The ancient imperial examinations in China were divided into four levels, namely, scientific examination, rural examination, general examination and palace examination. Those who pass the college entrance examination are called students or scholars; After having obtained the provincial examination, it is also called Qiu Wei once every three years, and it is called Juren in the exam, also called "Zhongju".
The winner of the first place is Xie Yuan; The exam, also known as Chunwei, was held in the capital, and the candidate was called Gong, who won the first place. The imperial palace examination was examined and given by the emperor himself, ranking in the top three. There were three in the first subject: the champion, the second subject, the flower exploration, the scholar and the rest, and the second and third subjects, with the background of scholar.
The imperial examination system in Ming and Qing dynasties is divided into provincial examination, provincial examination and palace examination. Juren passed the exam, and Xie Yuan was the first one. The exam is a national unified exam for juren in Beijing. The successful candidate is Jinshi, and the first one is Huiyuan. Palace examination was the Jinshi Examination presided over by the emperor himself. The first one is called champion, the second one is called second one, and the third one is called flower exploration.
Imperial Examination is an examination method for selecting talents in the history of China, which is similar to the current "civil service examination". It can divide ancient China literati into four stages: childlike innocence, scholar, juren and scholar. If they want to "upgrade", they must pass the exam.
The imperial examination is divided into three stages: provincial examination, general examination and palace examination. After passing the township examination, candidates selected by various provinces and counties in a certain proportion will take part in the preliminary examination. Those who pass the exam are called Ji and become jurors.