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Alas, I'm worried to death, another Han people who take the Zhenghuang Flag as the head banner of the royal family, why are the Han people so ignorant now, the reason for this is that those unlucky screenwriters are in trouble, tell you, the Zhenghuang Flag is very ordinary, like other flags, the Eight Banners are a kind of administrative establishment of our Manchurians, just like the army, division, brigade, regiment, battalion, company, and platoon of today's troops, but the Eight Banners are called Niulu, Jiala, and Gushan.
Some of the Manchurians were in the flag, and some were expelled from the flag.
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Categories: Culture Art >> Folklore.
Problem description: What are the three flags and the three flags of the so-called eight flags, and how are the flags divided? What's going on? I also want to know the specific situation of the blue flag (I am the blue flag, but I don't know what's going on).
Analysis: During the period of the Jurchen brother Nai Juren clan system, there was a form of organization as production and military action - "Niu Lu". At that time, when the army was marching and hunting, the members who participated marched according to their clan or village.
One out of every ten people is the leader, and he is called "Niu Lu Ezhen" (Niu Lu is "arrow", and Ezhen means "Lord"), and the nine people belong to him under his command. Nurhachi unified the Zhushen and Ilgen of the various tribes that had merged from the war, and stipulated that every 300 people should compile a Niu Lu, and each Niu Lu should be placed with a Niu Lu Ezhen (Chinese translation as Zuo Ling). Niu Lu Zhenzhen placed the two generations (i.e., Xiao Riding School) as deputies.
Every five cattle record the "five cattle record master" (that is, Jia Lae Zhen, Chinese translation is "participation in the collar"). Every five jiala constitutes a "solid mountain", that is, a flag. Envy.
The "flag" turned out to be just flags that marked different parts of the ranks of the new organization. In 1601 Nurhachi had only four flags: yellow, red, blue, and white. With the expansion of the team, in 1615, in addition to the original four-color flag, the four-color flag inlaid with yellow, blue, white and red was added, which was combined into eight flags.
The Eight Banners gradually took on the meaning of the name of the team they signified.
And because of the large number of troops, it is impossible for the emperor to personally command all the troops, and only personally lead the inlaid yellow, yellow, and white. These three flags are equivalent to the pro-guards, and naturally their hearts are higher than the others, and they gradually become the three flags. The rest were called the Lower Five Banners, and were under the command of the kings, Bel and Bezi.
Inlaid with blue flags, in the eastern part of the present-day Inner Mongolia Ulanchabu League. The troops with the blue flag are deployed in the Zhengyang Gate of Beijing, which is about the location of Xicheng District and Xuanwu District. At the end of the Qing Dynasty, there were 87 whole and one half subordinate commanders, 270,000 soldiers, and a total population of about 135,000 men, women, and children.
Mr. Hou Baolin, a famous performing artist, is a person with the Blue Flag.
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The Jurchen people (i.e., Manchu ancestors) living in the northeast region, during the Ming Dynasty, led by the Jurchen leader Nurhachi, gradually became stronger, and established the Later Jin State in 1616. Nurhachi organized his subordinates into an army according to the flags, first four flags, that is, flags of four colors, divided into red flags, blue flags, yellow flags, and white flags. Later, the number of people increased, and it became the Eight Flags, and there were more red flags, yellow flags, blue flags, and white flags, which is the origin of the Eight Flags.
The Manchus are all incorporated into the banner, and they are all called banner people, also known as those in the banner. Since all the Manchus were incorporated into the banner, there was a saying that all Manchus were banner people.
The Eight Banners of Mongolia are also known as the Eight Banners of Mongolia. One of the organizational components of the Qing Dynasty, the flag color and official system are the same as those of the Eight Banners of Manchuria, but the status is slightly lower than that of the Eight Banners of Manchuria and higher than that of the Eight Banners Han Army. Mongolian Eight Banners:
Huang Taiji recruited the Mongols to form the Mongolian Eight Banners. It was the Later Jin army after the Eight Banners of Manchuria.
After Huang Taiji succeeded to the throne, in order to expand the source of troops, on the basis of the Manchurian Eight Banners, he created the Mongolian Eight Banners and the Han Army Eight Banners, and their establishment was the same as that of the Manchu Eight Banners. A total of 24 flags of Manchu, Mongolia and Han constitute the whole of the Eight Banners system of the Qing Dynasty. After the Manchu Qing Dynasty entered the customs, the Eight Banners Army was divided into the Eight Banners of the Forbidden Brigade and the Eight Banners of the Garrison.
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
Red, blue, white, yellow, red, blue, white, yellow.
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Yellow, white, red, blue, yellow, white, red, blue.
The four positive color flags are the original, and the four colored flags were added later, but that is Nurhachi, not Huang Taiji, Huang Taiji set up the Han Eight Banners, the flag color is the same, in addition to the two there are Mongolian Eight Banners. >>>More