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Early Qing Dynasty: Military Region Commander + Local Administrator.
After the Qing Dynasty: After Yongzheng abolished the subordination of the Eight Banners to all the personnel of the banner (only the subordination of the direct Baoyi was retained), the banner owner Wang Ye was about to become an honorary title.
The owner of the Eight Banners during Nurhachi's lifetime, due to historical reasons, the order of the Eight Banners: inlaid yellow, positive yellow, positive white, positive blue, inlaid white, positive red, inlaid red, inlaid blue, collectively known as the Eight Banners, commanding the Manchurian, Mongolian, and Han armies.
Extended information: There is a Qing generation, due to the particularity of its ethnic group, it is not like the ** regime, which separates the army and political affairs, but creates a three-in-one organizational form of military, government and people, that is, the Eight Banners system.
In the twenty-ninth year of Wanli in the Ming Dynasty (1601), Nurhachi reorganized the Jurchen population, and initially set up four color flags of yellow, white, red and blue, and organized them into four flags. Later, four flags were added with yellow, white, red and blue, and the eight-flag system was established. Ding Zhuang was a soldier in wartime and a citizen in peacetime.
Each flag has a flag owner.
The owners of the Eight Banners and the distribution of the Eight Banners during Nurhachi's lifetime are roughly as follows:
Due to historical reasons, the order of the Eight Banners: inlaid yellow, bent and white, blue, inlaid white, red, inlaid red, inlaid blue, collectively known as the Eight Banners, commanding the Manchurian, Mongolian and Han armies.
Yellow flag: Nurhachi.
Yellow flag: Nurhachi.
Zhenghongqi: Nurhachi's second son.
Inlaid with red flags: Daishan's eldest son Yue Tuo.
Blue flag: Amin, the second son of Nurhachi's half-brother Shulhaqi.
Zhenglan Banner: Nurhachi's fifth son, Mang Gurtai.
Positive white flag: Nurhachi's eighth prince Taiji.
Inlaid with white flags: Du Du, the eldest son of Chu Ying, the eldest son of Nurhachi.
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The Eight Banners originally originated from the hunting organization of the Manchurian (Jurchen) people, and was the form of military organization of the social life of the Qing Dynasty banner people, as well as the fundamental system of the Qing Dynasty.
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 four color flags were placed and organized 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.
The Manchurian (Jurchen) society implemented the Eight Banners system, and Ding Zhuang was a soldier in war and a citizen in peacetime, so that his army had extremely strong combat effectiveness.
In 1615, Nurhachi set the red, white and black flags and the oxen he led into eight flags: the original red flag was divided into two flags: yellow and yellowThe original white flag is divided into three flags: white, inlaid white, and blue; The original black flag is divided into three flags: red, red and blue. The four flags are solid color square, and the dragon's head is facing backwards; The flag with four flags is pentagonal, the yellow, white and blue flags are inlaid with red edges, the red flag is inlaid with white edges, and the dragon's head is facing forward.
At that time, the flag owners of each flag were: the main yellow flag and the yellow flag master Nurhachi, the main red flag and the red flag master Daishan, the main white flag Huang Taiji, the white flag master Dudu, the blue flag owner Mang Gurtai, and the blue flag master Amin. Since the establishment of the Eight Banners, it is also the origin of the Eight Banners of Manchuria.
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): >>>More
The Eight Banners originally originated from the hunting organization of the Manchurian (Jurchen) people, and was the form of military organization of the social life of the Qing Dynasty banner people, as well as the fundamental system of the Qing Dynasty. >>>More
Because of his lack of ability, and because Dolgon's soldiers were very powerful, Dolgon's reputation was higher than that of him, and Dolgon was one of Nurhachi's favorite sons.
Strictly speaking, no.
Later, the basic language of the Jurchen nation was gone, and the cultural characteristics also changed, so I don't think it can be said to be a Jurchen, it can be said that it is a descendant of the Jurchen. >>>More
Uh, about Azig.
The issue of flag nationality is because it involves the Eight Banners of the early Qing Dynasty. >>>More