Link:/s/1mu2-s _ 2x-wlad5cwrrz04q
Extraction code: cafv Title: The origin, gains and losses of the political system in the Ming Dynasty
Author: Zhu Yongjia
Douban score: 7.8
Publishing House: China Chang 'an Publishing House
Publication year: 20 15-4- 10
Pages: 500
Content introduction:
What kind of national system did Zhu Yuanzhang design for future generations? Why can't the East Palace system directionally train qualified emperors? What are the consequences of "soldiers and will not learn from each other" in the Ming Dynasty? Why does the enfeoffment system not work? What is Zhu Yuanzhang's consideration for ruling officials with an iron fist?
This book is not only a well-known history of the political system in Ming Dynasty, but also an excellent theoretical work of political history. In the historical process of the Ming Dynasty, there were gains and losses. Where were the gains and losses? This is exactly what this book focuses on.
The title is "The Origin and Gains and Losses of the Political System in the Ming Dynasty", because the lecture is centered on the political system, and it talks about the traditional karma, and the source is the contradictions and struggles in real life at that time. Zhu Yuanzhang's system design was formed on these two foundations.
At present, there are many books to explain history, but most of them focus on imperial power and tell the story of power struggle. They rarely run through each other like this book, taking the history of institutions as the interception surface and telling the evolution and actual political operation of each system. The author also discusses the rationality of the system design, which is very enlightening to understand the current political system reform.
People's Republic of China (PRC) has accumulated many positive and negative experiences and lessons over the past 60 years, whether in the first 30 years or in the last 30 years. Understanding the legislative process of Zhu Yuanzhang's organizational system in the early Ming Dynasty and its realistic influence on the development of the next generation will be of great benefit to our future improvement of the legal system.
The author, Mr Zhu Yongjia, was an expert in the study of Ming history in 1950s. He was praised by Mr. Wu Han. After political experience, he wrote history in his later years, with unique insight and penetrating power.
For anyone who cares about the political system and its operation mode, The Origin and Gains and Losses of the Political System in Ming Dynasty is a must-read. In fact, its content is far more than the history of the Ming Dynasty, but a systematic general history.
About the author:
Zhu Yongjia (193 1—) is a historian, a professor in the history department of Fudan University and an expert in the study of Ming history. In his early years, he studied under Tan Qixiang, Zhou Yutong, Chen Shoushi and other famous writers of literature and history, and once taught in the History Department of Fudan University. He is the author of Mao Zedong's Rereading the Insider of Classical Chinese in His Later Years, On Cao Cao, Liu Bang and Xiang Yu, Shang Yang's Reform and Wang Mang's Reform, and Seeking Truth from Facts. During the "Cultural Revolution", he was the general manager of Shanghai Writing Group, and explained to Wang Hongwen the biography of Liu Pengzi in the Book of the Later Han Dynasty.
Yao () couldn't have written a review of "Hai Rui Dismissed from Office" without hard work.
-Zhu Weizheng (Professor, History Department, Fudan University)
He is a historian, and he was imprisoned because of Harry's dismissal from office and the "historical problems" of the Paris Commune. If he has a head-on reflection, he will definitely get through the past and the present. He went to my seminar to tell graduate students about the Qin and Han dynasties system and brought a blue cloth. After sitting down, he opened it layer by layer, and the innermost layer was the handout. The student asked about the origin of the Cultural Revolution, and he wanted to start from the Yin and Zhou Dynasties. A graduate student exclaimed afterwards: "This is the ancients living in the present, with the wind of the ancients!"
-Zhu Xueqin