The Three Lords and Nine Ministers system () was a central administrative system adopted in ancient China that was officially instituted in the Qin dynasty (221 BC â 206 BC) and was replaced by the Three Departments and Six Ministries () system since the Sui dynasty (AD 589âÂÂ618).
Divisions
Three Lords
Three Lords referred to three highest rank officials in the imperial government, namely:
- the Chancellor (ä¸Âç¸)
- the Imperial Secretary (御å²大夫)
- the Grand Commandant (太å°Â)
Nine Ministers
Nine Ministers comprised all the ministers of importance in the central government. They were:
- the Minister of Ceremonies (太常, formally known as å¥Â常)
- the Supervisor of Attendants (Ã¥Â
Â祿åÂÂ, formally known as éÂÂä¸Â令)
- the Commandant of Guards (è¡Âå°Â)
- the Minister of Coachmen (太åÂÂ)
- the Commandant of Justice (å»·å°Â)
- the Grand Herald (大鴻èÂÂ, formally known as Ã¥Â
¸å®¢ or 大è¡Â令)
- the Director of the Imperial Clan (å®ÂæÂ£)
- the Grand Minister of Agriculture (大å¸農, formally known as æ²»ç²ÂÃ¥Â
§å²)
- the Small Treasurer (å°ÂåºÂ)
See also
References
Citations
Sources