Zhou: The doctor system of Qinghe (divided into three levels) is in charge of Sima in the army, Situ in the construction and Sikong in the criminal law.
During the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, it was still a QingDafu system, but there was Xiangbang (later Guo Xiang)
Qin dynasty; Sangong Jiuqing, Sangong, Xiangbang, Qiu, Shi Yu. The prime minister is "the leader of a hundred officials", "the master of the son of heaven, and the assistant of each machine". The Qin dynasty set up the left and right prime ministers, with the right as the respect; Qiu is in charge of the military; The censor is the deputy prime minister and is in charge of supervision.
Jiuqing has a secret service and is in charge of ancestral temple etiquette; LangZhongLing, palm palace guards; Wei Wei, Zhang Gongmen Tunwei; Too servant, in charge of the royal chariots and horses; Ting Wei, in charge of criminal law; Temple branch, in charge of foreign affairs and ethnic affairs; Zong Zheng, in charge of the royal family, imperial clan pedigree and masterpieces; Manage the internal history of Xiaomi and be in charge of finance; Shaofu, in charge of the tax revenue of Shanhai pond and the emperor's living supply. In addition to Jiuqing, there are fierce Qing, such as lieutenant, who is in charge of public security in Beijing, and will be the second lieutenant's office, in charge of repairing the palace.
Han dynasty: the Han dynasty followed the system of the Qin dynasty, and the official name changed. Emperor Jing of the Western Han Dynasty changed "Fengchang" to "Taichang"; "Wei Wei" was changed to "Chinese medicine doctor's advice"; "Pavilion Guard" means "Dali"; "Point customers" are "big orders"; "The History of Treating Millet" is called "Imperial edict of Taiwanese farmers", and it was changed to "Big Sinon" during the reign of Emperor Wu. Liang Wudi changed "Daling" to "Dahonglu" and "Langzhongling" to "Guangluxun". Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty changed Tai Wei to Fu, when Han proclaimed himself emperor, he became a great scholar, and when Han mourned the emperor, he changed from prime minister to Da Situ. In order to strengthen centralization, Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty set up the Shangshutai (Royal Secretariat, Central Office).
Sui and Tang Dynasties: The Sui and Tang Dynasties established a system of three provinces and six departments. This system was used until the demise of the feudal dynasty.
Three provinces: Zhongshu province (drafting government decrees), Menxia province (managing government affairs) and Shangshu province (reviewing government decrees).
Official department, (selecting officials, personnel management) etiquette department (foreign exchange, royal etiquette. Management of official prostitutes and musicians), Ministry of War (army management, land reclamation), Du Zhi (later changed to the Ministry of Finance and Taxation), Superintendent (later changed to the Ministry of Punishment), Ministry of Industry (construction, river engineering). Under the direct leadership of the province, the Ministry has a department responsible for specific work.
Song Dynasty: The system of three provinces and six departments was followed, but the Privy Council and three departments were basically set up (salt and iron department, tax department and household department, salt and iron department in charge of resources, tax department in charge of finance and household department in charge of civil affairs).
In the Yuan Dynasty, Zhongshu province was in charge of officials, while the Privy Council and Yushitai were in charge of government, army and prison. Ministers saved time and effort, abandoned the provincial government, and the local government set up the Chinese book province to be directly in charge, so the Chinese book province is more important than the previous generation.
There was no secretariat order in the early Ming Dynasty, but the six books were still unified by the secretariat order, and the chief said that the prime minister was around. In the thirteenth year of Hongwu, Hu was overthrown, the province of Zhongshu and the prime minister were abolished, and the six departments were directly responsible to the emperor. At this point, the three provinces, six departments and three provinces were completely abolished. Become a cabinet (university)-six-part system
Qing dynasty: the Qing dynasty was ruled by the Ming dynasty, and six ministers were in charge of world affairs, including the king's meeting, study and military department.