The envoys of the Qing dynasty's envoy department are generally called "Fan Tai" or "Fang Bo". In the Qing dynasty, envoys were second-class officials with the same rank as governors. A cashier in charge of the administration and wealth of a province. State laws and regulations are promulgated by him to counties, so they are also called "Chengxuan Bureaucracy". Declare to the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development the household registration, tax service, number of people and number of fields in this province every ten years. All important government affairs must be reported to the governor for consideration.
Guatai
The provincial judges, referred to as "Gang Tai" and "Gang Si" for short, are in charge of the justice, supervision and evacuation affairs of a province. Abbreviation of the department of provincial judges and envoys in Qing dynasty.
Daotai
According to the official rank system in Qing Dynasty, Taoist priests (Daotai) were local governors among provinces and governments. In the early Qing Dynasty, Taoist priests were classified as "Zhengsi" for eighteen years (1753) (in Zhengsi, there were "provincial inspectors" as the platform for you to ask questions, and Taoism was divided into "guarding" and "patrolling"). There are also some professional roads that are responsible for a certain aspect of a province, such as grain storage roads, salt law roads, military defense roads, river engineering roads and so on.
The Qing Dynasty was the last feudal dynasty in the history of China. In order to strengthen centralization, weaken and divide the rights of ministers, and prevent powerful ministers from usurping the throne, a set of official system different from previous dynasties was established. There are nine grades and nineteen grades of official system in Qing Dynasty, which are divided into two categories: central official position and local official position.
Official system in Qing dynasty: the central official positions in Qing dynasty are divided into three categories: central, auxiliary and suggestion. For example, the cabinet, the military department, and the six departments. In Qing Dynasty, local officials were divided into civil servants and military attaché s, such as the governor, the governor and so on.
The Qing dynasty followed the tradition of the Ming dynasty and the official system in the early Qing dynasty, and generally inherited the old system of the Ming dynasty, but slightly reformed the outstanding disadvantages of the official system of the Ming dynasty. It was not until Yongzheng and Qianlong gradually adjusted and stabilized.