- Chancellor (China)
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The Chancellor (Chinese: 丞相 chéngxiàng or 宰相 zǎixiàng), variously translated as Prime Minister, Chancellor of State, Premier[citation needed] or Chief Councillor, was a generic name given to the highest-ranking official in the imperial government in ancient China. The Chancellor can also refer to a specific post in the imperial government, which was first officially instituted in Qin Dynasty (221 BC-206 BC) as the "head of all civil service officials".[1] The term was known by many different names throughout Chinese history, and the exact extent of the powers associated with the position fluctuated greatly even during a particular dynasty.
Contents
History
In the Spring and Autumn Period, Guan Zhong was the first Chancellor in China,[2] who became chancellor under the state of Qi in 685 BC. In Qin during the Warring States Period, the Chancellor was officially established as "the head of all civil service officials". There were sometimes two Chancellors, differentiated as being "of the left" (senior) and "of the right" (junior). After emperor Qin Shi Huang ended the Warring States Period by establishing the Qin Dynasty (221-206 BC), the Chancellor, together with the Imperial Secretary, and the Grand Commandant, were the most important officials in the imperial government, generally referred as the Three Lords.[3][4]
In 1 BC during the emperor Ai, the title was changed to da si tu (大司徒).[5] In the Eastern Han Dynasty, the Chancellor post was replaced by the Three Excellencies: Grand Commandant (太尉), Minister over the Masses and Minister of Works (司空).[6] In 190, Dong Zhuo claimed the title "Chancellor of State" (相國) under the powerless Emperor Xian of Han,[7] placing himself above the Three Excellencies. After Dong Zhuo's death in 192, the post was vacant until Cao Cao restored the position as "Imperial Chancellor" (丞相) and abolished the Three Excellencies in 208.[8] From then until March 15, 220, the power of Chancellor was greater than that of the emperor. Later this often happened when a dynasty became weak, usually some decades before the fall of a dynasty.
During the Sui Dynasty, the executive officials of the three highest departments of the empire were called "Chancellors" (真宰相) together.[9] In the Tang Dynasty, the government was divided into three departments: the Department of State Affairs (尚書省), the Chancellery (門下省) and the Secretariat (中書省) and the head of each department was generally referred to as the Chancellor.[10]
In the Song Dynasty, the post of Chancellor was also known as the "Tongpingzhangshi" (同平章事),[11] in accordance with late-Tang terminology, while the vice-chancellor was known as the "Jijunsi". Some years later, the post of Chancellor was changed to "Prime Minister" (首相 shou xiang) and the post of vice-Chancellor was changed to "Second Minister" (次相 ci xiang).[12] In the late Southern Song Dynasty, the system changed back to the Tang naming conventions.
During the Mongol-founded Yuan Dynasty, the Chancellor was not the head of the Secretariat, but the Crown Prince (皇太子) was. After the establishment of the Ming Dynasty, the post became the head of the Secretariat again. The post was abandoned after the execution of the Chancellor of China, Hu Weiyong, who was accused of treason (though his conviction is still strongly disputed in present times because of a lack of evidence to prove his guilt).[13] Still, appointments of the people who held the highest post in the government were called "Appointment of Prime Minister" (拜相) until 1644.
List of Chancellors of China
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This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
List of Chancellors of Shang Dynasty
Name Pinyin (Romanization) Chinese Characters Yi Yin 伊尹 Zhong Hui 仲虺 Yi Zhi 伊陟 Wu Xian 巫咸 Wu Xian 巫賢 Gan Xuan 甘盤 Fu Yue 傅說 Ji Zi 箕子 List of Chancellors of Qin Dynasty since 251 BC
# Name Took Office Left Office 1 Lü Buwei 251 BC 246 BC 2 Li Si 246 BC 208 BC 3 Zhao Gao 208 BC 207 BC List of other famous Chancellors and Prime Ministers
Zhou Dynasty
- Guan Zhong of Qi Kingdom (died in 645 BC)
Han Dynasty
- Xiao He (206 BC-193 BC in office)
- Cao Shen (193 BC-190 BC in office)
- Dong Zhuo (189-192 in office)
- Cao Cao (July 9, 208-March 15, 220 in office)
Three Kingdoms
- Zhuge Liang (221-234 of Shu Han)
- Lu Xun (244-245 of Eastern Wu)
Tang Dynasty
Main article: Chancellor of the Tang Dynasty- Fang Xuanling (626-648 in office)
- Di Renjie (691-693, 697-700 in office)
- Zhang Jiuling (733-736 in office)
- Yang Guozhong (752-756 in office)
- Wang Wei (758-759 in office)
Song Dynasty
- Fan Zhongyan (1040-1045 in office)
- Wang Anshi (1070-1075, 1076-1085 in office)
- Sima Guang (1085-1086 in office)
- Zhang Dun (1094-1100 in office)
- Wen Tianxiang (1236-1283)
Ming Dynasty
Note: after the death of Hu Weiyong, there is no chancellor carrying the title Primary Minister. Grand Secretaries became de facto chancellors after Xuande Emperor
- Li Shanchang
- Hu Weiyong (? -1380) - The last Chancellor of China
- Yang Siqi
- Yan Song (in office 1544-1545)
- Xia Yan (in office 1546-1547)
- Yan Song (2nd time in office 1548-1562)
- Xu Jie
- Gao Gong
- Zhang Juzheng (in office 1572-1582)
- Zhang Siwei
Qing Dynasty
See also: Grand CouncilThe Qing Dynasty bureaucratic hierarchy did not contain a Chancellor position. Instead, the duties normally assumed by a Chancellor was instead entrusted to a series of formal and informal institutions, the most prominent of which was the Grand Council. Occasionally, however, one minister may so dominate the government that he comes to be identified, figuratively, as the "Chancellor". One example in the late Qing Dynasty was Li Hongzhang.
In 1911, the Qing imperial court adopted reforms which, amongst other changes, established the position of Premier. This position existed for less than a year before the Qing governemnt was overthrown.
Premiers after 1911
See also
- List of Chinese people
- Chancellor of Tang Dynasty
- List of famous Premiers of China
- Imperial examination
- Chinese Law
Notes
- This article incorporates text from Journal of the North-China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Volume 10, by Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. North-China Branch, a publication from 1876 now in the public domain in the United States.
- ^ Li (2007), 74-75.
- ^ (Chinese) Guan Zhong Memorial Opened in Linzi, Xinhuanet September 19, 2004.
- ^ Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. North-China Branch (1876). Journal of the North-China Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, Volume 10. SHANGHAI: The Branch. p. 85. http://books.google.com/books?id=AH0uAAAAYAAJ&q=three+kung+highest+offices+empire+chancellor+in+europe#v=snippet&q=three%20kung%20highest%20offices%20empire%20chancellor%20in%20europe&f=false. Retrieved 2011-06-28.
- ^ Li (2007), 75.
- ^ Wang (1949), 144.
- ^ (Chinese) Chancellor of China, Sina.com.
- ^ Book of the Later Han Vol.72; Records of Three Kingdoms Vol. 6.
- ^ Records of Three Kingdoms Vol. 1.
- ^ (Chinese) The History of the Chancellor System in China.
- ^ (Chinese) Tong Zhongshu Menxia Pingzhangshi, Encyclopedia of China.
- ^ (Chinese) < Chancellor in the Song Dynasty.
- ^ (Chinese) The Change of Central Administration in Tang and Song Dynasties.
- ^ (Chinese) The History of Chancellor of China, QQ.com.
References
- Li, Konghuai (2007) (in Chinese). History of Administrative Systems in Ancient China. Joint Publishing (H.K.) Co., Ltd.. ISBN 978-962-04-2654-4.
- Wang, Yü-Ch'üan (June 1949). "An Outline of The Central Government of The Former Han Dynasty". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 12 (1/2): 134–187. doi:10.2307/2718206.
Categories:- Government of Imperial China
- Titles
- Positions of authority
- Chinese chancellors
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