Festivals represent the identity of the emperor, and any envoy who holds festivals represents the emperor himself, symbolizing the emperor and the country and exercising their rights. For example, enfeoffment of feudal lords, arrest of criminals, suppression of rebellion, missions to foreign countries, and peace talks. Even when the princes rebelled, they did not forget to forge a scepter in addition to private seals. King Yidu was built during the rebellion, so he made "twenty" envoys to use it.
In Su Wu, he was deceived by Yuan Shu and died in disgrace (note). The ceremony held by ministers is actually an eight-foot bamboo pole with a feather at the top. This feather was red at the beginning of the Han Dynasty, and then it turned yellow easily. Later, there were also gold bronze bodies, similar to gold knives and iron coupons, which were highly decorative and not all bamboo.
In addition, the "fake" holiday is a short-term agent, which is not true or false. For example, a fake Sima is an agent Sima and a fake King of Qi is an agent Qi, which is different from a real Sima and a real King of Qi. Han Xin wanted to be a fake king, but Liu Bang gave the real king to Han Xin. This is the difference between true and false. The envoys of the Jin Dynasty began to distinguish grades, and "false festivals", "observances", "envoys" and "false festivals and cymbals (or false yellow cymbals)" represented different powers and reputations.
Sort out the rights of the governor of Jin Dynasty:
(1) Holidays: People who have no right to dispose of people in peacetime can be killed in wartime.
(2) Integrity: People without official positions can be killed in peacetime, and officials below 2,000 stones can be killed in wartime.
(3) Observance of festivals: Officials under 2,000 stones can be killed in both peacetime and wartime.
(4) False cymbals (or false yellow cymbals): It can kill the general (including false cymbals, knots and knots).
The start time of Jin festivals can be traced back to the Cao Wei period, but as for Wu and Wu, they may not follow suit. Because the Wei and Jin dynasties ruled across counties, there were fake or fake time-saving envoys, but there were few counties ruled by Wu, so they didn't need partition rule, and they were all directly under the central government. General Wei Wu's son is forbidden to be a holiday, and the other four sons are a holiday; Although Shu generals Liao Hua, Wu Yi, Zhang Yi and others all have festivals, the real use of troops depends on the behavior of General Jiang Wei, but what is more special is that Guan Yu is a fake festival, which should be different; Not everyone will keep the festival when Wu Hui guards all the princes in the Yangtze River ── so the power of generals in the future is not as great as that of the Wei and Jin Dynasties. Festivals in Wu Shu are generally more like sending a special envoy than representing the central authorities.
It is also the predecessor of "our time" in the later separatist regions.