jizhōu Xindu Jizhou City southern HebeiLiangzhou 涼州 凉州 Liangzhōu Guzang Wuwei western Gansu 18 Qingzhou 青州 青州 Qingzhōu Linzi east of Zibo eastern ShandongXuzhou 徐州 徐州 Xuzhōu Pengcheng Xuzhou northern JiangsuYangzhou 揚州 扬州 Yangzhōu Jianye Nanjing southern Jiangsu southern Anhui Jiangxi Zhejiang Fujian ShanghaiYanzhou 兗州 兖州 Yǎnzhōu Linqiu northwest of Yuncheng County western ShandongYizhou 益州 益州 Yizhōu Chengdu central Sichuan GuizhouYongzhou 雍州 雍州 Yōngzhōu Chang an northwest of Xi an central ShaanxiYouzhou 幽州 幽州 Yōuzhōu Zhuoxian northern Hebei Beijing TianjinYuzhou 豫州 豫州 Yuzhōu Chenxian Huaiyang southern Henan northern AnhuiPingzhou 平州 平州 Pingzhōu Xiangping Liaoyang Liaoning northern KoreaQinzhou 秦州 秦州 Qinzhōu Jixian east of Gangu southern GansuLiangzhou 梁州 梁州 Liangzhōu Nanzheng Hanzhong southern Shaanxi eastern Sichuan ChongqingNingzhou 寧州 宁州 Ningzhōu Dianchi southeast of Kunming YunnanGuangzhou 廣州 广州 Guǎngzhōu Panyu Guangzhou Guangdong eastern GuangxiSizhou 司州 司州 Sizhōu Luoyang central Henan southern ShanxiSui dynasty 581 618 edit nbsp Sui provinces ca 610The period of dynastic turmoil between the Han and Sui dynasties led to proliferation of counties commanderies and regions often set up to administer the large refugee populations moving across China 19 In 586 Emperor Wen of Sui abolished commanderies and left provinces in direct control of counties In 605 Emperor Yang of Sui revived the commandery In the early years of the Sui dynasty Area Commanders in chief zongguan ruled as semi autonomous warlords but they were gradually replaced with Branch Departments of State Affairs xing taisheng 20 In 587 the Sui dynasty mandated every province to nominate three cultivated talents xiucai per year for appointment In 599 all capital officials of rank five and above were required to make nominations for appointment in several categories Imperial examinations edit Examination categories for classicists mingjing ke and cultivated talents xiucai ke were introduced Classicists were tested on the Confucian canon which was considered an easy task at the time so those who passed were awarded posts in the lower rungs of officialdom Cultivated talents were tested on matters of statecraft as well as the Confucian canon In AD 607 Emperor Yang established a new category of examinations for the presented scholar jinshi ke 进士科 These three categories of examination were the origins of the imperial examination system that would last until 1905 Consequently the year 607 is also considered by many to be the real beginning of the imperial examination system The Sui dynasty was itself short lived however and the system was not developed further until much later 21 The imperial examinations did not significantly shift recruitment selection in practice during the Sui dynasty Schools at the capital still produced students for appointment Inheritance of official status was also still practiced Men of the merchant and artisan classes were still barred from officialdom However the reign of Emperor Wen r 4 March 581 13 August 604 did see much greater expansion of government authority over officials Under Emperor Wen all officials down to the county level had to be appointed by the Department of State Affairs in the capital and were subjected to annual merit rating evaluations Regional Inspectors and County Magistrates had to be transferred every three years and their subordinates every four years They were not allowed to bring their parents or adult children with them upon reassignment of territorial administration The Sui did not establish any hereditary kingdoms or marquisates of the Han sort To compensate nobles were given substantial stipends and staff Aristocratic officials were ranked based on their pedigree with distinctions such as high expectations pure and impure so that they could be awarded offices appropriately 22 Provinces of the Sui dynastyName TraditionalChinese SimplifiedChinese Pinyin Capital Approximate extent in terms of modern locationsAncient name Modern locationYongzhou 雍州 雍州 Yōngzhōu Guanzhong Gansu and the Upper Yellow basinJizhou 冀州 冀州 Jizhōu Shanxi and Northern Hebei including modern Beijing and TianjinYanzhou 兗州 兖州 Yǎnzhōu Lower Yellow River area west of Qingzhou and east of JizhouQingzhou 青州 青州 Qingzhōu Shandong PeninsulaYuzhou 豫州 豫州 Yuzhōu HenanXuzhou 徐州 徐州 Xuzhōu Modern Xuzhou area southern Shandong and northern JiangsuLiangzhou 梁州 梁州 Liangzhōu Upper Yangtze Sichuan Basin south of the QinlingJingzhou 荆州 荆州 Jingzhōu Central YangtzeYangzhou 揚州 扬州 Yangzhōu Lower Yangtze entire SE Coast Hainan and Northern VietnamTang dynasty 618 907 edit nbsp Tang circuits ca 660 nbsp Tang circuits ca 742Main article Administrative divisions of the Tang dynasty See also Tang dynasty in Inner Asia At the beginning of the Tang dynasty Emperor Taizong introduced circuits to help monitor the operation of prefectures rather than a new primary level of administration 23 The circuit was assigned a Surveillance Commissioner ancha shi who functioned as an overall coordinator rather than a governor and visited prefectures and checked up on the performance of officials 24 In 639 these 10 circuits were oversaw 43 commanderies themselves subdivided into 358 prefectures 24 25 A normal prefecture was administered by a Prefect Sometimes a prefecture could be designated an Area Command dudu fu under an Area Commander dudu and a few prefectures could be grouped together into a Superior Area Command da dudu fu under a Commander in chief da dudu There were three Superior Prefectures known as Jingzhao in the Chang an area Henan in the Luoyang area and Taiyuan in modern Shanxi Province Each Superior Prefecture was nominally administered by an Imperial Prince but usually another official was actually in charge Area Commands were later replaced by Defense Commands zhen under Military Commissioners jiedushi After the An Lushan Rebellion 16 December 755 17 February 763 the role of the Surveillance Commissioner shifted to that of a more direct civil governor while many Military Commissioners became autonomous warlords in all but name Sometimes borderlands were designated a Protectorate duhu fu under a Protector duhu 24 In 733 Emperor Xuanzong expanded the number of circuits to 15 by establishing separate circuits for the areas around Chang an and Luoyang and by splitting the large Shannan and Jiangnan circuits into 2 and 3 new circuits respectively He also established a system of permanent inspecting commissioners though without executive powers 26 Expansion of the imperial examinations edit During the Tang dynasty candidates were either recommended by their schools or had to register for exams at their home prefecture 21 In 693 Wu Zetian expanded the examination system by allowing commoners and gentry previously disqualified by their non elite backgrounds to take the tests 27 Six categories of regular civil service examinations were organized by the Department of State Affairs and held by the Ministry of Rites cultivated talents classicists presented scholars legal experts writing experts and arithmetic experts Emperor Xuanzong of Tang also added categories for Daoism and apprentices The hardest of these examination categories the presented scholar jinshi degree became more prominent over time until it superseded all other examinations By the late Tang the jinshi degree became a prerequisite for appointment into higher offices Appointments by recommendation were also required to take examinations 14 However candidates who passed the exams were not automatically granted office They still had to pass a quality evaluation by the Ministry of Rites after which they were allowed to wear official robes 21 Successful candidates reported to the Ministry of Personnel for placement examinations Unassigned officials and honorary title holders were expected to take placement examinations at regular intervals Non assigned status could last a very long time especially when waiting for a substantive appointment After being assigned to office a junior official was given an annual merit rating There was no specified term limit but most junior officials served for at least three years or more in one post Senior officials served indefinitely at the pleasure of the emperor 28 The Tang emperors placed the palace exam graduates the jinshi in important government posts where they came into conflict with hereditary elites During the reign of Emperor Xuanzong of Tang 713 56 about a third of the Grand Chancellors appointed were jinshi but by the time of Emperor Xianzong of Tang 806 21 three fifths of the Grand Chancellors appointed were jinshi This change in the way government was organized dealt a real blow to the aristocrats but they did not sit idly by and wait to become obsolete Instead they themselves entered the examinations to gain the privileges associated with it By the end of the dynasty the aristocratic class had produced 116 jinshi so that they remained a significant influence in the government Hereditary privileges were also not completely done away with The sons of high ministers and great generals had the right to hold minor offices without taking the examinations In addition the number of graduates were not only small but also formed their own clique in the government based around the examiners and the men they passed In effect the graduates became another interest group the emperor had to contend with 29 Liao dynasty 916 1125 editMain article Administrative divisions of the Liao dynasty nbsp The Five circuits of Liao in 1111 ADThe Khitan led Liao dynasty was divided between a nomadic tribal Northern Administration and a sedentary Chinese Southern Establishment They were each headed by a Prime Minister the northern one appointed by the Xiao consort clan and the southern one appointed by the ruling Yelu clan The Southern Establishments were divided into five circuits each with a capital city Each circuit except for the one dominated by the Supreme Capital shangjing was ruled by a Regent liushou Under the Regent were Governors yin of prefectures who ruled below them Magistrates of counties Under the Northern Administration Khitans were organized around an ordo the moving camp of a chief Throughout the duration of the Liao dynasty the number of ordos fluctuated between 10 and 44 The tribal vassals of the Liao were organized into territories known as routes lu headed by a tribal chief 30 The southern commissioners were usually members of the Yelu royal clan the northern commissioners mostly members of the Xiao consort clan The administration of the Northern Region was mainly though not exclusively staffed by Khitan holding traditional Khitan titles Its most powerful officers were the Khitan commissioners for military affairs the prime ministers of the Northern and Southern administrations Beifu zaixiang Nanfu zaixiang the Northern and Southern Great Kings Bei Dawang Nan Dawang both of whom were members of the royal clan and the commander in chief yuyue These men controlled all military and tribal affairs the selection of military commanders the disposition of the tribal herds and the allocation of pastures Beneath them was a bewildering array of tribal officials an office for the royal clan of the former Bohai state and a range of offices providing services to the imperial house artisans physicians huntsmen and commissioners responsible for the royal herds stud farms and stables The government of the Southern Region was designed in imitation of a Tang model It was based as was the government of the Northern Region at the Supreme Capital where it had its main offices It had the traditional groups of elder statesmen the Three Preceptors san shi and the Three Dukes san gong to act as imperial advisers and a complex bureaucracy at the head of which were three ministries similar to the three central ministries san sheng of early Tang but only the Secretariat played any significant role in political decisions the Southern Administration was essentially an executive organization for the southern areas and their settled population The high sounding titles of its officers should not conceal the fact that routine decision making and all military authority southern officials were specifically excluded from decisions on military affairs at court were concentrated in the emperor s Khitan entourage drawn from the Northern Administration 31 Denis Twitchett and Klaus Peter Tietze Imperial examinations were only held for the Southern Establishments until the last decade of the dynasty when Khitans found it an acceptable avenue for advancing their careers The examinations focused primarily on lyric meter poetry and rhapsodies Recruitment through examinations was irregular and all offices of note were hereditary in nature and held by Khitans 32 Circuits of the Liao dynastyName Chinese Name Capital Modern name of capital Approximate extent in terms of modern locationsShangjing 上京道 Linhuang Fu Bairin Left Banner Eastern Inner Mongolia Outer MongoliaDongjing 东京道 Liaoyang Fu Liaoyang Heilongjiang Jilin Liaoning and parts of RussiaXijing 西京道 Datong Fu Datong Central Inner Mongolia Northern Shanxi and Northwestern HebeiNanjing 南京道 Xijin Fu Beijing Beijing Tianjin and Northern HebeiZhongjing 中京道 Dading Fu Ningcheng Northeastern Hebei Western LiaoningSong dynasty 960 1279 edit nbsp Circuits of Northern Song dynasty as of 1111 AD The Song dynasty continued the Tang system of circuit prefecture and county The Military Prefecture was called an army jun and a handful of prefectures containing mines and salterns were designated Industrial Prefectures jian The prefectures were nominally administered by a Prefect but in practice the central government appointed another Manager of the Affairs to administer groups of prefectures Actions by Prefects also had to be signed off by a prefectural supervisor 33 Like the Tang before them the Song used circuits not as provincial governorships but regions for Commissioners to coordinate government activity Four Commissions were assigned to every circuit each tasked with a different administrative activity military fiscal judicial and supply 4 Scholar bureaucracy edit The imperial examinations became the primary method of recruitment for official posts More than a hundred palace examinations were held during the dynasty resulting in a greater number of jinshi degrees rewarded 34 The examinations were opened to adult Chinese males with some restrictions including even individuals from the occupied northern territories of the Liao and Jin dynasties 35 Many individuals of low social status were able to rise to political prominence through success in the imperial examination The process of studying for the examination tended to be time consuming and costly requiring time to spare and tutors Most of the candidates came from the numerically small but relatively wealthy land owning scholar official class 36 Successful candidates were appointed to office almost immediately and waiting periods between appointments were not long Annual merit ratings were taken and officials could request evaluation for reassignment Officials who wished to escape harsh assignments often requested reassignment as a state supervisor of a Taoist temple or monastery Senior officials in the capital also sometimes nominated themselves for the position of Prefect in obscure prefectures 37 Although quite a few Northern Song families or lineages succeeded in producing high officials over several generations none could begin to rival the great families of the Six Dynasties and Tang in longevity prestige or perhaps even power Most important the promise of the examinations transformed learning from an elite concern to a preoccupation Education became less the domain of scholarly families comprising one portion of elite society and more an activity urged upon academically promising boys and young men throughout elite society 38 John W Chaffee Hereditary prefectures edit When Emperor Taizu of Song expanded southwest he encountered four powerful families the Yang of Bozhou the Song of Manzhou the Tian of Sizhou and the Long of Nanning Long Yanyao patriarch of the Long family submitted to Song rule in 967 with the guarantee that he could rule Nanning as his personal property to be passed down through his family without Song interference In return the Long family was required to present tribute to the Song court The other families were also offered the same conditions which they accepted Although they were included among the official prefectures of the Song dynasty in practice these families and their estates constituted independent hereditary kingdoms within the Song realm 39 In 975 Emperor Taizong of Song ordered Song Jingyang and Long Hantang to attack the Mu ege kingdom and drive them back across the Yachi River Whatever territory they seized they were allowed to keep After a year of fighting they succeeded in the endeavor 40 Circuits of the Northern Song dynastyName TraditionalChinese SimplifiedChinese Pinyin Capital Approximate extent in terms of modern locationsAncient name Modern locationChengdufu 成都府 成都府 Chengdufǔ Chengdu central SichuanFujian 福建 福建 Fujian Fuzhou FujianGuangnan East 廣南東 广南东 Guǎngnandōng Guangzhou eastern GuangdongGuangnan West 廣南西 广南西 Guǎngnanxi Guizhou Guilin western Guangdong Guangxi HainanHebei East 河北東 河北东 Hebeidōng Beijing Daming County Hebei eastern HebeiHebei West 河北西 河北西 Hebeixi Zhending Zhengding County Hebei western HebeiHedong 河東 河东 Hedōng Taiyuan ShanxiHuainan East 淮南東 淮南东 Huainandōng Yangzhou central JiangsuHuainan West 淮南西 淮南西 Huainanxi Shouzhou Fengtai County Anhui central AnhuiJiangnan East 江南東 江南东 Jiangnandōng Jiangning Fu Nanjing southern AnhuiJiangnan West 江南西 江南西 Jiangnanxi Hongzhou Nanchang JiangxiJingdong East 京東東 京东东 Jingdōngdōng Qingzhou Qingzhou Shandong eastern ShandongJingdong West 京東西 京东西 Jingdōngxi Nanjing south of Shangqiu Henan western ShandongJinghu North 荊湖北 荆湖北 Jinghubei Jiangling Hubei western HunanJinghu South 荊湖南 荆湖南 Jinghunan Tanzhou Changsha HunanJingji 京畿 京畿 Jingji Chenliu Chenliu Kaifeng Henan Kaifeng and environsJingxi North 京西北 京西北 Jingxibei Xijing Luoyang central HenanJingxi South 京西南 京西南 Jingxinan Xiangzhou Xiangfan southern Henan northern HubeiKuizhou 夔州 夔州 Kuizhōu Kuizhou Fengjie County Chongqing Chongqing eastern Sichuan GuizhouLiangzhe 兩浙 两浙 Liǎngzhe Hangzhou Zhejiang southern Jiangsu ShanghaiLizhou 利州 利州 Lizhōu Xingyuan Hanzhong northern Sichuan southern ShaanxiQinfeng 秦鳳 秦凤 Qinfeng Qinzhou Tianshui southern GansuYongxingjun 永興軍 永兴军 Yǒngxingjun Jingzhao Xi an ShaanxiZizhou 梓州 梓州 Zǐzhōu Zizhou Santai County Sichuan central southern SichuanJin dynasty 1115 1234 edit nbsp Circuits of Jurchen Jin dynasty as of 1142 A D The Jurchen led Jin dynasty was divided into 19 routes five of which were governed from capitals under the control of Regents The 14 routes not controlled by capitals were under the administration of Area Commands zongguanfu Under the routes were prefectures The Jurchens adopted a more Chinese administration than the Khitans They instituted an examination system in 1123 and adopted the triennial examination cycle in 1129 Two separate examinations were held to accommodate their former Liao and Song subjects In the north examinations focused on lyric meter poetry and rhapsodies while in the south Confucian Classics were tested During the reign of Emperor Xizong of Jin r 1135 1150 the contents of both examinations were unified and examinees were tested on both genres Emperor Zhangzong of Jin r 1189 1208 abolished the prefectural examinations Emperor Shizong of Jin r 1161 1189 created the first examination conducted in the Jurchen language with a focus on political writings and poetry Graduates of the Jurchen examination were called treatise graduates celun jinshi to distinguish them from the regular Chinese jinshi 21 Posts were regularly filled by examination graduates and it was not uncommon for one in three candidates to pass An average of 200 Metropolitan Graduate Degrees were handed out per year Although Chinese subjects were able to obtain offices through the examinations a regional quota assured that northerners principally Jurchens passed more consistently and were more quickly promoted upon obtaining office Often Jurchen examinees had to demonstrate little more than literacy to pass Chinese officials also faced discrimination at times physical while Jurchens retained all final decision making powers within the Jin government 41 Circuits of China under the Jin dynasty and the Southern Song dynastyName TraditionalChinese SimplifiedChinese Pinyin Capital Approximate extent in terms of modern locationsAncient name Modern locationJin dynastyBeijing 北京 北京 Beijing Beijing Ningcheng County Inner Mongolia eastern ManchuriaDamingfu 大名府 大名府 Damingfǔ Daming Fu Daming County Hebei border of Henan Hebei ShandongDongjing 東京 东京 Dōngjing Dongjing Liaoyang LiaoningFengxiang 鳳翔 凤翔 Fengxiang Fengxiang Fu Fengxiang County Shaanxi western Shaanxi eastern GansuFuyan 鄜延 鄜延 Fuyan Yan an northern ShaanxiHebei East 河北東 河北东 Hebeidōng Hejian Hejian Hebei eastern HebeiHebei West 河北西 河北西 Hebeixi Zhending Zhengding County Hebei western HebeiHedong North 河東北 河东北 Hedōngbei Taiyuan northern ShanxiHedong South 河東南 河东南 Hedōngnan Pingyang Linfen southern ShanxiJingzhaofu 京兆府 京兆府 Jingzhaofǔ Jingzhao Fu Xi an central ShaanxiLintao 臨洮 临洮 Lintao Lintao Lintao County Gansu southern GansuNanjing 南京 南京 Nanjing Nanjing Kaifeng Henan northern AnhuiQingyuan 慶原 庆原 Qingyuan Qingyang eastern GansuShandong East 山東東 山东东 Shandōngdōng Yidu Fu Qingzhou Shandong eastern ShandongShandong West 山東西 山东西 Shandōngxi Dongping Fu Dongping County Shandong western ShandongShangjing 上京 上京 Shangjing Shangjing Acheng Heilongjiang northern ManchuriaXianping 咸平 咸平 Xianping Xianping Fu Kaiyuan Liaoning northern LiaoningXijing 西京 西京 Xijing Xijing Datong northern Shanxi central Inner MongoliaZhongdu 中都 中都 Zhōngdu Zhongdu Beijing northern Hebei Beijing TianjinSouthern Song dynastyChengdufu 成都府 成都府 Chengdufǔ Chengdu central SichuanFujian 福建 福建 Fujian Fuzhou FujianGuangnan East 廣南東 广南东 Guǎngnandōng Guangzhou eastern GuangdongGuangnan West 廣南西 广南西 Guǎngnanxi Jingjiang Fu Guilin western Guangdong Guangxi HainanHuainan East 淮南東 淮南东 Huainandōng Yangzhou central JiangsuHuainan West 淮南西 淮南西 Huainanxi Luzhou Hefei central AnhuiJiangnan East 江南東 江南东 Jiangnandōng Jiangning Fu Nanjing southern AnhuiJiangnan West 江南西 江南 Jiangnanxi Longxing Fu Nanchang JiangxiJinghu North 荊湖北 荊湖北 Jinghubei Jiangling Hubei western HunanJinghu South 荊湖南 荊湖南 Jinghunan Tanzhou Changsha HunanJingxi South 京西南 京西南 Jingxinan Xiangyang Fu Xiangfan southern Henan northern HubeiKuizhou 夔州 夔州 Kuizhōu Kuizhou Fengjie County Chongqing Chongqing eastern Sichuan GuizhouLiangzhe East 兩浙東 兩浙东 Liǎngzhedōng Shaoxing central and southern ZhejiangLiangzhe West 兩浙西 兩浙西 Liǎngzhexi Hangzhou northern Zhejiang southern Jiangsu ShanghaiLizhou East 利州東 利州东 Lizhōudōng Xingyuan Hanzhong northern Sichuan southern ShaanxiLizhou West 利州西 利州西 Lizhōuxi Mianzhou Lueyang Shaanxi northern Sichuan southern GansuTongchuanfu 潼川府 潼川府 Tongchuanfǔ Luzhou central southern SichuanYuan dynasty 1271 1368 edit nbsp Yuan provinces in 1330 AD Main article Administrative divisions of the Yuan dynasty See also Yuan dynasty in Inner Asia and Tusi Under the Mongol led Yuan dynasty the largest administrative division was the province also known as a Branch Secretariat xing zhongshu sheng A province was governed by two Managers of Governmental Affairs pingchang zhengshi Occasionally a Grand Chancellor chengxiang was put in charge of an entire province It is questionable how much authority the central government had over the provinces as they were essentially the administrative bases of Mongol nobles Between the provinces and the central government were two agencies the Branch Bureau of Military Affairs xing shumi yuan and the Branch Censorate xing yushi tai The Military Branch handled military affairs and had jurisdiction over vaguely defined territories known as Regions chu There were three Branch Censorates that handled overseeing the provincial affairs of the Yuan dynasty 5 Below the provinces were circuits with agencies headed by Commissioners who coordinated matters between the provincial level authorities and lower level routes prefectures and districts The route was governed by an Overseer and a Commander Below routes were prefectures headed by an Overseer and a Prefect At the lowest level below the prefectures were counties headed by an Overseer and a Magistrate The capital Khanbaliq was governed by the Dadu Route under the administration of two Police Commissions while the summer capital Shangdu was under another Police Commission 42 All residents of the Yuan dynasty were grouped into four categories Mongols Semu Han and Manzi Semu were subjects of the Yuan coming from the west of China Han were the former subjects of the Jin dynasty and the Manzi were all former subjects of the Song dynasty All important government positions were held by Mongols and Semu with some minor offices held by Han while Manzi were relegated to local offices in their own area Mongol Overseers were assigned to every office down to the county level 43 Imperial examinations were ceased for a time with the defeat of the Song in 1279 by Kublai Khan One of Kublai s main advisers Liu Bingzhong recommended restoring the examination system however Kublai distrusted the examinations and did not heed his advice 44 Kublai believed that Confucian learning was not needed for government posts and was opposed to such a commitment to the Chinese language and to the Chinese scholars who were so adept at it as well as its accompanying ideology He wished to appoint his own people without relying on an apparatus inherited from a newly conquered and sometimes rebellious country 45 46 The examination system was revived in 1315 with significant changes during the reign of Ayurbarwada Buyantu Khan The new examination system organized its examinees into regional categories in a way which favored Mongols and severely disadvantaged the Manzi A quota system both for number of candidates and degrees awarded was instituted based on the classification of the four groups those being the Mongols and Semu Han and Manzi with further restrictions by province favoring the northeast of the empire Mongolia and its vicinities 47 A quota of 300 persons was fixed for provincial examinations with 75 persons from each group The metropolitan exam had a quota of 100 persons with 25 persons from each group Candidates were enrolled on two lists with the Mongols and Semu located on the left and the Han and Manzi on the right Examinations were written in Chinese and based on Confucian and Neo Confucian texts but the Mongols and Semu received easier questions to answer than the Chinese Successful candidates were awarded one of three ranks All graduates were eligible for official appointment 21 Under the revised system the yearly averages for examination degrees awarded was about 21 47 The way in which the four regional categories were divided tended to favor the Mongols Semu and Han despite the Manzi being by far the largest portion of the population The 1290 census figures record some 12 000 000 households about 48 of the total Yuan population for South China versus 2 000 000 North Chinese households and the populations of Mongols and Semu were both less 47 While South China was technically allotted 75 candidates for each provincial exam only 28 Han Chinese from South China were included among the 300 candidates the rest of the South China slots 47 being occupied by resident Mongols or Semu although 47 racial South Chinese who were not residents of South China were approved as candidates 48 Recruitment by examination during the Yuan dynasty constituted a very minor part of the Yuan administration Hereditary Mongol nobility formed the elite nucleus of the government Initially the Mongols drew administrators from their subjects but in 1261 attempts were made by Kublai to increase Mongol personnel by ordering the establishment of Mongolian schools to draw officials from The School for the Sons of the State was established in 1271 to give two or three years of training for the sons of Imperial Bodyguards so that they might become suitable for official recruitment 49 Officials serving in the capital were nominally supposed to receive merit ratings every 30 months for demotion or promotion but in practice government posts were inherited from father to son 50 Tusi edit Southwestern tribal chieftainships were organized under the tusi system The tusi system was inspired by the Jimi system Chinese 羈縻制度 implemented in regions of ethnic minorities groups during the Tang dynasty 51 It was established as a specific political term during the Yuan dynasty 52 and was used as a political institution to administer newly acquired territories following their conquest of the Dali Kingdom in 1253 53 Members of the former Duan imperial clan were appointed as governors general with nominal authority using the title Dali chief steward Chinese 大理總管 p Dalǐ Zǒngguǎn and local leaders were co opted under a variety of titles as administrators of the region 54 Some credit the Turkoman governor Sayyid Ajjal Shams al Din Omar with introducing the system into China 54 Duan Xingzhi the last king of Dali was appointed as the first local ruler and he accepted the stationing of a pacification commissioner there 55 Duan Xingzhi offered the Yuan maps of Yunnan and led a considerable army to serve as guides for the Yuan army By the end of 1256 Yunnan was considered to have been pacified Under the Yuan dynasty the native officials or tusi were the clients of a patron client relationship The patron the Yuan emperors exercised jurisdictional control over the client but not his her territory itself 56 The tusi chieftains in Yunnan Guizhou and Sichuan who submitted to Yuan rule and were allowed to keep their titles The Han Chinese Yang family ruling the Chiefdom of Bozhou which was recognized by the Song and Tang dynasties also received recognition by the subsequent Yuan and Ming dynasties The Luo clan in Shuixi led by Ahua were recognized by the Yuan emperors as they were by the Song emperors when led by Pugui and Tang emperors when led by Apei They descended from the Shu Han era king Huoji who helped Zhuge Liang against Meng Huo They were also recognized by the Ming dynasty 57 58 Provinces of the Yuan dynastyName TraditionalChinese SimplifiedChinese Pinyin Capital Approximate extent in terms of modern locationsAncient name Modern locationGansu 甘肅 甘肃 Gansu Ganzhou Zhangye Gansu NingxiaHuguang 湖廣 湖广 Huguǎng Wuchang Hunan western Guangdong Guangxi Guizhou HainanHenanjiangbei 河南江北 河南江北 Henanjiangbei Bianliang Kaifeng Henan northern Hubei northern Jiangsu northern AnhuiJiangxi 江西 江西 Jiangxi Longxing Nanchang Jiangxi eastern GuangdongJiangzhe 江浙 江浙 Jiangzhe Hangzhou Zhejiang southern Jiangsu southern Anhui FujianLiaoyang 遼陽 辽阳 Liaoyang Liaoyang Manchuria northeastern KoreaLingbei 嶺北 岭北 Lǐngbei Helin Kharkhorin Karakorum Mongolia northern Inner MongoliaShaanxi 陝西 陕西 Shǎnxi Fengyuan Xi an ShaanxiSichuan 四川 四川 Sichuan Chengdu eastern and central SichuanYunnan 雲南 云南 Yunnan Zhongqing Kunming Yunnan Upper BurmaZhengdong 征東 征东 Zhengdōng Kaesong Most of KoreaMing dynasty 1368 1644 editSee also Ming dynasty in Inner Asia and Tusi nbsp Administrative divisions of Ming dynasty in 1409 nbsp Regional Military Commissions Du Zhihui Shisi of Ming dynasty nbsp Ming dynasty official Yang Hong 1451The lowest administrative unit during the Ming dynasty was the county which was supervised by a prefecture through a subprefecture Prefectures were organized into provinces and administered by three cooperating agencies the Provincial Administration Commission chengxuan buzheng shisi the Provincial Surveillance Commission tixing ancha shisi and the Regional Military Commission du zhihui shisi The three agencies were directed by a Grand Coordinator and Supreme Commander The post of Grand Coordinator was indefinite and could last as long as 10 or even 20 years A Supreme Commander handled military affairs Neither posts were governorships and were considered special purpose representatives of the government 59 The Provincial Administration Commission was in general charge of all civil matters especially fiscal matters The Provincial Administration kept three to eight branch offices in each province Each branch office was headed by an Intendant daotai to exercise administrative authority Each province also had a Tax Intendant duliang dao The Provincial Surveillance Commission was headed by a single Surveillance Commissioner under whom were various vice and assistant commissioners who held censorial and judicial powers Regional Military Commissioners were responsible for military garrisons in the provinces Executive officials of the Three Provincial Commissions were collectively known as Regional Overseers The purpose of this tripartite administration of provinces was so that no one had supreme power in one region 6 Recruitment by examination flourished after 1384 in the Ming dynasty Provincial graduates were sometimes appointed to low ranking offices or entered the Guozijian for further training after which they might be considered for better appointments Before appointment to office metropolitan graduates were assigned to observe the functions of an office for up to one year The maximum tenure for an office was nine years but triennial evaluations were also taken at which point an official could be reassigned Magistrates of counties submitted monthly evaluation reports to their prefects and the prefects submitted annual evaluations to provincial authorities Every third year provincial authorities submitted evaluations to the central government at which point an outer evaluation was conducted requiring local administration to send representatives to attend a grand audience at the capital Officials at the capital conducted an evaluation every six years Capital officials of rank 4 and above were exempted from regular evaluations Irregular evaluations were conducted by censorial officials 60 Gaitu guiliu edit The Ming dynasty continued the Yuan tusi chiefdom system The Ming tusi were categorized into civil and military ranks 61 The civilian tusi were given the titles of Tu Zhifu native prefecture Tu Zhizhou native department and Tu Zhixian native county according to the size and population of their domains Nominally they had the same rank as their counterparts in the regular administration system 61 The central government gave more autonomy to those military tusi who controlled areas with fewer Han Chinese people and had underdeveloped infrastructure They pledged loyalty to the Ming emperor but had almost unfettered power within their domains All the native chieftains were nominally subordinate to Pacification Commissioners Xuanfushi Xuanweishi Anfushi The Pacification Commissioners were also native chieftains who received their title from the Ming court As a way of checking their power Pacification Commissioners were put under the supervision of the Ministry of War 62 Throughout its 276 year history the Ming dynasty bestowed a total of 1608 tusi titles 960 of which were military rank and 648 were civilian rank 63 the majority of which were in Yunnan Guizhou and Sichuan In Tibet Qinghai and Sichuan the Ming court sometimes gave both tusi titles and religious titles to leaders As a result those tusi had double identities They played both the role of political leaders and religious leaders within their domains For example during the reign of the Yongle Emperor the leader of the Jinchuan monastery assisted the Ming army in a battle against the Mongols The leader was later given the title Yanhua Chanshi 演化禅师 or Evolved Chan Master and the power to rule 15 villages as his domain as a reward 64 Under Ming administration the jurisdictional authority of tusi began to be replaced with state territorial authority The tusi acted as stop gaps until enough Chinese settlers arrived for a tipping point to be reached and they were then converted into official prefectures and counties to be fully annexed into the central bureaucratic system of the Ming dynasty This process was known as gaitu guiliu simplified Chinese 改土归流 traditional Chinese 改土歸流 or turning native rule into regular administration 53 The most notable example of this was the consolidation of southwestern tusi chiefdoms into the province of Guizhou in 1413 53 Building upon the Yuan precedent the Ming began its colonization of the southwest in the 1370s and though its military strength waxed and waned it was able to eliminate the largest autonomous kingdoms in the southwest by the early decades of the seventeenth century By the time of the Ming Qing transition what remained in the southwest were only a few small autonomous polities and the Rebellion of the Three Feudatories sanfan zhi luan 1673 81 did much to erase these from the landscape In short the Yongzheng Emperor s appointment of his trusted Manchu official Ortai 1680 1745 and the aggressive campaign against tusi offices they initiated in the 1720s in the southwest should be seen as the end point not the beginning of China s colonization of the southwest 65 John E Herman In sum gaitu guiliu was the process of replacing tusi with state appointed officials the transition from jurisdictional sovereignty to territorial sovereignty and the start of formal empire rather than informal 66 Provinces of the Ming dynastyName TraditionalChinese SimplifiedChinese Pinyin Capital TraditionalChinese SimplifiedChinese Modern divisionsNorth Zhili 北直隸 北直隶 Beizhili Shuntian Beijing 順天府 北京 顺天府 北京 Beijing Hebei TianjinSouth Zhili 南直隸 南直隶 Nanzhili Yingtian Nanjing 應天府 南京 应天府 南京 Anhui Jiangsu ShanghaiFujian 福建 福建 Fujian Fuzhou Fuzhou 福州府 福州府Guangdong 廣東 广东 Guǎngdōng Guangzhou Guangzhou 廣州府 广州府 Guangdong HainanGuangxi 廣西 广西 Guǎngxi Guilin Guilin 桂林府 桂林府Guizhou 貴州 贵州 Guizhōu Guiyang Guiyang 貴陽府 贵阳府Henan 河南 河南 Henan Kaifeng Kaifeng 開封府 开封府Huguang 湖廣 湖广 Huguǎng Wuchang Wuhan 武昌府 武漢 武昌府 武汉 Hubei HunanJiangxi 江西 江西 Jiangxi Nanchang Nanchang 南昌府 南昌府Shaanxi 陝西 陕西 Shǎnxi Xi an Xi an 西安府 西安府 Gansu Ningxia ShaanxiShandong 山東 山东 Shandōng Jinan Jinan 濟南府 济南府Shanxi 山西 山西 Shanxi Taiyuan Taiyuan 太原府 太原府Sichuan 四川 四川 Sichuan Chengdu Chengdu 成都府 成都府 Chongqing SichuanYunnan 雲南 云南 Yunnan Yunnan Kunming 雲南府 昆明 云南府 昆明 Zhejiang 浙江 浙江 Zhejiang Hangzhou Hangzhou 杭州府 杭州府Qing dynasty 1644 1912 edit nbsp The Qing dynasty and its provinces near its greatest extent 1820 nbsp Governorships of the Qing dynasty nbsp Official map of the Qing Empire published in 1905 The Qing dynasty kept the Ming province system and expanded it to 18 provinces by 1850 However unlike the Ming tripartite provincial administration Qing provinces were governed by a single Governor xunfu who held substantial power Although all provincial agencies communicated with the central government through him he himself was subordinate to a Governors general zongdu While nominally superior to a Governor usually the Governors general cooperated closely with the Governor and acted jointly in reporting to the central government Governors and Governors generals did not have to have a Manchu Han Chinese balance unlike in the central government 7 Subordinate to Governors were two kinds of agencies Provincial Administration Commissions chengxuan buzheng shisi and Provincial Surveillance Commissions tixing ancha shisi The Provincial Administration Commissioner was a lieutenant general who bore fiscal responsibilities The Provincial Surveillance Commissioner was responsible for the administration of judicial and censorial matters There was also an unofficial Provincial Education Commissioner tidu xuezheng in every province who supervised schools and certified candidates for the civil service examinations Under the provincial administration were Circuit Intendants daotai who served as intermediaries between prefectures and provincial administration 67 Lifan Yuan edit See also Qing dynasty in Inner Asia Peripheral territories such as Mongolia Xinjiang and Tibet were supervised by the Lifan Yuan Court of Colonial Affairs The people living in these areas were generally able to keep their own way of life so long as they kept the peace and showed deference to the Qing emperor Many of the Mongols were organized into Manchu style banners or leagues and it was not until the 19th century that Mongolia was brought under tighter control under a Manchu general or Grand Minister Consultant canzan dachen and several Judicial Administrators banshi siyuan The people of Xinjiang were treated as tributary vassals and their leaders used Chinese titles Tibet s religious leaders were relatively autonomous and treated as tributary princes until the 1720s when rebelliousness prompted the Qing government to place the area under the administration of two Grand Minister Residents zhuzang dachen who were supported by Qing military garrisons 68 Provinces of the Qing dynasty 1911 Name TraditionalChinese SimplifiedChinese Pinyin Abbreviation Capital TraditionalChinese SimplifiedChineseChina properAnhui 安徽 安徽 Anhui 皖 wǎn Anqing 安慶 安庆Zhejiang 浙江 浙江 Zhejiang 浙 zhe Hangzhou 杭州 杭州Zhili 直隸 直隶 Zhili 直 zhi Baoding 保定 保定Fujian 福建 福建 Fujian 閩 mǐn Fuzhou 福州 福州Henan 河南 河南 Henan 豫 yu Kaifeng 開封 开封Hubei 湖北 湖北 Hubei 鄂 e Wuchang 武昌 武昌Hunan 湖南 湖南 Hunan 湘 xiang Changsha 長沙 长沙Gansu 甘肅 甘肃 Gansu 甘 gan or 隴 lǒng Lanzhou 蘭州 兰州Jiangsu 江蘇 江苏 Jiangsu 蘇 su Jiangning Nanjing Suzhou 江寧 南京 蘇州 江宁 南京 苏州Jiangxi 江西 江西 Jiangxi 贛 gan Nanchang 南昌 南昌Guangdong Canton 廣東 广东 Guǎngdōng 粵 yue Guangzhou Canton 廣州 广州Guangxi 廣西 广西 Guǎngxi 桂 gui Guilin 桂林 桂林Guizhou 貴州 贵州 Guizhōu 黔 qian or 貴 gui Guiyang 貴陽 贵阳Shanxi 山西 山西 Shanxi 晉 jin Taiyuan 太原 太原Shandong 山東 山东 Shandōng 魯 lǔ Jinan 濟南 济南Shaanxi 陝西 陝西 Shǎnxi 陝 shǎn or 秦 qin Xi an 西安 西安Sichuan 四川 四川 Sichuan 川 chuan or 蜀 shǔ Chengdu 成都 成都Yunnan 雲南 云南 Yunnan 滇 dian or 雲 yun Kunming 雲南 昆明 云南 昆明 Manchuria incorporated into the provincial system in 1907 Fengtian now Liaoning 奉天 奉天 Fengtian 奉 feng Mukden now Shenyang 盛京 瀋陽 盛京 沈阳 Heilongjiang 黑龍江 黑龙江 Heilongjiang 黑 hei Qiqihar 齊齊哈爾 齐齐哈尔Jilin 吉林 吉林 Jilin 吉 ji Jilin 吉林 吉林Xinjiang incorporated into the provincial system in 1884 Xinjiang 新疆 新疆 Xinjiang 新 xin or 疆 jiang Dihua Urumqi 迪化 烏魯木齊 迪化 乌鲁木齐 Feudatory Regions of the Qing dynastyPeriod Name Current Name TraditionalChinese SimplifiedChinese Pinyin Abbreviation Capital TraditionalChinese SimplifiedChineseTibet Tibet 西藏 西藏 Xizang 藏 zang Lhasa 喇薩 拉薩 喇萨 拉萨 Qinghai 青海 青海 Qinghǎi 青 qing Xining 西寧 西宁Uliastai Outer Mongolia 烏里雅蘇臺 外蒙古 乌里雅苏台 外蒙古 Wulǐyǎsutai Menggǔ Uliastai 烏里雅蘇臺 乌里雅苏台 Secen Khan aimag 車臣汗部 车臣汗部 Chechenhanbu Ikh Khuree Ulaanbaatar 大庫倫 烏蘭巴托 大库伦 乌兰巴托 Tusheetu Khan aimag 土謝圖汗部 土谢图汗部 Tǔxietuhanbu Ikh Khuree 大庫倫 烏蘭巴托 大库伦 乌兰巴托 Altay Altay 阿爾泰 阿尔泰 Aĕrtai Chenghua Temple Altay 承化寺 阿勒泰 承化寺 阿勒泰 Inner Mongolia 內蒙古 内蒙古 Nei Menggǔ None The divisions below are direct administered by Lifan Yuan Jirim aimag Tongliao 哲里木盟 通遼 哲里木盟 通辽 Zhelǐmu Josutu aimag part of Chifeng 卓索圖盟 卓索图盟 Zhuosuǒtu Yekejuu aimag Ordos 伊克昭盟 鄂尔多斯 伊克昭盟 鄂尔多斯 Yikezhao Juuuda aimag Chifeng 昭烏達盟 赤峰 昭乌达盟 赤峰 Zhaowuda Xilingol aimag 錫林郭勒盟 锡林郭勒盟 Xilinguōle Beizi Temple Xilinhot 貝子廟 錫林浩特 贝子庙 锡林浩特 Ulanqab aimag 烏蘭察布盟 乌兰察布盟 Wulanchabu Chahar part of Xilingol 八旗察哈爾 八旗察哈尔 Chaha er Kalgan Zhangjiakou 喀拉幹 張家口 喀拉干 张家口 West Hetao Mongolia 西套蒙古 西套蒙古 Xitao Menggǔ None The divisions below are direct administered by Lifan Yuan Alxa 阿拉善厄魯特旗 阿拉善厄鲁特旗 Alashan elŭte Bayanhot 定遠營 巴彥浩特 定远营 巴彦浩特 Ejin Ejin Banner 額濟納土爾扈特旗 额济纳土尔扈特旗 Ejinatŭĕrhute See also editDynasties of China Tributary system of China Chinese expansionismCitations edit a b Wilkinson 2012 p 260 Wilkinson 2012 p 262 a b Wilkinson 2012 p 264 a b Hucker 1987 p 45 46 a b Hucker 1987 p 63 64 a b Hucker 1987 p 77 a b Hucker 1987 p 88 Wilkinson 2012 p 259 Hucker 1987 p 9 Hucker 1987 p 9 10 Hucker 1987 p 13 14 a b Hucker 1987 p 14 Hucker 1987 p 16 a b Autocratic Tradition and Chinese Politics Zhengyuan Fu Yu 57 Hucker 1987 p 15 16 Kracke 253 Wai Kit Wicky Tse 2012 Dynamics of Disintegration The Later Han Empire 25 220CE amp Its Northwestern Frontier PhD thesis University of Pennsylvania Xie 2013 p 92 Hucker 1987 p 25 26 a b c d e The Chinese Imperial Examination System WWW chinaknowledge de Hucker 1987 p 27 Twitchett 1979 p 203 a b c Hucker 1987 p 32 33 Twitchett 1979 pp 203 205 Twitchett 1979 p 404 Paludan Ann 1998 Chronicle of the Chinese Emperors The Reign by Reign Record of the Rulers of Imperial China Thames and Hudson ISBN 0 500 05090 2 p 97 Hucker 1987 p 37 Miyazaki 1976 p 112 Hucker 1987 p 55 Twitchett amp Tietze 1994 pp 78 79 Crossley 1997 p 22 Theobald Ulrich Song Empire Government Administration and Law www chinaknowledge de www chinaknowledge de Retrieved 9 April 2023 Zhengyuan Fu Autocratic Tradition and Chinese Politics Kracke 257 Table 2 which shows 26 doctoral degrees awarded in 1184 to individuals from Occupied North China and 1 in 1256 Gernet Jacques 1962 Daily Life in China on the Eve of the Mongol Invasion 1250 1276 Translated by H M Wright Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 0720 0 p 65 Hucker 1987 p 52 Chaffee 1995 p 182 183 Cosmo 2003 p 251 Cosmo 2003 p 252 Hucker 1987 p 57 Hucker 1987 p 65 Hucker 1987 p 67 Rossari 1988 30 Rossari 1988 71 Wendy Frey History Alive The Medieval World and beyond Palo Alto CA Teacher s Curriculum Institute 2005 a b c Kracke 263 Kracke 263 amp p 391 n 17 Hucker 1987 p 69 Hucker 1987 p 68 中国土司制度 云南民族出版社 1992年出版 作者 龚荫 ISBN 7 5367 0509 3 nulog cn or sfyey net 土司制度基本概念辨析 云南师范大学学报 哲学社会科学版 2014年1期 作者 李世愉 mzb com cn cssn cn or wenku baidu a b c Dardess 2012 p 6 a b Bin Yang Between Winds and Clouds The Making of Yunnan Ch 4 Columbia University Press Atwood C P Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongols p 613 Herman 2007 p 11 Herman John E 2005 Di Cosmo Nicola Wyatt Don J eds Political Frontiers Ethnic Boundaries and Human Geographies in Chinese History illustrated ed Routledge p 260 ISBN 1135790957 Crossley Pamela Kyle Siu Helen F Sutton Donald S eds 2006 Empire at the Margins Culture Ethnicity and Frontier in Early Modern China Vol 28 of Studies on China illustrated ed University of California Press p 143 ISBN 0520230159 Hucker 1987 p 75 76 Hucker 1987 p 81 82 a b Pamela Kyle Crossley Helen F Siu Donald S Sutton 2006 Empire at the Margins Culture Ethnicity and Frontier in Early Modern China Berkeley University of California Press 2006 pp 136 Shin The making of the Chinese state p 61 Crossley Empire at the Margins p 137 邹 立波 2010 从土司封号看嘉绒藏族土司与宗教的关系 西南民族大学学报 人文社科版 31 02 11 15 p 11 Herman 2007 p 12 Herman 2007 p 16 Hucker 1987 p 89 Hucker 1987 pp 90 91 References editChaffee John 1995 The Thorny Gates of Learning in Sung Song China State University of New York Press Cosmo Nicola di 2003 Political Frontiers Ethnic Boundaries and Human Geographies in Chinese History Crossley Pamela Kyle 1997 The Manchus Cambridge Mass Blackwell ISBN 1557865604 Dardess John 2012 Ming China 1368 1644 A Concise History of A Resilient Empire Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Inc Herman John E 2007 Amid the Clouds and Mist China s Colonization of Guizhou 1200 1700 Harvard University Asia Center Hucker Charles 1987 A Dictionary of Official Titles in Imperial China Kracke E A Jr 1967 1957 Region Family and Individual in the Chinese Examination System in Chinese Thoughts amp Institutions John K Fairbank editor Chicago and London University of Chicago Press Miyazaki Ichisada 1976 China s Examination Hell The Civil Service Examinations of Imperial China translated by Conrad Schirokauer Weatherhill reprint Yale University Press 1981 ISBN 9780300026399 Twitchett D 1979 Cambridge History of China Sui and T ang China 589 906 Part I vol 3 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 21446 7 Twitchett Denis Tietze Klaus Peter 1994 The Liao In Franke Herbert Twitchett Denis eds The Cambridge History of China Volume 6 Alien Regime and Border States 907 1368 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 43 153 ISBN 0521243319 Wilkinson Endymion 2012 Chinese History A New Manual Harvard University Asia Center for the Harvard Yenching Institute Xie Baocheng 2013 A Brief History of the Official System in China Translated by Chen Mirong Social Sciences Academic Press ISBN 978 1 84464 153 6 Yu Pauline 2002 Chinese Poetry and Its Institutions in Hsiang Lectures on Chinese Poetry Volume 2 Grace S Fong editor Montreal Center for East Asian Research McGill University Yu Jianfu 2009 The influence and enlightenment of Confucian cultural education on modern European civilization Front Educ China vol 4 no 1 pp 10 26 doi 10 1007 s11516 009 0002 5 S2CID 143586407 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Administration of territory in dynastic China amp oldid 1216215728, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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