Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - What were the official positions called during the Republic of China? What, the commander-in-chief, the commander-in-chief, the police chief, etc., who can tell me specifically?

What were the official positions called during the Republic of China? What, the commander-in-chief, the commander-in-chief, the police chief, etc., who can tell me specifically?

Head of State (President, Prime Minister, Governor, or Grand Marshal)

Economic Envoy (In 1918, directly under Cao Kun, he was the Economic Envoy of the four provinces of Sichuan, Guangdong, Hunan, and Jiangxi. The largest local official position in the Republic of China, jurisdiction over four provinces, but it is a vacant position)

Inspector envoy (controlling two or more provinces.)

Dudu (i.e. military governor, supervisor, supervisor). , the highest official in a province, in charge of the military and civilian affairs, and the provincial governor is a vacant position)

Assistant officer (the second-in-command in a province.)

Guardian envoy (within a province). Divide several regions, and the head of this region is the garrison, who is under the governor)

Daoyin (the administrative chief of several counties under his jurisdiction.)

The county governor. (That is, the county magistrate.)

The military governor was the military governor of the province during the Beiyang Government of the Republic of China.

Inspector envoy, during the Beiyang warlord government, the official title of inspection envoy was given to warlords who owned more than two provinces in order to control their territory.

Guardian envoys. During the rule of the Beiyang warlords, military envoys were set up in important areas of each province. They were responsible for the military affairs in the area, and their powers were superior to those of the garrison envoys.

Supervision, in the late Qing Dynasty, both the central and local governments had temporary agencies. The length of their existence varied. The officer with the highest grade was called the supervisor or the general office, the deputy title was the general manager, and the one with the lower qualifications was called the general manager. Assistant, a person responsible for handling daily routine affairs is called an assistant. This system still existed during the Beiyang government period.

The garrison envoy was established during the reign of the Beiyang warlords. He was a local military commander with a mixed brigade or division of the army under his jurisdiction.

Extended information;

Official system

1. National Government Committee: chairman, members

Civil Affairs Office: civil servant, secretary, counselor , Director of the Documentation Bureau, Director of the Printing and Casting Bureau

Military Affairs Office: Chief of the Military Affairs Bureau, Director of the Military Affairs Bureau, Director of the Ceremony Bureau, Director of the General Affairs Bureau

Accounting Office: Accountant General, Accounting Officer, Director of the Bureau of Planning, Director of the Accounting Bureau, and Director of the Bureau of Statistics

National Government Guard Corps (later promoted to brigade, division, and army)

2. All agencies directly under the National Government:

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Military Commission:

Chairman, Vice Chairman, Standing Committee members, members, senior staff officers

The committee is under the jurisdiction of the General Office, the First Department, the Second Department, The third hall, the Quanxu Hall, the Audit Hall, the Bureau of Investigation and Statistics (referred to as "Military Command"), and the Attendant's Office. Each department has a director and deputy director, and the Military Command Bureau has a director and deputy director. Each department and bureau has a division, which has a division director and deputy division chief, and the attendant office has a director.

Reference source; Baidu Encyclopedia - Official System of the Republic of China

Baidu Encyclopedia - Chronology of Officials in the Republic of China