The book is divided into six chapters: •
Offices of the Heaven () on general principles of governance, appointment of officials, guards, attendants and royal purveyors of provisions such as wine, jade, dried meat, vinegar... Descriptions on duties and responsibilities of officials, eunuchs and concubines; •
Offices of Earth () on local governance, agriculture, taxation and division of land; •
Offices of Spring () on ceremonies, music, rituals and divinatory practices; •
Offices of Summer () on the organization of the army; •
Office of Autumn () on justice, punishments, legal system and court rites; •
Office of Winter () on public works, manufacturing, artisans, craftmanship and art. The work consists mainly of schematic lists of Zhou dynasty bureaucrats, stating what the function of each office is and who is eligible to hold it. Sometimes though the mechanical listing is broken off by pieces of philosophical exposition on how a given office contributes to social harmony and enforces the universal order. The division of chapters follows the six departments of the Zhou dynasty government. The bureaucrats within a department come in five ranks: minister ('
), councilor (' ), senior clerk ('
), middle clerk (' ) and junior clerk ('''' ). There is only one minister per department -the department head-, but the other four ranks all have multiple holders spread across various specific professions. It was translated into French by
Édouard Biot as
Le Tcheou-Li ou Rites des Tcheou, traduit pour la première fois du Chinois in 1850 and an abridged English translation edition called
Institutes of the Chow Dynasty Strung as Pearls by Hoo peih seang and translated by William Raymond Gingell in 1852. In addition to the
Etiquette and Ceremonial, the Rites of Zhou contain one of the earliest references to the
Three Obediences and Four Virtues, a set of principles directed exclusively at women that formed a core part of
female education during the Zhou. ==Record of Trades==