1, Taishou: The Warring States called the county magistrate, and the Han Dynasty changed the county magistrate to be the chief executive of a county. There are 36 counties in Qin Fen that are bigger than counties. Equivalent to the mayor of the current provincial capital city.
2. Secretariat: Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty divided the whole country into thirteen states, and the secretariat was in charge of the military and political power of one state. It is equivalent to the governor of the province (city) and the commander of the province (city) army (district).
3. Jing: the local governor of Gyeonggi in the Western Han Dynasty. Equivalent to the mayor of Beijing.
4. Qiu: Qin Zhihan has been established as the national military and political leader. Equivalent to the Secretary of Defense.
5, Yue Riding a Captain: It was established when Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty, and it was forbidden to be the commander of the army. Equivalent to the garrison commander.
6. Ting Wei: Minister in charge of law and presiding over major cases. Equivalent to the President of the Supreme Court.
7. History Department Shangshu: in charge of the assessment, rewards and punishments of civil and military officials throughout the country. Equivalent to the Minister of Personnel.
8. Dr. Guanglu: Advisor to the Emperor. It is equivalent to the Standing Committee of the Central Advisory Committee.
9, book order: in charge of the emperor's order release. Equivalent to the "two offices" secretary-general.
10, Shang Shuling: Participating in major policies and managing government affairs in an all-round way is the first of 100 officials. Quite prime minister.
1 1, riding a general: the status is respected, and the ministers are more aggravated. Equivalent to a marshal.
12. Chief officer: the general who leads the army to the war. Equivalent to the commander-in-chief of the front line.
13. suggestion of Duchayuan: the highest supervisory body in ancient times. Equivalent to the Minister of Supervision.
14, magistrate: local governor in charge of state and county affairs. It is equivalent to the governor (or provincial mayor).
15, known as: local chief executive. Equivalent to the mayor of a provincial capital city.
16, magistrate: local governor. Equivalent to the county magistrate.
17. adoption of the judgment: government representative. Equivalent to vice governor (or vice mayor of a provincial city).
18, Commander-in-Chief of Military Forces: Chief of Military Forces Division in Ming and Qing Dynasties. Equivalent to the director of the Beijing Municipal Public Security Bureau.
19, pushing officials: taking the name of punishment and praise code. Equivalent to the director of the policy department of the Supreme Court.
20. Everything: Handheld Cashier Text Transfer. The Ministry of National Defense, the Ministry of Supervision and other ministries have internal directors.
2 1, as a matter of fact: the emperor banned escort agency officials. Equivalent to the life or political secretary of the Fuehrer.
22.experience Head of institutions affiliated to ministries and commissions. Equivalent to the heads of secondary institutions of ministries and commissions.
23. pedestrians For scheduling. Equivalent to the staff of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
24. Dian Bao. Xie Sibao holds the jade seal. Equivalent to two metre cadres in charge of the seal.
25. xian cheng. Assist the county magistrate to govern a county. Equivalent to the deputy county magistrate.
26, the main thin. Manage money, grain and household registration. Equivalent to the director of food or the director of household registration.
27. calibration Acting official position. Secretary level.
28. professor The government supervises and inspects students. Equivalent to the director of the provincial education department.
29. Teaching. County palm teaching. Director of county education.
Overview of ancient local official positions;
The main administrative areas in Qin and Han Dynasties were counties. Chief, Qin said chief, Korea said satrap. The main administrative area of Sui and Tang Dynasties was Zhou, which was called the secretariat by state officials, and its subordinate officials were Chang Shi and Sima. In the Tang dynasty, in some important military towns, our officials were appointed, including marching horses, staff officers and secretaries. In Song Dynasty, state officials were called breg and county officials were called breg. During the Ming and Qing dynasties, the state was changed to the government, which was called the magistrate.
In addition, there were also counties in the Han Dynasty, and the world was divided into more than a dozen counties, all of which were basically monitoring areas. The central government sent officials to spy on the situation, calling it a secretariat. During the Sui and Tang Dynasties, there were more than a dozen roads in China, also called prison areas. The central government sent officials to inspect them. These officials were called ambassadors. In the Song Dynasty, the whole country was divided into about twenty roads, and several departments were responsible for all aspects. In the Yuan Dynasty, the highest local administrative organization was called the book province in China, and in the Ming Dynasty, it was renamed the Chengxuan Bureaucracy Department, and it is still called "province" in custom.