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Ministry of Popular Affairs

The Ministry of Popular Affairs (Japanese: 民部省, Hepburn: Minbu-shō)[2] may refer to:

  1. one of the Eight Ministries (八省) of the Japanese imperial court, established by the Taihō Code of the early 8th century, and continued under the Ritsuryō legal system.[3]
  2. A short-lived ministry during the Meiji period (August–September 1869, August 1870 – September 1871).[4]
Premodern Japan
Part of a series on the politics and
government of Japan during the
Nara and Heian periods
Daijō-daijin
Minister of the LeftSadaijin
Minister of the RightUdaijin
Minister of the CenterNaidaijin
Major CounselorDainagon
Middle CounselorChūnagon
Minor CounselorShōnagon
Eight Ministries
CenterNakatsukasa-shō  
CeremonialShikibu-shō
Civil AdministrationJibu-shō
Popular AffairsMinbu-shō
WarHyōbu-shō
JusticeGyōbu-shō
TreasuryŌkura-shō
Imperial HouseholdKunai-shō

Minbu-shō (Ritsuryō) edit

The ministry, established by the Taihō Code and Ritsuryō laws, was one of the Eight Ministries, in the wing of four ministries reporting to the Controlling Board of the Left (左弁官局, Sabenkankyoku) out of eight ministries.[5] As the name indicates, this body was concerned with oversight over the affairs of the common people, viewed as taxable producers of goods.[1][6] The ministry maintained various records: the population census sent from the provinces, cadastral (real estate) records, and tax accounting records.[6]

Ministerial authority under Yōrō Code edit

The Yōrō Code (a revised version of the Taihō Code that created the ministry), stipulates the powers vested in the ministry, under its Official Appointments statute (職員令, Shikiin-ryō, "Article for the Ministry of Popular Affairs"). There it is stated that :

諸国戸口名籍、賦役、孝義・優復・蠲免、家人奴婢、橋道、津済、渠池、山川、藪沢、諸国田事[7]

"the ministry is responsible for the registers of populations,[a] the labour tax, family obligations [i.e. exemptions from labour tax in deserving cases, such as that of a son the sole support of aged parents, etc.];servants and slaves [who being unfree and propertyless were untaxable]; bridges and roads, harbours, fences, bays, lakes, mountains, rivers, woods, and swamps etc.; rice lands in all provinces."—Sansom tr.[1]

In the above "all provinces" does not include the capital.[8] The census for the aristocracy who had clan names (uji or kabane) etc. was under the purview of the Jibu-shō (Ministry of Civil Administration). And the ministry was not "directly responsible for the upkeep of roads, bridgees, etc.," but merely kept such records for taxation and tax transportation tracking purposes.[1]

Popular Affairs certificate edit

The ministry issued order certificates or charters called the minbushō-fu (民部省符, "Popular Affairs certificate") to officials and provincial governors (kokushi). The shōen system recognized private ownership of reclaimed rice-paddy lands, but did not automatically confer tax-exemption (as some misleading dictionary definitions suggest). From the early Heian period, the tax-exempt or leniency status was ratified by the certificate or charter (kanshōfu (官省符)) issued either by this ministry or the Great Council (daijō-kan) itself. (See kanshōfu-shō (官省符荘)).[9][b]

In the Jōgan (貞観) period (859–877) occurred a breakdown of the Ritsuryō system under the Fujiwara no Yoshifusa regime, with authorities of the ministries absorbed by the Great Council.[10] The decree of Jōgan 4, VII, 27 (August 826)[c] essentially stripped the ministry of its control over the tax-leniency policy, ordaining that all applications for tax relief would be decided completely by the Great Council of State (daijō-kan), and its ruling delivered directly to the countries by the Great Council's certificate (daijō-kan fu). The ministry still issued certificates for exemptions on the shōen estates, but this was just rubberstamping decisions from above, as before. These changes in the exercise of administration were codified in the Jogan shiki (貞観式, "Procedures of the Jogan Era") and later Engishiki.[d][11] The ministry was thus reduced to processing clerical responsibilities concerning the provinces.

Hierarchy edit

The Minbu-shō (民部省) was headed by the minister, whose office was ordinarily filled by a son or close relative of the emperor, of the fourth grade or higher.[1][12][13]

  • Minbu-kyō (民部卿) - "Minister of Popular Affairs"
aliases: "Chief administrator of the ministry of civil services"[14]
  • Minbu-no-tayū (民部大輔) - "Senior Assistant Minister of Popular Affairs"
aliases: "Vice-Minister"[1]
  • Minbu-no-shōyū (民部少輔) - "Junior Assistant Minister of Popular Affairs"[15]
aliases: "Assistant Vice-Minister"[1]
  • Minbu-no-daijō (民部大丞) (x 2) - "[Senior] Secretaries"[1][16]
  • Minbu-no-shōjō (民部少丞) (x 2) - "Junior Secretaries"[1]
  • Minbu-dairoku or Minbu-no-dai-sakan (民部大録) (x 1) - "[Senior] Recorder"[1]
  • Minbu-shōroku or Minbu-no-shō-sakan (民部少録) (x 3[1]) - "Junior Recorders"[1]

Under the Ministry were two bureaus:

The Shukei-ryō, or Kazue-no-tsukasa (主計寮), the "Bureau of Computation"[17] or "Bureau of Statistics."[1] was in charge of two forms of taxes, the chō (調, "handicraft tax") and the (corvée). The was a form of conscripted compulsory labor, or more often the goods paid to be exempt from the obligation.

The Shuzei-ryō or Chikara-ryō (主税寮), the "Tax Bureau,"[1][17] was in charge of the third form of tax, the so (, "land tax (paid by rice)"). The three forms of taxes were known as Soyōchō (租庸調) under the Ritsuryō system.

  • Kazue-no-kami (主計頭) - "Director"[1]
  • Kazue-no-suke (主計助) - "Assistant director"
  • Kazue-no-taijō (主計大允) - "Secretary"[1]
  • Kazue-no-shōjō (主計少允) - "Assistant Secretary" [1]
  • Kazue-no-dai-sakan (主計大属) - "Senior Clerk"[1]
  • Kazue-no-shōzoku (主計少属) - "Junior Clerk"[1]
  • Sanshi (算師) (x 2) - "Accountants" [1]
trained mathematicians who calculated tax revenue and expenditures.[6]
  • Chikara-no-kami (主税頭) - "Director"[1]
The director was in charge of dispensing and receipt from the government granaries. so[1]
  • Chikara-no-suke (主計助) - "Assistant director"
  • Chikara-no-taijō (主税大允) - "Secretary"[1]
  • Chikara-no-shōjō (主税少允) - "Assistant Secretary" [1]
  • Chikara-no-dai-sakan (主税大属) - "Senior Clerk"[1]
  • Chikara-no-shōzoku (主税少属) - "Junior Clerk"[1]
  • Sanshi (算師) (x 2) - "Accountants" [1]
trained mathematicians who kept tax records.[6]

The Rinin (廩院) was an ancillary facility to this ministry that stored a portion of the corvée tax ( of soyōchō) and nenryō shōmai (年料舂米, "yearly assessed polished rice"), which were distributed during ceremonies and functions.[18][e]

Personages who held offices edit

  • Ariwara no Yukihira (Ariwara no Yukihira), minister (883–887), known as Zai Minbukyō ("Zai" being the Chinese reading of the first letter of his surname).
  • Sugawara no Michizane (菅原道真), junior assistant minister (874), minister (896).
  • Fujiwara no Tadabumi (藤原忠文) 873–947, aka "Uji no Minbukyō" or "the Uji Director (of the Ministry of Popular Affairs).[19][20]
  • The fictional Fujiwara no Koremitsu (藤原惟光), foster brother of Hikaru Genji was Minbu no taifu.[21]
  • Fujiwara no Tameie (1198–1275) was nominal minister,[22] but governance had already shifted to samurai in the Kamakura period

List of translated aliases edit

literal
semantic
  • Department of Revenue and Census[29]
  • Ministry of Civil Administration[30]
  • Ministry of Civil Services[14]
  • Ministry of Personnel[31]

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ The word (in) all provinces (諸国) appears at the beginning of the original text, and so "aller Provinzen" appears here in Dettmer 2009, p. 226, but Sansom leaves ".. in all provinces" to the end of paragraph.
  2. ^ The Ministry of Popular Affairs (which dealt with the common people and not the gentry) did not have the decision-power to issue such charter on its own initiative. It merely drafted and rubberstamped the charter at the behest of the Great Council. 坂本賞三 (1985). 荘園制成立と王朝国家. 塙書房.
  3. ^ in volume 6 of Ruijū fusen shō ("assorted orders abridged")
  4. ^ There is a shift in terminology. The exemption from kanmotsu (官物), which are mentioned in the Jōgan decree and the Engishiki, was understood to include the fuyu (不輸, "tax privlieges") rights
  5. ^ This differs from the Ōiryō, the granary of the Imperial Household Ministry.

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Sansom 1932, pp. 87–88, vol. IX; Samson does not redundantly print the Japanese 8-fold for each ministry. For the Japanese equivalent, consult pp. 71-77; pp. 77-82; pp.82-83 (overview and first two ministries).
  2. ^ "Ministry of Popular Affairs"[1]
  3. ^ Sansom 1978, p. 104
  4. ^ a b 高柳, 光寿 (Takayanagi, Mitsuhisa); 竹内, 理三 (Rizō, Takeuchi), eds. (1974) [1966], 角川日本史辞典 (2 ed.), 角川書店, p. 976, ISBN 4040305027{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  5. ^ a b Organizational chart diagram, Deal 2006, p. 90
  6. ^ a b c d e Miller 1979, pp. 124–128
  7. ^ Heading: "職員令 21 民部省条... 掌.." (Yōrō code text)押部, 佳周 (Oshibe Yoshikane) (1981), 日本律令成立の研究 (Nihon ritsuryō seiritsu no kenkyū) (snippet), 塙書房, p. 100
  8. ^ Dettmer 2009, p. 226, note 405
  9. ^ Sato, Elizabeth (1974), "Early Development of the Shōen", in Hall, John Whitney; Mass, Jeffrey P. (eds.), Medieval Japan: Essays in Institutional History, Stanford University Press, p. 96, ISBN 9780804715119
  10. ^ Entry for "貞観時代 (Jōgan jidai)" in Kadokawa historical dictionary[4]
  11. ^ 早川, 庄八 (1997) [1978]. 日本古代の文書と典籍. 吉川弘文館. pp. 55–56. ISBN 9784642023177.; Originally published 1978 in 『古代史論叢』 2 (中)
  12. ^ 和田, 英松 (Wada, Hidematsu) (1926), , 明治書院, pp. 69–71, archived from the original (NDL) on September 8, 2021{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Titsingh 1834, p. 428 Totsomg gives Japanese representation next to each French name of office, but the latter does not correspond well with modern English translations.
  14. ^ a b Varley, H. Paul. (1980). Jinnō Shōtōki, p. 272.
  15. ^ Borgen 1994, p. 118; quote: "(Year) 877, Michizane was named junior assistant minister of ceremonial."
  16. ^ Murase 2001, p. 5; "Senior Secretary in the Bureau of Popular Affairss"
  17. ^ a b c McCullough 1999, p. 112
  18. ^ 佐藤, 信 (1997) [1984], 日本古代の宮都と木簡, vol. 2(下), 吉川弘文館, p. 62, ISBN 9784642023115, Originally 1984 "民部省廩院について" in 土田直鎮先生還暦記念会編』, Vol. 2(下)
  19. ^ Florenz, Karl (1906), Geschichte der japanischen Litteratur, C. F. Amelangs, p. 242
  20. ^ Dykstra, Yoshiko Kurata (tr.) (2003), The Konjaku tales (snippet), Kansai Gaidai University Publication, pp. 270–271, ISBN 9784873350264
  21. ^ a b Royall 2003;Commissioner of Civil Affairs (probably Koremitsu), p.228. Minbu no Taifu = Commissioner of Civil Affairs p.1162
  22. ^ Nussbaum & Roth 2005, p. 210
  23. ^ Whitehouse 2010, p. 138
  24. ^ Van Goethem 2008, p. 96 (Popular Affairs minister)
  25. ^ McCullough & McCullough 1980, pp. 810
  26. ^ Ooms 2009, p. 112, this source inconsistently use ministry or department for various shō.
  27. ^ Borgen 1994, p. 117ff
  28. ^ Versucher 2007, p. 319
  29. ^ Kawakami 1903, pp. 36–7
  30. ^ Ministry of Civil Administration, Sheffield.
  31. ^ Naoki 1993, pp. 234

References edit

Translations of primary sources
  • Sansom, George Bailey (1932). "Early Japanese Law and Administration". Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan. Second Series. 9: 67–110. (Yōrō Code administrative laws and ministerial organization, as preserved in Ryō no Gige, excerpted translation and summary.)
  • Sansom, George (1978). A history of Japan to 1334. Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-0523-2.
  • Dettmer, ed. (2009), Der Yōrō-Kodex, die Gebote: Einleitung und Übersetzung des Ryō-no-gige (format) (in German), vol. 1, Hans Adalbert, Otto Harrassowitz Verlag, pp. 226–, ISBN 978-3447059404
Secondary sources
  • Deal, William E. (2006), Handbook to Life in Medieval and Early Modern Japan (preview), Infobase Publishing, ISBN 978-0-816-07485-3(organizational chart)
  • Ito, Hirobumi (1889), Commentaries on the Constitution of the Empire of Japan (Google), Translated by Itō Miyoji, Tokyo: Igirisu-Hōritsu Gakko, p. 87
  • Kawakami, Kiyoshi Karl (1903), The Political Ideas of Modern Japan, Tokyo: Shokwabo, OCLC 466275784
    • — Iowa City, Iowa: University of Iowa Press (1903) Internet Archive, full text
  • Murase, Miyeko (2001). The tale of Genji: legends and paintings. British Museum Press. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-807-61500-3.
  • McCullough, Helen Craig; McCullough, William H. (1980), A Tale of Flowering Fortunes: Annals of Japan; Aristocratic Life, vol. 1, Stanford University Press, ISBN 978-0-804-71039-8
  • McCullough, William H. (1999), "Chapter 2: The Capital and its Society", in Hall, John Whitney; Shively, Donald H.; McCullough, William H. (eds.), The Cambridge History of Japan (preview), vol. 2, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978-0-521-55028-4; (organizational chart)
  • Miller, Richard J. (1979). "Japan's first bureaucracy : a study of eighth-century government" (snippet). China-Japan Program. 19: 124–128.
    • e-text at Cornell digital collection
  • Naoki, Kōjirō (1993), Hall, John W. (ed.), The Cambridge History of Japan: Ancient Japan (preview), vol. 1, Cambridge University Press, pp. 260–, ISBN 978-0-521-22352-2
  • Nussbaum, Louis Frédéric; Roth, Käthe, eds. (2005), Japan Encyclopedia, Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-674-01753-5, OCLC 48943301
  • Titsingh, Isaac (1834), Annales des empereurs du Japon (google) (in French), Paris: Royal Asiatic Society, Oriental Translation Fund of Great Britain and Ireland, OCLC 5850691 (tr. of Nihon Odai Ichiran)
  • Ooms, Herman (2009), Imperial Politics and Symbolics in Ancient Japan: The Tenmu Dynasty, 650-800 (preview), University of Hawaii Press, ISBN 978-0-824-83235-3
  • Reischauer, Robert Karl (1937), Early Japanese history, c. 40 B.C.-A.D. 1167 (snippet), Princeton University Press
  • Ury, Marian. (1999). "Chinese Learning and Intellectual Life," The Cambridge history of Japan: Heian Japan. Vol. II. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-22353-9
  • Varley, H. Paul. (1980). Jinnō Shōtōki: A Chronicle of Gods and Sovereigns. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-04940-5; OCLC 59145842
additional sources used to compile English translated names.
  • Borgen, Robert (1994), Sugawara No Michizane and the Early Heian Court (preview), University of Hawaii Press, ISBN 978-0-824-81590-5
  • McCullough, Helen Craig (1990), Classical Japanese Prose: An Anthology, Stanford University Press, p. 173, ISBN 978-0-804-71960-5
  • Tyler, Royall (tr.) (2003), The tale of Genji, Murasaki Shikibu, Penguin, pp. 1161–2, ISBN 014243714X
  • Van Goethem, Ellen (2008), Nagaoka:Japan's Forgotten Capital (preview), Stone Bridge Press, Inc., ISBN 978-1-880-65662-4
  • Versucher, Charlotte (2007), "Life of Commoners in the Provinces", in Adolphson, Mikael S.; Edward, Kames; Matsumoto, Stacie (eds.), Heian Japan: Centers and Peripheries (preview), University of Hawaii Press, ISBN 978-0-824-83013-7
  • Whitehouse, Wilfrid (2010), Ochikubo Monogatari or The Tale of the Lady Ochikubo: A Tenth Century Japanese Novel / Chikamatsu Monzaemon (preview), Taylor & Francis, ISBN 978-0-203-84350-5

ministry, popular, affairs, japanese, 民部省, hepburn, minbu, shō, refer, eight, ministries, 八省, japanese, imperial, court, established, taihō, code, early, century, continued, under, ritsuryō, legal, system, short, lived, ministry, during, meiji, period, august,. The Ministry of Popular Affairs Japanese 民部省 Hepburn Minbu shō 2 may refer to one of the Eight Ministries 八省 of the Japanese imperial court established by the Taihō Code of the early 8th century and continued under the Ritsuryō legal system 3 A short lived ministry during the Meiji period August September 1869 August 1870 September 1871 4 Premodern JapanPart of a series on the politics andgovernment of Japan during theNara and Heian periodsDaijō kan Council of State Chancellor Chief MinisterDaijō daijinMinister of the LeftSadaijinMinister of the RightUdaijinMinister of the CenterNaidaijinMajor CounselorDainagonMiddle CounselorChunagonMinor CounselorShōnagonEight MinistriesCenterNakatsukasa shō CeremonialShikibu shōCivil AdministrationJibu shōPopular AffairsMinbu shōWarHyōbu shōJusticeGyōbu shōTreasuryŌkura shōImperial HouseholdKunai shōvte Contents 1 Minbu shō Ritsuryō 1 1 Ministerial authority under Yōrō Code 1 2 Popular Affairs certificate 2 Hierarchy 3 Personages who held offices 4 List of translated aliases 5 See also 6 Explanatory notes 7 Citations 8 ReferencesMinbu shō Ritsuryō editThe ministry established by the Taihō Code and Ritsuryō laws was one of the Eight Ministries in the wing of four ministries reporting to the Controlling Board of the Left 左弁官局 Sabenkankyoku out of eight ministries 5 As the name indicates this body was concerned with oversight over the affairs of the common people viewed as taxable producers of goods 1 6 The ministry maintained various records the population census sent from the provinces cadastral real estate records and tax accounting records 6 Ministerial authority under Yōrō Code edit The Yōrō Code a revised version of the Taihō Code that created the ministry stipulates the powers vested in the ministry under its Official Appointments statute 職員令 Shikiin ryō Article for the Ministry of Popular Affairs There it is stated that 諸国戸口名籍 賦役 孝義 優復 蠲免 家人奴婢 橋道 津済 渠池 山川 藪沢 諸国田事 7 the ministry is responsible for the registers of populations a the labour tax family obligations i e exemptions from labour tax in deserving cases such as that of a son the sole support of aged parents etc servants and slaves who being unfree and propertyless were untaxable bridges and roads harbours fences bays lakes mountains rivers woods and swamps etc rice lands in all provinces Sansom tr 1 In the above all provinces does not include the capital 8 The census for the aristocracy who had clan names uji or kabane etc was under the purview of the Jibu shō Ministry of Civil Administration And the ministry was not directly responsible for the upkeep of roads bridgees etc but merely kept such records for taxation and tax transportation tracking purposes 1 Popular Affairs certificate edit The ministry issued order certificates or charters called the minbushō fu 民部省符 Popular Affairs certificate to officials and provincial governors kokushi The shōen system recognized private ownership of reclaimed rice paddy lands but did not automatically confer tax exemption as some misleading dictionary definitions suggest From the early Heian period the tax exempt or leniency status was ratified by the certificate or charter kanshōfu 官省符 issued either by this ministry or the Great Council daijō kan itself See kanshōfu shō 官省符荘 9 b In the Jōgan 貞観 period 859 877 occurred a breakdown of the Ritsuryō system under the Fujiwara no Yoshifusa regime with authorities of the ministries absorbed by the Great Council 10 The decree of Jōgan 4 VII 27 August 826 c essentially stripped the ministry of its control over the tax leniency policy ordaining that all applications for tax relief would be decided completely by the Great Council of State daijō kan and its ruling delivered directly to the countries by the Great Council s certificate daijō kan fu The ministry still issued certificates for exemptions on the shōen estates but this was just rubberstamping decisions from above as before These changes in the exercise of administration were codified in the Jogan shiki 貞観式 Procedures of the Jogan Era and later Engishiki d 11 The ministry was thus reduced to processing clerical responsibilities concerning the provinces Hierarchy editThe Minbu shō 民部省 was headed by the minister whose office was ordinarily filled by a son or close relative of the emperor of the fourth grade or higher 1 12 13 Minbu kyō 民部卿 Minister of Popular Affairs aliases Chief administrator of the ministry of civil services 14 Minbu no tayu 民部大輔 Senior Assistant Minister of Popular Affairs aliases Vice Minister 1 Minbu no shōyu 民部少輔 Junior Assistant Minister of Popular Affairs 15 aliases Assistant Vice Minister 1 Minbu no daijō 民部大丞 x 2 Senior Secretaries 1 16 Minbu no shōjō 民部少丞 x 2 Junior Secretaries 1 Minbu dairoku or Minbu no dai sakan 民部大録 x 1 Senior Recorder 1 Minbu shōroku or Minbu no shō sakan 民部少録 x 3 1 Junior Recorders 1 Under the Ministry were two bureaus The Shukei ryō or Kazue no tsukasa 主計寮 the Bureau of Computation 17 or Bureau of Statistics 1 was in charge of two forms of taxes the chō 調 handicraft tax and the yō 庸corvee The yō was a form of conscripted compulsory labor or more often the goods paid to be exempt from the obligation The Shuzei ryō or Chikara ryō 主税寮 the Tax Bureau 1 17 was in charge of the third form of tax the so 租 land tax paid by rice The three forms of taxes were known as Soyōchō 租庸調 under the Ritsuryō system Kazue no kami 主計頭 Director 1 Kazue no suke 主計助 Assistant director Kazue no taijō 主計大允 Secretary 1 Kazue no shōjō 主計少允 Assistant Secretary 1 Kazue no dai sakan 主計大属 Senior Clerk 1 Kazue no shōzoku 主計少属 Junior Clerk 1 Sanshi 算師 x 2 Accountants 1 trained mathematicians who calculated tax revenue and expenditures 6 Chikara no kami 主税頭 Director 1 The director was in charge of dispensing and receipt from the government granaries so 1 Chikara no suke 主計助 Assistant director Chikara no taijō 主税大允 Secretary 1 Chikara no shōjō 主税少允 Assistant Secretary 1 Chikara no dai sakan 主税大属 Senior Clerk 1 Chikara no shōzoku 主税少属 Junior Clerk 1 Sanshi 算師 x 2 Accountants 1 trained mathematicians who kept tax records 6 The Rinin 廩院 was an ancillary facility to this ministry that stored a portion of the corvee tax yō of soyōchō and nenryō shōmai 年料舂米 yearly assessed polished rice which were distributed during ceremonies and functions 18 e Personages who held offices editAriwara no Yukihira Ariwara no Yukihira minister 883 887 known as Zai Minbukyō Zai being the Chinese reading of the first letter of his surname Sugawara no Michizane 菅原道真 junior assistant minister 874 minister 896 Fujiwara no Tadabumi 藤原忠文 873 947 aka Uji no Minbukyō or the Uji Director of the Ministry of Popular Affairs 19 20 The fictional Fujiwara no Koremitsu 藤原惟光 foster brother of Hikaru Genji was Minbu no taifu 21 Fujiwara no Tameie 1198 1275 was nominal minister 22 but governance had already shifted to samurai in the Kamakura periodList of translated aliases editliteralBureau of Civil Affairs 21 Popular Affairs Department 23 Popular Affairs Ministry 6 17 24 25 Ministry of Popular Affairs 1 5 26 27 Ministry of Population 28 semanticDepartment of Revenue and Census 29 Ministry of Civil Administration 30 Ministry of Civil Services 14 Ministry of Personnel 31 See also editDaijō kanExplanatory notes edit The word in all provinces 諸国 appears at the beginning of the original text and so aller Provinzen appears here in Dettmer 2009 p 226 but Sansom leaves in all provinces to the end of paragraph The Ministry of Popular Affairs which dealt with the common people and not the gentry did not have the decision power to issue such charter on its own initiative It merely drafted and rubberstamped the charter at the behest of the Great Council 坂本賞三 1985 荘園制成立と王朝国家 塙書房 in volume 6 of Ruiju fusen shō assorted orders abridged There is a shift in terminology The exemption from kanmotsu 官物 which are mentioned in the Jōgan decree and the Engishiki was understood to include the fuyu 不輸 tax privlieges rights This differs from the Ōiryō the granary of the Imperial Household Ministry Citations edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab Sansom 1932 pp 87 88 vol IX Samson does not redundantly print the Japanese 8 fold for each ministry For the Japanese equivalent consult pp 71 77 pp 77 82 pp 82 83 overview and first two ministries Ministry of Popular Affairs 1 Sansom 1978 p 104 a b 高柳 光寿 Takayanagi Mitsuhisa 竹内 理三 Rizō Takeuchi eds 1974 1966 角川日本史辞典 2 ed 角川書店 p 976 ISBN 4040305027 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link a b Organizational chart diagram Deal 2006 p 90 a b c d e Miller 1979 pp 124 128 Heading 職員令 21 民部省条 掌 Yōrō code text 押部 佳周 Oshibe Yoshikane 1981 日本律令成立の研究 Nihon ritsuryō seiritsu no kenkyu snippet 塙書房 p 100 Dettmer 2009 p 226 note 405 Sato Elizabeth 1974 Early Development of the Shōen in Hall John Whitney Mass Jeffrey P eds Medieval Japan Essays in Institutional History Stanford University Press p 96 ISBN 9780804715119 Entry for 貞観時代 Jōgan jidai in Kadokawa historical dictionary 4 早川 庄八 1997 1978 日本古代の文書と典籍 吉川弘文館 pp 55 56 ISBN 9784642023177 Originally published 1978 in 古代史論叢 2 中 和田 英松 Wada Hidematsu 1926 官職要解 修訂 Kanshoku yōkai shutei 3rd ed 明治書院 pp 69 71 archived from the original NDL on September 8 2021 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Titsingh 1834 p 428 Totsomg gives Japanese representation next to each French name of office but the latter does not correspond well with modern English translations a b Varley H Paul 1980 Jinnō Shōtōki p 272 Borgen 1994 p 118 quote Year 877 Michizane was named junior assistant minister of ceremonial Murase 2001 p 5 Senior Secretary in the Bureau of Popular Affairss a b c McCullough 1999 p 112 佐藤 信 1997 1984 日本古代の宮都と木簡 vol 2 下 吉川弘文館 p 62 ISBN 9784642023115 Originally 1984 民部省廩院について in 土田直鎮先生還暦記念会編 Vol 2 下 Florenz Karl 1906 Geschichte der japanischen Litteratur C F Amelangs p 242 Dykstra Yoshiko Kurata tr 2003 The Konjaku tales snippet Kansai Gaidai University Publication pp 270 271 ISBN 9784873350264 a b Royall 2003 Commissioner of Civil Affairs probably Koremitsu p 228 Minbu no Taifu Commissioner of Civil Affairs p 1162 Nussbaum amp Roth 2005 p 210 Whitehouse 2010 p 138 Van Goethem 2008 p 96 Popular Affairs minister McCullough amp McCullough 1980 pp 810 Ooms 2009 p 112 this source inconsistently use ministry or department for various shō Borgen 1994 p 117ff Versucher 2007 p 319 Kawakami 1903 pp 36 7 Ministry of Civil Administration Sheffield Naoki 1993 pp 234References editTranslations of primary sourcesSansom George Bailey 1932 Early Japanese Law and Administration Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan Second Series 9 67 110 Yōrō Code administrative laws and ministerial organization as preserved in Ryō no Gige excerpted translation and summary Sansom George 1978 A history of Japan to 1334 Stanford University Press ISBN 0 8047 0523 2 Dettmer ed 2009 Der Yōrō Kodex die Gebote Einleitung und Ubersetzung des Ryō no gige format in German vol 1 Hans Adalbert Otto Harrassowitz Verlag pp 226 ISBN 978 3447059404Secondary sourcesDeal William E 2006 Handbook to Life in Medieval and Early Modern Japan preview Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 0 816 07485 3 organizational chart Ito Hirobumi 1889 Commentaries on the Constitution of the Empire of Japan Google Translated by Itō Miyoji Tokyo Igirisu Hōritsu Gakko p 87 Kawakami Kiyoshi Karl 1903 The Political Ideas of Modern Japan Tokyo Shokwabo OCLC 466275784 Iowa City Iowa University of Iowa Press 1903 Internet Archive full text Murase Miyeko 2001 The tale of Genji legends and paintings British Museum Press p 5 ISBN 978 0 807 61500 3 McCullough Helen Craig McCullough William H 1980 A Tale of Flowering Fortunes Annals of Japan Aristocratic Life vol 1 Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 804 71039 8 McCullough William H 1999 Chapter 2 The Capital and its Society in Hall John Whitney Shively Donald H McCullough William H eds The Cambridge History of Japan preview vol 2 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 55028 4 organizational chart Miller Richard J 1979 Japan s first bureaucracy a study of eighth century government snippet China Japan Program 19 124 128 e text at Cornell digital collection Naoki Kōjirō 1993 Hall John W ed The Cambridge History of Japan Ancient Japan preview vol 1 Cambridge University Press pp 260 ISBN 978 0 521 22352 2 Nussbaum Louis Frederic Roth Kathe eds 2005 Japan Encyclopedia Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01753 5 OCLC 48943301 Titsingh Isaac 1834 Annales des empereurs du Japon google in French Paris Royal Asiatic Society Oriental Translation Fund of Great Britain and Ireland OCLC 5850691 tr of Nihon Odai Ichiran Ooms Herman 2009 Imperial Politics and Symbolics in Ancient Japan The Tenmu Dynasty 650 800 preview University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 824 83235 3 Reischauer Robert Karl 1937 Early Japanese history c 40 B C A D 1167 snippet Princeton University Press Ury Marian 1999 Chinese Learning and Intellectual Life The Cambridge history of Japan Heian Japan Vol II Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 22353 9 Varley H Paul 1980 Jinnō Shōtōki A Chronicle of Gods and Sovereigns New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 04940 5 OCLC 59145842additional sources used to compile English translated names Borgen Robert 1994 Sugawara No Michizane and the Early Heian Court preview University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 824 81590 5 McCullough Helen Craig 1990 Classical Japanese Prose An Anthology Stanford University Press p 173 ISBN 978 0 804 71960 5 Tyler Royall tr 2003 The tale of Genji Murasaki Shikibu Penguin pp 1161 2 ISBN 014243714X Van Goethem Ellen 2008 Nagaoka Japan s Forgotten Capital preview Stone Bridge Press Inc ISBN 978 1 880 65662 4 Versucher Charlotte 2007 Life of Commoners in the Provinces in Adolphson Mikael S Edward Kames Matsumoto Stacie eds Heian Japan Centers and Peripheries preview University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 824 83013 7 Whitehouse Wilfrid 2010 Ochikubo Monogatari or The Tale of the Lady Ochikubo A Tenth Century Japanese Novel Chikamatsu Monzaemon preview Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 203 84350 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ministry of Popular Affairs amp oldid 1087214435, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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