In the modern military ranks system of China, generals included generals, admirals, lieutenant generals, and major generals. Below generals were field officers, including senior colonel, colonel, lieutenant colonel, and major. Further down were lieutenants, including captain, first lieutenant, and second lieutenant. Different military ranks had a certain corresponding relationship with their positions. For example, the rank of division corresponded to colonel and major general, the rank of deputy division corresponded to colonel and senior colonel, the rank of regiment corresponded to colonel and lieutenant colonel, and the rank of deputy regiment corresponded to lieutenant colonel and major. The establishment of these ranks and positions was helpful in the management of the army, the construction of the command system, and many other aspects of military work. The novel " The General's Promotion " is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to click and read it!
In history, a great general was an official position. It was usually a high-ranking military position. Its functions, status, and scope of power varied in different dynasties. For example, in some dynasties, generals were responsible for commanding the army, commanding battles, defending the border, and other military affairs. They often had a higher status and greater power in the military system. The novel " The General's Promotion " is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to click and read it!
In ancient China, there were many official positions that began with general. The following were some common ones: - General of Flying Cavalry: After the early Qin and Western Han Dynasties, it gradually became an official title. It was often added to the official title of the Central Court. It participated in the government affairs and was an important minister of the court. It was in charge of the Imperial Army, guarding the capital, or ordered to lead troops to go out to war. - Chariot General: Similar to the Flying Cavalry General, he was an important general in the court. Apart from leading the army, he also participated in court politics. - General of Wei: also known as the general of the imperial court, responsible for leading the imperial army, guarding the capital, etc., or ordered to lead troops to fight and other affairs, often added to the official title of the Chinese court to participate in the government. - General of the West Town: One of the four town generals, the general of the army, ranked second to the four levy generals, in charge of conquering betrayal, guarding the west. Wei Zhenxi General of the Three Kingdoms was ranked second. He was in charge of Liang and Yong. He was in charge of defending against Shu's attack. The senior one was the Great General. In modern times, there were titles such as major general, lieutenant general, and general in the army. They held different levels of military command in the army. In the modern military establishment system, officers with the rank of general could serve in different military command positions, such as commanders. The novel " The General's Promotion " is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to click and read it!
There were many types of official positions in the novel. From the perspective of modern official positions, there were different levels such as the Premier of the State Council (Level 1), the Vice Premier of the State Council (Level 2 to Level 3), the Chief Minister of the Ministry (Level 3 to Level 4), the Deputy Minister of the Ministry (Level 4 to Level 5), etc., as well as the Chief Minister of the Department Level, the Chief Minister of the Department Level, the Inspector (Level 5 to Level 7), the Deputy Minister of the Department Level, the Deputy Minister of the Department Level, the Assistant Inspector (Level 6 to Level 8), the Chief Minister of the Department Level, the Chief Minister of the County Level, the Researcher (Level 7 to Level 10), etc. In terms of ancient official positions, there were Zhongdu Zai (similar to modern mayors), Sikong (officials of the Ministry of Works), and Da Sikou.(Similar to the president of the Supreme Court) and other official positions during the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period; prefect (mayor of a city under the jurisdiction of a province), provincial governor (governor of a province (city) and commander of a province (city) military (sub-district), Jing Zhaoyin (mayor of Beijing City), marshal (minister of national defense), Tingwei (president of the Supreme Court), minister of the Ministry of Civil Affairs (minister of the Organization Department), Guanglu doctor (** Standing Committee of the Committee of Counselors), Zhongshu Ling (Secretary General of the "two offices"), Shangshu Ling (Prime Minister), Cheji General (Marshal), Censor of the Imperial Censorate (Minister of Supervision), Prefect (Mayor of a provincial city), Zhizhou (similar to Prefect), Magistrate (Local Chief Executive), etc. There were also First Grade Grand Preceptor, Grand Tutor, Grand Protector, Grand Scholar (Wen), and Minister of Internal Guards (Wu). In addition, different types of novel characters had special official positions, such as the rank of bishop in the Holy See (such as the red cardinal), the rank of werewolf (such as the senior colonel, the major general, etc.), and the rank of vampire (duke, marquis, etc.). <a href="/?from=ask_words" style="color:red" target="_blank">Read more exciting novels for free</a>
Duke, marquis, uncle, and son were not official positions, but titles of nobility in ancient times. Official positions referred to people who held specific positions in government agencies, while titles were bestowed by the emperor to nobles and meritorious officials. Duke, marquis, uncle, and son were the titles of nobility in ancient times, while Qing and Da Fu were official positions.
Bodyguard was an official name in ancient times. It was an attendant guard and a military officer who guarded the emperor. It was first derived from the Biography of Dongping Xian Wang Cang in the Book of the Later Han Dynasty. In the Qing Dynasty, there was the official position of the Minister of Internal Affairs. It was the highest official rank of the first rank. It was a military position and was responsible for managing the emperor's guards and taking responsibility for the emperor's safety. Its rank was higher than that of the local garrison generals and local generals. In the Qing Dynasty, all the official positions that involved the word "bodyguard" were only first rank. There was also the rank of second grade guard, one of the guards under the jurisdiction of the guard office. It was a guard of the palace and was ranked fourth grade. There are 150 people (50 people per flag) on the three flags of inlaid yellow, true yellow and true white, each promoted by the third class of guards of the flag. In addition, there were 18 second-class guards in the imperial guards (six per flag), and there was no quota for second-class guards in the Han guards. In the fifth year of Yongzheng (1727), two (second place) and three (Tanhua) were awarded the second-class guards. In the fifty-second year of Qianlong (1787), it was restored that all marquises were awarded the second-class guards. The imperial guards of the Ming Dynasty were called Jinyiwei, and their full name was the Commander of the Royal Guards. They wore flying fish clothes on formal occasions, holding embroidered spring knives and wearing spring belts. They usually wore red plain clothes. The novel "Hello, Guard, Goodbye, Guard" is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to click and read it!
In different dynasties, the positions above the Great General were different. At the end of the Han Dynasty and the Three Kingdoms period, in terms of official position, the Great Sima was above the Great General. In the Western Han Dynasty, there were Grand Preceptor, Grand Tutor, and Grand Protector. They were called Shanggong, and their status was above the three dukes and also higher than the general.(In the Eastern Han Dynasty, Shanggong only had one Grand Tutor, but it was not permanent.) After Emperor Wu of the Western Han Dynasty, the Great General was often given the title of Great Sima. His rank was ten thousand stones, and he was in charge of the affairs of the minister. He was in charge of the government and became the highest leader of the officials in the court. However, after the Great General was given the title of Great Sima, his status had reached a very high level. During the Wei, Jin, and Southern and Northern Dynasties, there was a general of the pillar country among the honorary titles, which was above the general (the general of the pillar country in the Northern Zhou Dynasty was the second class of meritorious officials, and the general was the fourth class). In addition, in ancient feudal dynasties, the three dukes (Taiwei, Situ, Sikong, etc., different dynasties had different terms) usually referred to the three most prominent official positions. Although the actual power of the general might exceed the three dukes, the three dukes were also a notional official level above the general. The novel "The General's Promotion" is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to click and read it!
In the China People's Liberation Army, a general was the highest rank in the current military rank system. In 1955, when they were first awarded titles, generals were divided into four levels: general, admiral, lieutenant general, and major general. At that time, generals were below generals and above lieutenant generals. The position of a general covered many important military leadership positions, such as the vice-chairman and member of the Central Military Committee. In terms of different military services, there were admirals, admirals, air force admirals, rocket army admirals, etc. They held senior positions in their respective military services, such as the executive deputy director of the Political Work Department of the Military Committee, the president of the National Defense University, and the secretary of the Political and Law Committee of the Military Committee. They were responsible for military command, leadership, management, decision-making, military education, and other important work. They had a vital influence on the construction of the army, combat command, military strategic planning, etc. In other countries 'armies, the United States had five-star generals and admirals. The United States Congress stipulated that five-star generals were only awarded during wartime and must serve as the commander of the allied theater of operations and never retire. Russia divided the official ranks into four levels, of which admirals were the second level, second only to generals. They also held important military command positions in their respective countries' military systems. The novel " The General's Promotion " is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to click and read it!
In ancient China, generals had many positions, and the situation was different in different dynasties: 1. ** Qin and Han Dynasties ** - ** Great General **: The head of the generals. His official position was comparable to the three dukes. Sometimes it was above the three dukes, sometimes it was below the three dukes. At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, his official position was above the three dukes. His subordinate officials were the long history and Sima. - General of the Flying Cavalry: His position was below that of the Great General, comparable to the three dukes. - General of Chariots and Cavalry: His position was below that of the General of Flying Cavalry, comparable to the three dukes. - ** General of Wei **: The position is below the general of chariots and horses, comparable to the three dukes. - ** Front, Front, Left, and Right Generals (General of the Four Armies)**: It was only used on weekends. It was not often used during the Han Dynasty. At the end of the Han Dynasty, it became a heavy general (high-ranking officer). In the Qin and Han Dynasties, the former general was a high-ranking official at the level of Shangqing, who could be responsible for military work in the border areas. The latter general was also a high-ranking military officer, but it was not often set up. It was usually set up during wartime. The overall status of the four generals (front, back, left, right, left, right) was roughly arranged according to the front, left, right, and back. - Zhonglang General: Military officers in the Han Dynasty were divided into three levels: General, Zhonglang General, and Lieutenant. Usually, the highest official position that a military officer could obtain was Zhonglang General, with a rank of "Bi 2000 Shi". He was in charge of the Royal Guards and was under the jurisdiction of Guangluxun. During the Three Kingdoms period, he became a middle and lower rank officer. - ** Lieutenant Colonel **: A military officer position slightly lower than the Zhonglang General. The rank was "Bi 2000 Shi". In the Han Dynasty, there were eight lieutenants in charge of the army. During the Three Kingdoms period, they became low-level officers. 2. ** Three Kingdoms Period ** - Other than the general positions from the Qin and Han Dynasties, some new general positions were added. - ** Four Conquest Generals (Four Conquest Generals)**: The Eastern Conquest General, the Southern Conquest General, the Western Conquest General, and the Northern Conquest General. It was established during the Han and Wei Dynasties. Its position was second only to the three dukes, below the Wei General. - ** Four Town Generals (Four Town Generals)**: The General of the East Town, the General of the South Town, the General of the West Town, and the General of the North Town. It was only established during the Han and Wei Dynasties. Its position was second only to the Three Dukes and was below the General of the Four Conquests. - General of Four Peace: General of East Peace, General of South Peace, General of West Peace, and General of North Peace. During the Eastern Han Dynasty, there were such titles. They were ranked second to the three dukes and were below the generals of the four towns. - ** Siping General **: namely, Pingdong General, Pingnan General, Pingxi General, Pingbei General. It was only established during the Han and Wei Dynasties. Its position was second only to the three princes, below the four peace generals. - ** Grand Governor **: Cao Wei set up, the first grade, not often set up, belong to the promotion of officials, plus this official can control the section of the general and other senior generals, Wu with Wei system, Shu set up the Central Governor to command the internal and external military. - Commander-in-Chief: It was set up at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty. Because there was no subordinate relationship between the various generals, a commander-in-chief was set up to supervise several armies and serve as the military commander. Later, the "Commander-in-Chief of a certain state's military" could be in charge of all the troops stationed in the state and also manage the civil affairs of the state. - ** Great General **: Sun Quan appointed Lu Xun as the Great General, and later Lu Dai also held this position. - ** General with a miscellaneous title **: During the Han and Wei Dynasties, due to the large number of people who had military merits, it was more difficult to grant official positions, so a general with a miscellaneous title appeared. 3. ** Tang Dynasty ** - [First Rank: Heavenly Strategy General (Li Shimin)] - ** From the first grade **: General of the Flying Cavalry. - [Rank-2 Official: Fuguo Great General] - ** Second Rank **: Garrison General, Governor, Protector-General. - ** Third Rank **: Champion General, Huaihua General, Left and Right Thousand Bull Guard General, Left and Right Great Army General, Middle Commander-in-Chief, Upper Protector-General, Left and Right Guard, Left and Right Xiao Guard, Left and Right Martial Guard, Left and Right Wei Guard, Left and Right Leading Guard, Left and Right Jinwu Guard, Left and Right Prison Guard, Left and Right Yulin Army, Left and Right Longwu. - ** From the three ranks **: Yunhui General, Guide General, Zhu Wei Yu Lin, Qianniu Longwu General, Lower Governor, Deputy Governor of the Great Protectorate. - The fourth rank: Zhongwu General, Zhuangwu General, Shangfu Zechong Duwei, Shangdu Duwei, Shangdu Duwei, Shangqing Duwei, Military Equipment Supervisor, Left and Right Qianniu Guards, Left and Right Prison Guard Zhonglang General, Qinxun Yi Wei Yu Lin Zhonglang General. - ** From the fourth rank **: General Yiwei, General Wei, Light Che Duwei, Prince's Left and Right Guards, Prince's Pro-Honor Yi Wei Zhonglang General, Grand Dudu Mansion Grand Duhu Mansion Prince Mansion Sima, Zhongfu Zechong Duwei. - ** The fifth rank **: General Dingyuan, General Ningyuan, Commander of Shangqi, Commander of Qinxun Yiwei Yu Linlang, Chief History of Shangdufu of the Central Dudu Mansion, Minister of the Prince's Mansion, Military Equipment Supervisor, Taishi Supervisor, Minister of the Prince's Mansion, Commander of the Prince's Mansion, Commander of the Prince's Qinxun Yiwei Lang, Commander of Shangdufu of the Central Dudu Mansion, Commander of the Lower Dufu. - ** From the fifth rank **: guerrilla general, riding commander, prince's deputy commander, son-in-law commander, Fengche commander, under the Dudu Fu Shangzhou Sima. - ** Sixth Rank **: Zhaowu Lieutenant, Xiaoqi Lieutenant, Zhaowu Deputy Lieutenant, Left and Right Division of the Guards, Zhongfu Guoyi Lieutenant, Shangzhen General. - ** From the sixth grade **: Zhenwei Lieutenant, Zhenwei Deputy Lieutenant, Flying Cavalry Lieutenant, the left and right divisions of the government, the left and right prison gate lieutenant, the pro-meritorious Yiwei brigade commander, the lower government Guoyi Duwei. - ** Seven grades **: Zhiguo Lieutenant Colonel, Zhiguo Deputy Lieutenant, Yunqi Lieutenant, Jingzhao Henan Taiyuan Prefecture Secretary Lu joined the army, Grand Governor General Office Secretary joined the army, Prince's Office Cao joined the army, Zhongzhen General, Prince Qianniu, Pro-Xun Yi Guard Chief and Deputy Chief, Jingzhao Henan Taiyuan Prefecture Grand Governor General Office Cao joined the army, Zhongdu Governor Shangdu Office Secretary joined the army, Zhuwei Left and Right Marquis, Shangfu Biejiang, Xiazhen General. - ** From the seventh grade **: Yihui Colonel, Yihui Deputy Captain, Wu Qi Wei, Lower Dudu Fu Shangzhou Lushi Joined the Army, Middle Dudu Shangdu Fu Cao Can Military, Middle Fu Biejiang Changshi, Middle Town Deputy, Left and Right Prison Gate Zhichang, Xun Wei, Prince's Personal Guard, Prince's Left and Right Prison Gate Zhichang, Prince's Mansion Brigade Commander, Zhuzechong Mansion Colonel. The novel "The General's Promotion" is equally exciting. Everyone is welcome to click and read it!
In ancient times, petty officials were a type of official position. They were unranked officials, and there was a huge gap between their status and that of an official. The minor officials were the auxiliary staff who served the officials. They did not have the treatment of officials, nor did they have the power of officials. In the ancient ranking system, minor officials were usually the lowest level officials, responsible for handling specific matters. Their power was relatively small, but they still had some influence in the society at that time. To be specific, officials below the county magistrate, such as Zhaomo, state officials, treasury envoys, tax envoys, prison officials, etc., could be considered as the lowest level of officials from the ninth grade. They belonged to the category of minor officials.
The daily official positions of the empress were arranged according to her political strategy and ability. It could be seen that in the game, players needed to determine the official's position according to their political strategy and ability. At the start of the game, officials with lower political strategies could be released and their positions would be arranged according to their political strategies. In addition, they could also obtain more talents through the imperial examination to fill the vacancies. According to the suggestions in the search results, the talents of the Imperial Academy should not be arranged in positions lower than the seventh rank. In the early stages, they could attract relatives of the aristocratic families to fill the vacancies. In short, the daily arrangement of the empress's official position required consideration of the political strategy and ability of the officials, as well as making decisions based on the game's situation.