-
Hou Ye is a title in ancient times, the Zhou Dynasty formulated etiquette, the title was divided into 24 grades, of which the prince and the boy were the first few, to the Han Dynasty, Liu Bang had an order, the opposite sex was not allowed to be crowned. The largest is the male, and the most is the Hou Ye, that is, the Hou of Wanhu.
-
Ancient Chinese titles: Gonghou Bozinan. It is not certain what an official is, because the marquis is just a knighthood.
-
It is equivalent to the secretary of the provincial party committee of China and the governor of the United States.
-
Hou is a title given by ancient Chinese emperors, and the title is different from official positions and is a symbol of status. The official is just working for the emperor, and the Hou is much more noble in comparison.
-
In ancient times, the title was the prince of the duke, and the marquis was the second rank after the duke.
-
According to the Spring and Autumn Jue of the Western Zhou Dynasty, it can be roughly divided into six levels: king, duke, marquis, uncle, son, and male.
The prince and the marquis, referring to the prince and the marquis, are a kind of aristocratic titles, not official positions.
In ancient times, the Hou Ye meant that the emperor was a relative of the country, and he rested with the country, and the Hou and the Hou were also different.
For example, civil officials rarely became marquis in ancient history. The size of the position depends on whether there is an official position, and if there is an official position, it is the real power of the marquis, that is, the official is at the first level.
In the Qin and Han Dynasty's "Hanshu Hundred Officials and Ministers' Table", from the tenth-level left chief to the eighteenth-level chief, the rank is higher than the ninth secretary, and they are all military generals. The nineteenth and twentieth levels are all liehous.
The marquis after the Han Dynasty is generally a knighthood, and in addition to the grade, it is generally considered to be a super grade. If there is no other specific position, there is no real power, just a kind of honor and honor.
-
The marquis, that is, the marquis, is the rank division of the ancient nobles, not the position. Since the pre-Qin era in China, there have been monarchs who have given the title of marquis, which is the second rank of the feudal fifth-class lords of the Zhou Dynasty. "The Book of Rites: The Royal System": "The king's system is the lord of Lu, the prince and the prince, and the fifth class".
Among the vassal states of the Zhou Dynasty, the marquis states included Lu, Qi, Chen, Cai, Wei, Xing, Jin, Yan, Guan, Teng, Yang, Jizi, Xue, Jiao, Lai, and Ji.
The status of the marquis was different in each era. During the Zhou Dynasty, it was divided into five lords, such as duke, marquis, uncle, son, and male, all of whom were hereditary, and the fiefs were all called the state, and they exercised the right to rule in the feudal country. In the country of the princes, the titles of qing, doctor, and scholar are placed, and the state of Chu is placed in the titles of Zhigui and Zhibo.
The secretary and the doctor have a fiefdom, and they can also exercise the right to rule the fiefdom and only accept the orders of the princes.
Therefore, the marquis is just a title, not an official position.
Outside the staff, also known as the outside of the staff, in ancient times, referred to the Lang official outside the positive amount, which is what is called "outside the establishment" today. >>>More
From the point of view of administrative rank, whether in the military or at the local level, the smallest officer is the army commander. >>>More
In ancient times, officials were all first-class staff in a general sense, but the actual subdivision of "officials" and "officials" is indeed different, and the difference is still very big. "Official" refers to the "court **" appointed by the imperial court, with official rank. >>>More
The meaning of official is basically a general term for ****, which is a kind of position. The difference is that there are different differences in different eras, but most officials are better than officials.
The greatest official in ancient China was the prime minister. Prime Minister: The ancient Chinese official name, generally refers to the highest administrative officer below the emperor, and the ** who assists the emperor's prime minister and the hundred officials. >>>More