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Red, blue, white, yellow, red, blue, white, yellow.
Zheng Huang (45 Niu Lu) and Huang (20 Niu Lu): Nurhachi Zheng White Flag (25 Niu Lu): Huang Taiji Inlaid White Flag (15 Niu Lu):
Chu Ying's son Du Du Zheng Red Flag (25 Niu Lu): Dai Shan inlaid red flag (26 Niu Lu); Daishan's eldest son, Yue Tuo, is a blue flag (21 Niu Lu): Mang Gurtai inlaid with a blue flag (33 Niu Lu): Amin.
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It is the eight flags of yellow, white, red, blue, yellow, white, red and blue, of which the yellow and yellow flags are directly led by the Khan or the emperor.
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The Eight Banners of the Qing Dynasty should be the Yellow Flag, the White Flag, the Blue Flag, and the Red Flag, the Yellow and White Flag. Blue and white flags, red and blue flags, red and white flags.
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The Eight Banners of the Manchu Dynasty refer to the Yellow Flag, the Yellow Flag, the Red Flag, the Red Flag, the White Flag, the Blue Flag, and the Blue Flag.
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The eight flags are yellow, white, red, blue, yellow, white, red, and blue. In the twenty-ninth year of Wanli in the Ming Dynasty (1601), Nurhachi reorganized the organization, with Niulu Ezhen, Jiala Ezhen, and Gushan Ezhen as the leaders. At the beginning, the yellow, white, red, and blue 4-color flags were placed, and the cherry blossom shed was arranged into four flags.
In the forty-third year of Wanli (1615), four flags were added with yellow, white, red and blue, and the system of eight flags was established. Manchurian society implemented the eight-banner system, which made its army extremely combative.
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The Eight Banners of the Qing Dynasty refer to the military and administrative organizations formed by the Manchurians when they established their power in the early days. The eight flags are: the yellow flag, the white flag, the red flag, the yellow flag, the white flag, the red flag, the red flag, the blue flag.
Among them, Zhengqing refers to the three flags of the early flag, the place where the aristocratic family lived, and the inlaid flag is five flags, including the Manchurian nobles and the Han bannermen. The auxiliary flag is where the mixed descendants of the Manchurians and Han Chinese lived. Later, due to the increase in the population of Manchuria, four more banners were added:
Maoqin, inlaid blue, blue, Zhengwei flag. These banners played an important role in the history of the Qing Dynasty.
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The eight flags are yellow, white, red, blue, yellow, white, red, and blue.
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The highest status of the Eight Banners is the Yellow Flag, because at the beginning of the establishment of the Eight Banners, the Yellow Flag was Nurhachi's pro-army, and the nine noble families of the Qing Dynasty all came from the Yellow Flag.
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The eight flags of the Qing Dynasty in history refer to: the yellow flag, the yellow flag, the white flag, the white flag, the red flag, the red flag, the blue flag, and the blue flag.
The owners of the Eight Banners and the distribution of the Eight Banners during Nurhachi's lifetime are roughly as follows:
1. Zhenghuang Banner (45 Niu Lu): Nurhachi.
2. Yellow flag (20 bulls): Nurhachi.
3, Zhenghongqi (25 Niu Lu): Nurhachi's second son Daishan.
4, inlaid with red flags (26 Niu Lu): Daishan's eldest son Yue Tuo.
5, inlaid with blue flag (33 Niu Lu): Nurhachi's second son Amin with his maternal brother Shuerhaqi.
6, Zhenglan Banner (21 Niu Lu): Nurhachi's fifth son, Mang Gurtai.
7. Zhengbai Flag (25 Niu Lu): Nurhachi's eighth prince Taiji.
8, inlaid with white flags (15 Niu Lu): Nurhachi's eldest son, Chu Ying's eldest son, Du Du.
The status of the eight flags is divided into two kinds, the upper three flags (yellow flag, yellow flag, and white flag) and the lower five flags (red flag, red flag, blue flag, white flag, blue flag), and the status of the upper three flags is higher than that of the lower five flags.
1. Three flags.
Shangsan Banner is the three flags of the Qing Dynasty that were directly under the control of the emperor. The upper three flags are inlaid with yellow, yellow and white. Each flag is set up with Manchurian, Mongolian and Han armies, which are inlaid with Huangman, inlaid with Huangmeng, inlaid with Huanghan, Zhenghuangman, Zhenghuangmeng, Zhenghuanghan, Zhengbaiman, Zhengbaimeng, Zhengbaihan.
2. Lower the five flags.
Before the Qing Dynasty entered the customs, the five flags were the red flag, the red flag, the white flag, the white flag, and the blue flag; After entering the customs, Emperor Shunzhi relied on the political and economic power of the ** regime to master the positive white flag, set aside the positive blue flag, and adjusted the lower five flags to the positive red flag, the inlaid red flag, the positive blue flag, the inlaid white flag, and the inlaid blue flag.
The main task of the lower five banners is to garrison the Beijing division and various places. In order to further strengthen the rule of **, Emperor Yongzheng strictly distinguished the subordination of the flag division (outer leader) and the subordinate leader (inner leader) in the five banners, and the main part of the flag division and leadership was actually directly controlled by the emperor.
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The three banners are "the Son of Heaven is his own general", most of them are led by the emperor, the highest status, and the number of people is overwhelming, becoming the core; They are: yellow, yellow, white, guarding the imperial city and picking guards. As the emperor's escort when he went out, he was a pro-army.
Under the five flags to guard the outside of the capital, a large number of guards were stationed in various places. They are inlaid white, inlaid red, inlaid red, inlaid blue, inlaid blue.
In 1601, the four banners were set up by the owners:
Zhenghuang Banner, led by the banner lord Nurhachi;
is a white flag, led by Chu Ying, the eldest son of the flag owner Nurha;
is a red flag, and the banner owner is led by Dai Shan, the second son of Nurhachichi;
The blue flag is owned by Nurhachi's younger brother Shulhaqi.
In 1615, the banners were expanded into eight banners, and the owners were:
Zhenghuang Banner, led by the banner lord Nurhachi;
inlaid with yellow flags, led by the banner lord Nurhachi;
is a white flag, and the eighth prince of the banner lord Nurhachi is too desperate to command;
Set with a white flag, the banner owner is led by the twelve sons of Nurhachi, Azig.
The main banner of the red flag is led by the second son of Nurhachi.
The banner is blue, and the banner owner is led by Nurhachi's nephew Amin.
The blue flag is inlaid with a blue flag, and the banner owner is led by Nurhachi's fifth son, Mang Gurtai.
Left wing: yellow, white, white, blue Right: yellow, red, red, blue.
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The Eight Banners of the Qing Dynasty was the main military organization of the Qing Dynasty and was founded by the Manchurians. Its name derives from the Manchurian word "qi", which means flag, flag. The eight flags are divided into eight simple and prudent flags: yellow flag, white flag, red flag, yellow flag, white flag, red flag, left wing yellow flag, and right wing white flag.
The Zhenghuang Banner is a banner species created by the leader of Manchuria, Nurhachi, also known as the "Wang Banner". The Zhenghuang Banner is the most noble flag species, and only the emperor of Manchuria and his family can belong to this flag species.
The Zhengbai Flag is a flag species created by Nurhachi's son, Huang Taiji. The positive white flag is one of the oldest flags, and it is also the most popular flag.
The Zhenghong Banner is a flag created by Shunzhi, the first emperor of the Qing Dynasty. The Zhenghongqi was one of the most powerful banners of the Qing Dynasty, and its members were often regarded as the elite of Manchuria.
The yellow flag, the white flag, and the red flag belonged to the middle class of Manchuria. The members of these banners are usually military officers, ** and merchants.
The left-wing yellow flag and the right-wing white flag belonged to the lower strata of Manchuria. The members of these flags are usually farmers, workers and craftsmen.
The Eight Banners system played an important role during the Qing Dynasty, and its members were often privileged and held high political, economic, and military positions. With the changes of the times, the Eight Banners system has gradually declined, but its influence is still far-reaching.
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