officials
County 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. 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. The county was headed by a "court-appointed official" (''
) 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 '
also had runners (') 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.
Village 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 '''' (ex.
Emperor Gaozu of Han). Later dynasties had security institutions composed of several households such as the
baojia system.
Provincial administration 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. Permanent provincial administrations developed under the Yuan and Ming dynasties. 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). 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. 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).
Metropolitan 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.
Table of administrative divisions ==Qin dynasty (221–206 BC)==