Official levels in the Tang Dynasty
First and third divisions (Taishi, Taifu, Taibao) or three Dukes (Taiwei, Situ, Sikong)
Three In the Western Zhou Dynasty, the masters were relatively mature, and they were originally the elders of the clan, responsible for guiding, assisting, and guardianship of the king. Bao, to protect one's body; Fu, to instill virtue and righteousness; Teacher, to teach one's lessons. "The ruler is the foundation of governance" ("Book of Rites of Great Dai. Three Books of Rites"), which plays a comprehensive guiding role when the monarch is young or immature. If the non-moral meritorious service is noble, then it will not occupy its position, and it is better to lack it than to overdo it. By the Tang Dynasty, it had transformed into three official positions, which were empty positions with high status but did not actually exercise power, and honorary positions that were not among the subordinates.
The two and three provinces are concurrently ministers (Zhongshu, Menxia, ??Shangshu)
The central administrative agency also has other provinces, temples, prisons and other departments, but these three are the most important. Among them, the Zhongshu Province is the agency entrusted with the functions of formulating and issuing various government orders under the supreme directive; the Menxia Province is the review organ for imperial decrees and various superior documents; and the Shangshu Province is the highest executive agency, executing various government orders.
The functional division and position setting of the three provinces mainly include:
1. Zhongshu Province: the principal officer is Zhongshu Ling, and the deputy chief is Zhongshu Shilang. Under the jurisdiction of:
Zhongshusheren, Yousanqi Changshi, Youjianyidafu, Youbuque, Youshiyi, Living Sheren, Jixian Hall and History Museum (institution)
< p>2. Menxiasheng: The chief officer is the servant under the door, and the deputy chief is the servant under the door. Under the jurisdiction of:Gi Shizhong, Zuo Sanqi, Zuo Jianyi, Zuo Jianyi, Zuo Buque, Zuo Shiyi, Qi Julang, Chengmen Lang, Fu Baolang, Hongwen Guan (organization, in charge of books, etiquette , system evolution, etc.)
3. Shangshu Province: the principal officer is Shangshu Ling, and the deputy chiefs are Zuo and Youpu She. Each of the six ministries has a minister and a minister as chief and deputy chiefs. It has six ministries and twenty-four departments. Situation 4. The internal attendant agencies
There are the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Academy of Academic Affairs, and the Internal Affairs Bureau. Among them, the Bachelor's College was founded by Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty. At first, recruiting talented and learned people was called "waiting for imperial edicts", and then selected talented people from the court officials to live in the Hanlin, called "hanlin worship". Later, it was renamed "bachelor", who specialized in controlling internal affairs. Later, there was another name for "Inner Prime Minister", especially titles such as "Zhi Zhi Gao" and "Hanlin Bachelor Cheng Zhi". |
5. Rank system that is different from positions
Staff who do not hold actual management positions have their own ranks. In many cases, positions and ranks are not consistent. The ranks and names of civil servants are as follows:
1. The first rank: Taiwei, Situ, Sikong
2. The first rank: Kaifu Yitong Sansi
3. The second rank: Special Advance
4. The second rank: Doctor Guanglu
5. The third rank: Doctor Guanglu of Jinzi
6. Third grade: Yinqing Guanglu doctor
7. From the fourth level: Zhengyi doctor
8. From the fourth level: Tongyi doctor
9. From the fourth level: Taizhong Dafu
10. From the fourth position: Zhongdafu
30. From the ninth position: General Shilang
In addition, there are members of the Duihuang clan. Titles with different treatments awarded for rewards such as military exploits and military exploits.
6. Supervision, admonishment system and its structural settings
The Yushitai in the Tang Dynasty was a completely independent supervision structure. The Taiyuan Yushi is divided into three courtyards:
1) The Taiyuan Yushi is responsible for correcting and impeaching all officials of the imperial court.
2) Serving the censor in the palace and conducting various ceremonies in the palace. "Those who are in the main class and are listed outside the pavilion gate, and those who are not in the class and do not speak calmly".
3) The scope of supervision by the Procuratorate and the Censor is very wide. Patrol various places. Although the supervisory censor is only an eighth-rank minor official, he holds the Tianxian in his hand and has great courage. "When the censor is sent as an envoy, he cannot shake the mountains or shock the prefectures and counties. It is not his job to hold the post"!
In addition, in addition to the three public servants who also have such rights and responsibilities, the casual knights, regular attendants, admonishment officials, repairers, and relic collectors are also specialized admonishment officials. Wei Zheng, who was famous for his "violent appearance and strong admonition", once served as an admonishment official. And formed the "system in which admonishers follow the prime minister into the cabinet to discuss matters."
Discussing the official system and its origins in the Tang Dynasty
Each dynasty has a royal family and a government. The royal family is represented by the emperor, while the prime minister is the top leader of the government. Both prime minister and prime minister mean deputy, so the prime minister is also an adjutant. In the pre-Qin era, he was actually the adjutant of nobles such as kings or princes. Inside, the housekeeper is called the boss, and outside, the director is called the prime minister. After Qin unified the world, all the nobles fell, and only one noble family remained, the royal family. Therefore, the prime minister in their family had to manage both the country and the emperor's family affairs. This is the origin of the Prime Minister.
The prime ministers of the Tang Dynasty adopted a committee system, which was different from the leadership system of the Han Dynasty. The government has three yamen: Zhongshu, Menxia, ??and Shangshu. The functions of these three departments plus the Yushitai are equivalent to the powers of the prime minister in the Han Dynasty. This shows the decentralization of power among the prime ministers in the Tang Dynasty.
1. Zhongshu Sheng---issue orders. These orders were called "imperial edicts" in the Tang Dynasty. Although they were issued in the name of the emperor, they were not drawn up by the emperor but by Zhongshu Sheng. The procedure is as follows: Zhongshu Sheren drafts multiple copies of the imperial edict, called "Wuhua Judgement", and then Zhongshu Ling (Zhongshu Provincial Governor) or Zhongshu Shilang (Zhongshu Provincial Adjutant) selects one and slightly polishes it. , became a formal edict, and then the emperor drew a word "edict" to become the emperor's order, and finally was issued to the provinces.
2. Save under the door---review. The emperor's order issued by Zhongshu Province must now be reviewed. If the review fails, the document will be returned to the Zhongshu Province with an annotation from the official (the official with the right to reject it), which is called "Tu Gui", which means requesting the Zhongshu Province to redraft it. If the review is passed, it still needs to be signed by the Shizhong (the governor of the Menxia Province) or the Shilang (the adjutant of the Menxia Province) before the edict will officially take effect, and then it will be sent to the Shangshu Province for execution. It was considered illegal in the Tang Dynasty if the emperor issued an order directly without a Zhongshu or a family seal.
3. Shangshu Province---Execution. The governor of Shangshu Province is called Shangshu Ling. Li Shimin once held this position before he became emperor. Therefore, none of the subsequent courtiers dared to serve as Shangshu Ling again, and the vacancy often remained vacant. The real power of Shangshu Province lies with his adjutants, who are called left and right servants. The left servant is in charge of the three departments of officials, households, and rituals, and the right servant is in charge of the three departments of military, punishment, and work. The functions of the six departments can be found in Brother zxc789's "A Quiz on the Central Management System of the Tang Dynasty." Each subordinate has four divisions, totaling twenty-four divisions.
Zhengshitang---Since an edict must go through Zhongshu and Menxia Province before it becomes official, for the sake of convenience, when discussing major events, a joint meeting is held by the governors of Zhongshu and Menxia Provinces. The meeting is located It is called "Political Affairs Hall". If a person is both a left and right servant, he is called "Tong Zhongshu Menxia Ping Zhang Shi", and he also has the right to enter the political hall to discuss matters (because the chief of the Shangshu Province is fictitious). But after Kaiyuan, Pushe could no longer enter the political hall to discuss affairs, and the Shangshu Province became a pure executive organ. Therefore, in the Tang Dynasty, the chief minister under Zhongshu and the sect was the real prime minister.
Let me introduce the Yushitai again. It is divided into left and right censors. The left censor supervises central government officials, mainly officials from the six ministries of Shangshu Province, while Zhongshu and Menxia provinces are not included in the supervision; the right censor inspects local officials. The country is divided into ten channels, each of which One is called "observer". This "observation envoy" was originally a central supervisory officer who inspected various areas. Later, he became a permanent central official stationed in the local area, and invisibly became the highest local official. If his mission is to patrol the border and stop at important border defense areas, and the central government gives him all the power to deal with local affairs, he becomes a "Jiedushi". Jiedushi was a kind of full-power seal at that time. With it, everything could be controlled, so it was called "Jiedushi". Because of its great power, it gradually evolved into a "vassal town".
In the Tang Dynasty, there were nine grades of officials. The first and second grade officials were designated as elders, who were not actually responsible for political affairs, that is, they had titles such as "three ministers". The top leaders of the "three provinces, six departments and one unit" mentioned above are all third-rank officials.
Official positions other than "three provinces, six ministries and one department" are mostly idle positions. Let’s talk about “Nine Temples” here. It comes from Jiuqing during the Qin and Han Dynasties. The status is below the six departments. The chief and deputy chiefs are Qing and Shaoqing.
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2. Guanglu Temple---its origin is from Guanglu Xun of the Han Dynasty. "Xun" is connected with "阍", which is the entrance of the royal family. Therefore, Guanglu Temple is in charge of the palace gate security;
3. Weiwei Temple---originally a royal guard in the Han Dynasty, but in the Tang Dynasty it only managed the emperor's tents, etc.;
4. Zongzheng Temple---in charge of the emperor's clan affairs;
5. Taipu Temple---Pu means driver, so Taipu Temple is in charge of the emperor's horses;
6. Dali Temple---originates from the court officials of the Han Dynasty. It is the central judicial organ;
7. Honglu Temple---Honglu means paging, originating from the Great Honglu in the Han Dynasty. It is in charge of the emperor's treatment of people and is equivalent to the emperor's personal foreign ministry;
8. Sinong Temple --- originated from the Great Sinong of the Han Dynasty and is an institution in charge of the government's economy. All income from the world's land tax is nominally managed by the Sinong Temple and goes into the national treasury;
9. Shaofu Temple---is also an institution in charge of the economy, but it is responsible for taxes on Shanze Salt Mine and other taxes. This part of the revenue is included in the emperor's private treasury