The governor and governor of the Ming Dynasty, can the governor be in charge of the governor?

Updated on history 2024-02-09
13 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    Governors are generally not in charge of governors, because their respective functions are unrelated.

    The Governor General was a local military and political official established in the Ming Dynasty of China. Nominally, he is not a magistrate, but a "dispatched" nature. It governs the administrative, economic and military affairs of one or more provinces, and the official rank is generally the second grade.

    In addition, there are governors who are in charge of certain government affairs, such as the governor of rivers and the governor of Caoyun.

    The governor, on the other hand, was in charge of the administrative affairs of only one province. At the same time, he is also in charge of military affairs in addition to government affairs. In the twenty-fourth year of Hongwu in the Ming Dynasty, a governor was established. In the early days, he only supervised the tax and grain, the prime minister of the river, pacified the displaced people, rectified the border passes, and later also took charge of the military.

    According to this, the rank of the governor is generally higher than that of the governor, and if there is a special period such as banditry, suppression, etc., the governor of several provinces can be controlled, but in general, each has its own functions, and cooperates with each other in work, and is not subordinate.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Only during special periods. Generally speaking, the rank of the governor is higher than that of the governor, and if there is a special period such as banditry, suppression, etc., the governor of several provinces can be controlled, but relatively speaking, each has its own functions, cooperates with each other in work, and is not subordinate.

    The Governor General was a local military and political official established in the Ming Dynasty of China. Nominally, he is not a magistrate, but a "dispatched" nature. It governs the administrative, economic and military affairs of one or more provinces, and the official rank is generally the second grade.

    In addition, there are governors who are in charge of certain government affairs, such as the governor of rivers and the governor of Caoyun.

    The governor, on the other hand, was in charge of the administrative affairs of only one province. At the same time, he is also in charge of military affairs in addition to government affairs. In the 24th year of Hongwu in the Ming Dynasty, he set up a governor, and at the beginning he only supervised the tax and grain, the prime minister's river, the homeless people, and the border passes, and later he was also in charge of the military.

    Although the governor of the Ming Dynasty was not a local official military and political chief, he actually held the local military and political power because of his dispatch of the local government and the control of the three divisions (Cheng Xuan Political Envoy Division, Criminal Prosecution Envoy Division, and Du Command Envoy Division). At the same time, the governor had to go to Beijing every year to discuss matters, which also reflected the strengthening of the imperial court's local jurisdiction.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Yes. The governor is the chief executive of a province. The Governor General, on the other hand, is the supreme governor of a large province or two smaller provinces.

    The two positions are essentially direct. Moreover, the governor is generally in ****, and generally serves as the third grade, and the governor is in ****, which is generally from the second grade, or even the second grade. For example, Hu Zongxian.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    It can be because the Ming Dynasty implemented the three-division system in the locality, according to the inspection envoy, the political envoy, and the three escort envoys are responsible for their own responsibilities. However, when encountering peasant uprisings and other things, the three of them passed the buck to each other, and it was difficult to implement effective management, so the governor system was established to manage the affairs of a province in a unified manner. The governor is generally served by the squire of each ministry.

    However, in the late Ming Dynasty, due to the increasing scope of the peasant uprising, the governor of one province could not govern other regions, so the post of governor was established, which was held by the secretaries of various ministries to coordinate the affairs of the provinces.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    The governor and the governor were both local military and political officials, and were collectively called governors.

    However, the power of the governor is greater than that of the governor, and most of the regional governors are under the governor, and there are also governors who also serve as governors; The governor's jurisdiction is larger than that of the governor, generally more than one province, and at the end of the Ming Dynasty, there were more people who had jurisdiction over five provinces and seven provinces; [And the rank of the governor is higher than that of the governor], and the local governors are mostly elected by the ministers and officials, and are served by the Shangshu and the squire, and the title of the chief official of the Metropolitan Procuratorate (Du Yushi, Deputy Duyu Shi, and Du Yushi) is also added.

    However, there is no clear subordinate relationship between the two.

  6. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    It must be managed, and if it can't be managed, the governor will be over, so why send a governor again.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    The Governor is one level older than the Governor and is in charge of the work of the Governor.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    All of them are temporary positions, and there is no fixed grade.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    The governors of the Ming Dynasty, as long as they were within the jurisdiction of the governor, were subject to the governor's control.

    Unlike the Qing Dynasty, where governors were not subordinate to each other, the governors of the Ming Dynasty were set up for military needs and did not spread throughout the country. He is the highest military and political chief of a military and garrison region, and because it is a war need, it is necessary to unify the powers, and the governors, general soldiers and other civil and military ** in the jurisdiction must be controlled by him.

    However, there is still a division of labor in the processing of transactions. For example, during the Jiajing Anti-Japanese War, the governor was mainly responsible for recruiting officers and soldiers and instructing strategies; The governor supervises military affairs and raises food and wages, and in layman's terms, the governor is responsible for overall planning and command, and the governor is responsible for logistics and wages.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    Both of them were directly appointed by ** to the local Beijing officials, which were originally temporary positions, but later in the late Ming Dynasty due to more peasant uprisings, they became fixed in a certain place.

    Governors and governors began to appear in the Ming Dynasty, which were set up by the Ming Dynasty as local high-ranking **, and were used by the Qing Dynasty later.

    Initially, there was a governor, the full name is "the governor of a certain place and other places to supervise military affairs and manage food and salary", its meaning is "patrol pacification", the main responsibility of this kind of ** is to coordinate the three divisions of the province - according to the judge, the political division, the command of the embassy (that is, judicial, civil finance, and military) functions, in fact, there is no official name, but the responsibility is entrusted to the ** official position in the **** official position, in the early days it is generally **temporary appointment of the special commissioner**, as the governor of ** The grade is relatively high, generally for the ministry, If it's over, it's going back. Later, due to the emergence of many practical problems, it was temporarily changed to a permanent commissioner.

    After the Ming Dynasty determined the governor system, the Ming Dynasty had a large-scale rebellion and peasant uprising, which spread to several provinces at every turn, in order to facilitate the suppression of the rebellion and coordinate the relationship between the governors of the provinces, the Ming Dynasty sent a higher level of commissioners to generally serve as the secretary of the ministry, the position is called the governor, the full name is "the governor of a certain place and other places to supervise military affairs and pay and governor", mainly responsible for military affairs, management of the governor. The Governor is generally responsible for the affairs of two provinces or one large province and may issue orders to the governor. Because the power of these two positions is very large, the threat to the imperial power is greater, therefore, the Ming Dynasty has never wanted to fix the two positions.

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    It is normal that different dynasties have different names, different political systems, and political structures, so the power is naturally different and there are essential differences.

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    Different official positions, different functions, different scopes, different areas of management, and different levels of power.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    This is because the Ming Dynasty and the Qing Dynasty had different understandings of this position, and also had different positions, so there was a fundamental difference.

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