Take the Ming Dynasty as an example. Generally speaking, in the imperial court, three bachelors and six ministers are first-class and second-class officials, six assistant ministers are third-class, and six ministers are only seventh-class. The suggestions of Duchayuan can also be litigated, and the suggestions of Duchayuan are generally only six or seven products. If you are a local official, you can only go to the court above level 4, and level 4 is the governor, which is close to the level of the governor.
In fact, there are very few officials above the doctrine in China, except for three university students and six ministers and assistant ministers, as well as six ministers and assistant ministers in Nanjing, and political envoys and supervisory envoys in thirteen provinces. Therefore, throughout the Ming Dynasty, not counting military commanders, there were no more than 120 civil servants above the third class. And only officials in Beijing can go to court every day, so 15 people are alive. There are seventy or eighty things in six parts, but you don't go to court every day. You can only go to court if you have something to do. Douchayuan's suggestions can go to court every day, but only 20 or 30 people, not necessarily all. So there are only about thirty or forty officials every morning.