Answered by Mr.Smarties from China | Apr. 11, 2011 18:16
The basic pattern of governmental institutions in China has been the same for two thousand years, but every dynasty installed special offices and bureaus for certain purposes. The Ming administration was also structured in this pattern: the Grand Secretariat (內閣 neige; before: 中書省 zhongshusheng) was assisting the emperor, besides are the Six Ministries (六部 Liubu) for Personnel (吏部 libu), Revenue (戶部 hubu), Rites (禮部 libu), War (兵部 bingbu), Justice (刑部 xingbu), and Public Works (工部 gongbu), under the Department of State Affairs (尚書省 shangshu sheng). The Censorate (都察院 duchayuan; before: 御史台 yushitai) surveilling the work of imperial officials was also an old institution with a new name. The nominal -and often not employed- heads of government, like since the Han Dynasty, were the Three Dukes (三公 sangong: the Grand Mentor 太傅 taifu, the Grand Preceptor 太師 taishi and the Grand Guardian 太保 taibao) and the Three Minor Solitaries (三孤 sangu). The first emperor of Ming in his persecution mania abolished the Secretariat, the Censorate and the Chief Military Commission (都督府 dudufu) and personally took over the responsibility and administration of the respective ressorts, the Six Ministries, the Five Military Commissions (五軍府 wu junfu), and the censorate ressorts: a whole administration level was cut out and only partially rebuilt by the following emperors. The Grand Secretariat was reinstalled, but without employing Ground Counsillors ("chancellors"). The ministries, headed by a minister (尚書 shangshu) and run by directors (郎中 langzhong) stayed under direct control of the emperor until the end of Ming, the Censorate was reinstalled and first staffed with investigating censors (監察御史 jiancha yushi), later with censors-in-chief (都御史 du yushi). Of special interest during the Ming Dynasty is the vast imperial household that was staffed with thousands of eunuchs, headed by the Directorate of Palace Attendants (內史監 neishijian), and divided into different directorates (監 jian)