Commander of the Fifth Battalion of Jiumenbu Army, referred to as Commander of Jiumenbu Army for short, was the military attache of the Qing Dynasty in Beijing, and was established in the 13th year of Kangxi (1674). Mainly responsible for the security and access control inside and outside the nine gates of Beijing's inner city (Zhengyangmen, Chongwenmen, Xuanwumen, Andingmen, Deshengmen, Dongzhimen, Xizhimen, Chaoyangmen and Fuchengmen), and also responsible for night patrol, fire fighting, Garbo preparation and inspection, prohibition, arrest and escape. In fact, he was the commander-in-chief of the imperial army in the Qing dynasty, and his rank was first positive and then deputy, and then later.
The former site is located in Chongwenmen. It is still in use after the Revolution of 1911. 1924, the authority of which belongs to Shi Jing inspection office.
Extended data
Nine governors hold high positions.
High status means high status. The initial grade of the nine magistrates is positive second class, which is the same as that of the provincial governors; At 1799, he was promoted to a subordinate, on an equal footing with the six ministers of the university and the co-organizers of the university, just like a court official.
Weight means great strength. The Nine Magistrates not only managed nine city gates, but also the troops under his command were responsible for the garrison, police and public security of the entire capital except the Imperial City. So it has both the attributes of the army and the police.
More importantly, the troops under the command of the Nine Magistrates are well-equipped and well-trained, and have remained at around 20,000-30,000 for a long time, which is the last barrier to the safety of the imperial city. At that time, Empress Dowager Cixi and Prince Gong dared to launch a "coup in mind" and hit the ministers, largely because Jiumen prefect Rui was often one of their own.
In a sense, the Nine Magistrates even influenced the abolition of the emperor.