Han to Northern and Southern dynasties (202 BC – 589 AD) Using the Recommendatory System and Nine-rank System to select governments officials and candidates were popular during the long period beginning with the
Han dynasty and ending after the
Northern and Southern dynasties period. Scholars-officials during this period usually from prominent clans, including the
Zheng clan of Xingyang,
Xie clan of Chen Commandery,
Cui clan of Qinghe,
Cui clan of Boling,
Wang clan of Langya,
Wang clan of Taiyuan, and the
Lu clan of Fanyang. These clans were prominent in having Confucian scholars and high-ranking government officials, with male family members serving as official for generations and some clans or families serving several chancellors. They formed a huge network through political marriages with each other or the imperial family and also formed a monopoly on education and government officials.
Sui and Tang Dynasties (581–907) , a politician and noted poet Officially established in 587, the Civil Service Examination allowed for selection of scholar-officials. Beginning with the
Sui dynasty, those with the right family background who passed this examination would become scholar-officials. In the early part of the
Tang dynasty, empress
Wu Zetian reformed and improved the Imperial Examination system by establishing the
Metropolitan Exam; people who passed it were called
Jinshi (metropolitan graduates, highest degree), and people passed the Provincial Exam were called
Juren (provincial graduates). Wu's reforms gradually led to today's concept of scholar-officials and the intellectual class. The government would select scholar-officials by examining their poems and essays writings for knowledge of Confucian texts and some Buddhist texts. Intellectuals who passed the exam served as officials. Many famous Tang poets were scholar-officials, such as
Du Mu. However, because the Tang Dynasty was a rapidly changing period for the final formation of the structure and composition of scholar-officials, there is some ambiguity of the usage of the words "scholar-officials": according to the
Old Book of Tang, scholars/intellectuals who passed the imperial exam but took no official position could only be referred to
Shi 士; according to the
New Book of Tang, as long as they were scholars, whether official or not, they could be called scholar-officials.
Song Dynasty (960–1279) The
Song dynasty was the golden age for scholar-officials. By this time, passing the Imperial Examination had become the major path for people to hold an official position in the government. With the continuous improvements and reforms of Imperial Examination, the bureaucracy completely replaced the aristocracy, and the scholar-officer's polity was completely established. Song was the only dynasty in Chinese history that provided scholar-officials judicial privilege. Due to the influence of the founding emperor of Song
Zhao Kuangyin, almost all Song emperors showed great respect to intellectuals. If a scholar-official from the Song dynasty committed a crime, he couldn't be held accountable directly. Instead, an internal impeachment replaced the formal judicial process. If his crime wasn't serious, he only needed to be punished with a reprimand instead of a criminal penalty.
Yuan, Ming, and Qing dynasties (1271–1912) ) '' (襴衫) worn by scholars and students During the
Yuan,
Ming and
Qing dynasties, the stereotyped writing style of the
eight-legged essay (八股文) format dominated the Imperial Examination, and scholar-officials from this period were relatively unable to speak and create freely due to the harsh political environment. The strong relationship between Imperial Examination and the official position were still present, though the entire society formed a climate of "studying well so as to become an official" 学而优则仕. In 1905, the Qing government abolished the imperial examination system, leading to the gradual disappearance of scholar-officials. ==Non-governmental functions==