So what kind of quest are you most interested in seeing me do?

  • A Mighty Disciple - History's Mightiest Disciple

    Votes: 25 21.4%
  • Child of Konoha - Naruto

    Votes: 33 28.2%
  • Nobunaga's Ambition: Tenka Fubu - Nobunaga's Ambition

    Votes: 12 10.3%
  • As High As Honor - ASOIAF

    Votes: 15 12.8%
  • A (Hedge) Knight's Tale - ASOIAF

    Votes: 11 9.4%
  • Rurouni Kenshin Quest

    Votes: 12 10.3%
  • Heaven & Earth - Tenra Bansho Zero/CKII

    Votes: 5 4.3%
  • Chronicles of Shen Zhou - Legends of the Wulin

    Votes: 11 9.4%
  • Fullbringer Quest - Bleach

    Votes: 15 12.8%
  • Digidestined Quest - Digimon

    Votes: 10 8.5%
  • Final Fantasy X Quest

    Votes: 5 4.3%
  • Final Fantasy XII Quest

    Votes: 5 4.3%
  • Final Fantasy XIII Quest

    Votes: 4 3.4%
  • Avatar: The Last Airbender Quest

    Votes: 27 23.1%
  • Nobunaga's Ambition: Tenra Bansho - Nobunaga's Ambition/Tenra Bansho Zero Fusion

    Votes: 5 4.3%
  • Strongest Under the Heavens - Exalted: Burn Legend

    Votes: 11 9.4%
  • Mass Effect Quest

    Votes: 14 12.0%
  • Dragon Age Quest

    Votes: 12 10.3%
  • Fallout Quest

    Votes: 13 11.1%
  • Tales of Symphonia Quest

    Votes: 4 3.4%
  • Tales of Legendia Quest

    Votes: 1 0.9%
  • Enemy of Harmony - My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic

    Votes: 10 8.5%
  • Just go back to the quests you've already made, jackass!

    Votes: 16 13.7%
  • The Age of Heroes - DCU Quest

    Votes: 24 20.5%
  • True Psychic Tales - Psychonauts Quest

    Votes: 6 5.1%
  • It's Time to Duel! - Yu-Gi-Oh! Quest

    Votes: 17 14.5%
  • Romance of the Three Kingdoms Quest

    Votes: 18 15.4%
  • Devil Never Cries - Devil May Cry

    Votes: 11 9.4%
  • Dragon Ball 1000

    Votes: 4 3.4%

  • Total voters
    117
Twenty Ranks of Han Society

The Han court upheld a socioeconomic ranking system for commoners and nobles, which was based on the twenty-ranks system installed by the statesman Shang Yang (d. 338 BCE) of the State of Qin (incidentally, Shang Yang is a fascinating read, if only because of how completely insane yet disturbingly effective the guy was). All males above the age of 15 (excluding slaves) could be promoted in rank up to level eight. When a commoner (who originally had no rank) was promoted in rank, he was granted a more honorable place in the seating arrangements of hamlet banquets, was given a greater portion of hunted game at the table, was punished less severely for certain crimes, and could become exempt from labor service obligations to the state. In addition to an increase in salary, newly promoted men were granted wine and ox-meat for a celebratory banquet. The 19th and 20th ranks were both marquess ranks, yet only the 20th rank allowed one to have a marquessate fief.

Promotions in rank were decided by the emperor and could occur on special occasions, such as installation of a new emperor, inauguration of a new reign title, the wedding of a new empress, or the selection of a royal heir apparent (when you read about powerful figures "ennobling" lots of people en masse, it's just a translation of the practice of promoting everyone a rank or two). The central government sometimes sold ranks to collect more revenues for the state. The official Chao Cuo (d. 154 BCE) once wrote that anyone who presented a substantial amount of agricultural grain to the government would also be promoted in rank. Upon reaching adulthood, a man's rank started as one rank below that of their father. This was also the practice when granting kingoms and marquessates to relatives of the Emperor; this was to keep the Han Empire from breaking down into a huge collection of fiefs for hereditary kings and marquesses.

This also goes some way toward explaining how so many gentry scholars could afford to just not get work despite the costs of maintaining their households, corresponding with each other, and getting their hands on reading material (paper had been invented but wasn't used for books at the time; everything was written down in one of two ways. The cheap but cumbersome way was to write things on long, thin blocks of wood or bamboo and thread them together with string to make a "scroll" that could be rolled up. The less burdensome but much more expensive way was to write on silk. And of course there was no printing press, so everything was copied by hand).

1 bushel = 8 gallons = 36 liters

Millet is a kind of grain that has historically been a staple of diets throughout the world because of its hardy nature and quick growing period.

1. Gentleman - 50 bushels of millet annually
2. Gentleman of Distinguished Accomplishments - 100 bushels
3. Gentleman With Ornamented Horses - 150 bushels
4. Gentleman Exempt from Conscript Service - 200 bushels
5. Grandee - 250 bushels
6. Government Grandee - 300 bushels
7. Gentleman Grandee - 350 bushels
8. Gentleman of the Chariot - 400 bushels
9. Chief Grandee - 450 bushels
10. Chief of the Multitude on the Left - 500 bushels
11. Chief of the Multitude on the Right - 550 bushels
12. Chieftain of Conscripts on the Left - 600 bushels
13. Chieftain of Conscripts in the Center - 650 bushels
14. Chieftain of Conscripts on the Right - 700 bushels
15. Lord of Distinguished Accomplishments - 750 bushels
16. Lord of Most Distinguished Accomplishments - 800 bushels
17. Chieftain of the Multitude Riding a Four-Horse Chariot - 850 bushels
18. Grand Chieftain of the Multitude - 900 bushels
19. Marquess of an Imperial Domain - 950 bushels
20. Grand Marquess - 1,000 bushels of millet annually
 
Oh, hey. Noticed that there is an option for ROTK Quest at the poll, now. *Hint Hint* for those interested.
 
So since I've talked about the 20 ranks and their salaries, here's the system of government salaries.

Government Salaries & the Monetary System
During the Han dynasty, the prestige of a government official was determined by his annual salary-rank, measured in grain units which are roughly equal to the unit of measurement known in the west as a "bushel," which is equal to 8 gallons or 36 liters, so that's what I'm calling it. However, approximately half an official's salary in grain was made in payments of cash coins. The other half of an official's salary consisted of unhusked grain and husked grain measured in hu (roughly 20 liters); since one hu of unhusked grain was equal to 100 coins and one hu of husked grain was equal to 160 coins, the conversion ratio for unhusked grain to husked grain was 10 to 6. The most senior officials in the central government earned a 10,000-Bushels salary. The officials who oversaw nine specialized ministries each earned the Fully 2,000-Bushels rank, while the magistrate of a county earned a 600-Bushel salary on average. Occasionally, emperors bestowed luxurious gifts of wine, foodstuffs, and silk clothes upon high officials. These gifts, in some generous cases, could equal as much as half the value of the officials' standard annual salary. Aged officials were often retired from service and given a pension.

As an example, the highest officials (the Three Excellencies) received a monthly salary of 350 hu of unhusked grain, 105 hu of husked grain, and 17,500 cash. Meanwhile on the other end of the pay-scale, an attendant clerk received a monthly salary of 8 hu of unhusked grain, 2.4 hu of husked grain, and 400 cash.

I should also take a moment to comment on the coinage and the use of the word "cash." The actual Chinese word for these coins literally translates to "square-holed money" because that's exactly what it is and the Chinese went for a very long period of time with only one kind of coin, so they didn't exactly need to call it anything except "money" until they started modernizing and invented the yuan as the standard currency, with lots of different bills and coins.

Until then, most dynasties stuck almost exclusively with the same basic design of a round copper, brass or iron coin (at the end of the Qing Dynasty, coins were 3 parts copper and 2 parts lead) with a square hole in the middle, which in English we've chosen to refer to as "cash coins" or just "cash" for some reason. The hole is because, being made of copper, the coins don't have much intrinsic value, so you'll need a lot of them to make purchases. So you string them together in strings of 1,000 coins; a string of 1,000 coins is suppose to be roughly equal to one tael (~30 grams, or a little over 1 ounce) of pure silver in value. Obviously you can then subdivide this as needed into smaller numbers.

Of course, it was never that clean and simple in practice, and a lot of these values are nominal. For example, local custom dictated that the person who strings the cash together gets to take a small number from each hundred, which could vary from place to place from as low as 1 per 100 to as high as 4 per 100. Thus an ounce of silver could exchange for 970 coins in one city and 990 in the next. A string of cash weighed about 10 lbs and was carried slung over the shoulder. In China, the first paper banknotes issued in the Song Dynasty were referred to as "flying cash," and they often showed a picture of the appropriate number of cash coins strung together to equal their nominal value.
 
Last edited:
Central Government in the Han Dynasty

Qin's imperial model
Qin Shi Huang, the first ruler of the Qin dynasty, established China's imperial system of government in 221 BCE after unifying the Seven Warring States through conquest, bringing to an end the Warring States period. For a time, the rulers of the warring states claimed nominal allegiance to an overlord king of the Zhou dynasty (c. 1050 – 256 BCE), yet the Zhou kings' political power and prestige was much less than that of later Chinese emperors. The imperial system fell apart after the fall of Qin in 206 BCE. However, following Han's victory over Chu, Liu Bang the King of Han reestablished the imperial system and is known posthumously as Emperor Gaozu of Han (r. 202–195 BCE).

The Han system of imperial government borrowed many of its core features from the regime established by the Qin dynasty. For example, Gaozu's Chancellor Xiao He (d. 193 BCE) integrated much of the statutes of the Qin law code into the newly compiled Han law code. Yet Gaozu's establishment of central control over only a third of the empire—the other two-thirds of territory was controlled by semi-autonomous kingdoms—strayed from Qin's imperial model which gave the emperor direct control over all of China. However, a series of reforms eventually stripped away any vestiges of the kingdoms' independence. Han emperors thereafter enjoyed full and direct control over China, as had the first Qin emperor. The Han court's gradual move towards reestablishing central control can also be seen in its monetary policy. While the Qin regime installed a nationwide standard currency, the early Western Han regime oscillated between abolishing and legalizing private mints, commandery-level mints, and kingdom-level mints issuing various coins. In 113 BCE the Han court finally established the central government's monopoly control over the issuance of a standard, nationwide currency.

Roles, rights, and responsibilities
The emperor, who enjoyed paramount social status, was the head of the government administration. His rule was virtually absolute, although civil officials, representing the competing interests of different state organs, scrutinized his decisions. Although the General-In-Chief (also translated as Grand Commandant) had a nominal role as commander-in-chief, the emperor served as the commander-in-chief of the armed forces. The emperor had the sole right to appoint central government officials whose salary-rank was 600-Bushels or higher. The emperor also appointed the leading officials at the provincial, commandery, and county levels of government. Appointees to office were usually recommended men from the commanderies, family relatives of high officials, or student graduates of the Imperial University. This institution was established in 124 BCE, and provided a Confucian-based education for those entering civil service.

The emperor had the exclusive right to modify the law code and issue new laws in the form of imperial edicts and decrees. However, he often accepted the decisions and reforms suggested by his chief judicial minister, the Minister of Justice. The emperor also acted as the supreme judge. Any lawsuits which a county administration, then commandery administration, and then the Minister of Justice could not resolve were deferred to the emperor.

The emperor's role as supreme judge could be temporarily duplicated by any official he designated in times of emergency or in distant borderlands where central government had little influence. This entailed a symbolic conferral of power, which was embodied in the Staff of Authority. Roughly 2 meters (6 feet) in height and decorated with ribbons, the Staff of Authority was often granted to an official with a specific errand, such as acting on behalf of the emperor as ambassador to a foreign country, appointing civilians to office, or immediately promoting a deserving military officer on the field of battle. It also granted the authority to sentence and execute criminals and political rebels without notifying the court first.

During the Qin dynasty, the first Qin emperor's legitimacy to rule was ultimately decided by his ability to conquer others. However, by the time of Wang Mang's (r. 9–23 CE) reign, the Mandate of Heaven was considered the only legitimate source of imperial authority. This concept was given greater prominence after the state officially sponsored the worship of Heaven over that of the Five Powers in 31 BCE. Moreover, the philosophy of the scholar Dong Zhongshu (179–104 CE), which held that a dynasty's rule on earth was bound to greater cosmological cycles in the universe, was officially sponsored by the Han court from Emperor Wu's (r. 141–87 BCE) reign onward. The emperor was expected to behave according to proper ritual, ethics, and morals, lest he incur the wrath of Heaven and bring an end to his reign. He became the highest priest in the land. By performing certain religious rites and rituals, the emperor acted as a sacred link between Heaven and Earth.

Court conferences
Although the emperor held supreme power, he more often sought the advice of his cabinet and other ministers before making decisions and when revoking them. He often assembled leading officials for debates or discussions on policy, known as court conferences. Various issues were debated at these gatherings, such as installment of new emperors, enfeoffment of nobles, the establishment of new ancestral temples, reforms to the state religion, the monetary or tax systems, management of government monopolies on salt and iron (when they existed during Western Han), the introduction of new laws or the repeal of old ones, complex lawsuits, or whether or not to declare war on a foreign country or accept peaceful negotiation. Although the emperor could reject the decisions reached by his court conference, he did so at the risk of alienating his leading ministers. More often than not, he was forced to accept the majority consensus of his ministers, whose individual opinions were equally tallied regardless of their standing or salary-rank.

Empress dowager
When the emperor died without officially appointing a successor, his widow, the empress dowager, had the sole right to appoint one of the late emperor's surviving sons or relatives to the position. Most often the successor chosen in this fashion was a minor, thus the empress dowager served as regent over the government. A high-status male relative, usually a father or brother, would assume control of the Imperial Secretariat. Even when an emperor reached his majority and became an active ruler, he often sought the advice and acceptance of the empress dowager on policy decisions; she also had the right to override his decisions. The empress dowager was protected by the Minister of the Guards, yet if her faction—the consort clan— was removed from power, he was then responsible for keeping her under house arrest.

Grand Tutor
The post of Grand Tutor, although given the highest civil status below the emperor, was not regularly occupied. The role was considered an honorary rather than substantive office. In Western Han, a Grand Tutor was supposedly appointed at the beginning of each emperor's reign, and was not replaced until that emperor's death. However, only four Grand Tutors were appointed between 202 BCE – 6 CE. In contrast, during Eastern Han, a new Grand Tutor was appointed when every emperor except Emperor Huan of Han (r. 146–168 CE) had a Grand Tutor installed at the beginning of their reigns. The Grand Tutor's salary is unspecified in literary sources, though it was probably above that of the Three Excellencies. The Grand Tutor was nominally in charge of providing a young emperor with moral guidance, but it is doubtful that this role was ever taken seriously or formally conducted. The post often served to deliberately block someone from obtaining a more important post, such as one of the Excellencies, while Grand Tutors were usually elder statesmen chosen for their age rather than merits (so they would die off quickly after being appointed). This is why, during the Three Kingdoms, Cao Shuang rallied to get Sima Yi promoted to this rank; so that he would be stripped of all actual authority. Unfortunately for him, the emperor included a decree that Sima would get to keep his military command.

Excellencies
The Excellencies ("excellency" is literally translated as "duke") were the foremost officials in central government who formed the cabinet during both Western and Eastern Han. For most of Western Han, the Excellencies were the Chancellor, the Imperial Counselor, and the General-In-Chief. In 8 BCE, the post of Imperial Counselor was abolished in favor of a Grand Excellency of Works, and by 1 BCE the Chancellor's post was abolished and replaced by the Excellency Over the Masses. The exact salary figures for the Excellencies before 8 BCE are unknown, although from that year forward they were given a 10,000-Bushels salary-rank, in addition to periodic gifts which further boosted their incomes.

Chancellor
During Western Han, the Chancellor was the chief civil official. The duties of the chancellery were divided between a Right Chancellor and Left Chancellor between 196 and 180 BCE. After 180 BCE, the Left Chancellor's post was merely titular and its incumbent had no real authority. The Western Han Chancellor oversaw state finances, logistics for military campaigns, registers for land and population, maps of the empire's territories, annual provincial reports, high-profile lawsuits, and drafted the government budget. The Chancellor could directly appoint officials who were ranked 600-Bushels or below, while he was also able to recommend nominees to the emperor for recruitment to the senior roles in central government. The Chancellor was held responsible for the actions of officials he recommended and appointed, yet he could also punish inadequate officials without the emperor's consent.

Whenever the emperor was absent from a court conference but sought its advice, he relied on the chancellor to direct it and inform him of the resulting majority opinion. If the attending ministers were split into opposing factions of roughly equal size, the chancellor would listen to the positions of both sides and count the exact number of ministers who supported either opposing opinion.

The Palace Writers were originally palace eunuch secretaries from Emperor Wu's reign until 29 BCE, when they were staffed by regular officials. They usurped much of the Chancellor's powers by the end of the Western Han. The position of Chancellor was abolished for much of Eastern Han and replaced by the Excellency over the Masses. However, in 208 CE Cao Cao, then the Excellency of Works, assumed the revived post of Chancellor. Cao Cao also abolished the Grand Commandant and Excellency of Works while reinstating the Imperial Counselor.

Imperial Counselor
During Western Han the Imperial Counselor was considered the second-ranking official below the Chancellor. Like the Chancellor, he exercised censorial powers over provincial officials who also sent him annual reports. His primary duty was to uphold disciplinary procedures for officials; he could investigate even those attached to the chancellery and the imperial palace. Since one of his main functions was to prevent abuse of authority, his jurisdiction over officialdom tended to overlap with that of the Chancellor's. His subordinates included the Imperial Clerks, led by the Palace Assistant Imperial Clerk. They were often sent out into the provinces to investigate possible wrongdoing on the part of local officials.

The Imperial Counselor transmitted and received imperial edicts to and from the chancellery and also presented officials' memorials to the throne. During Western Han, the Palace Assistant Imperial Clerk's office was located within the walls of the palace. He had the authority to investigate attendants and eunuchs of the palace and to reject improperly written memorials before submission to the Imperial Counselor. The Masters of Writing under the Minister Steward then processed these memorials before they were sent to the throne. The Palace Assistant Imperial Clerk's proximity to the emperor during Eastern Han allowed him to surpass the authority of his nominal superior, the Excellency of Works, yet his Western-Han-era power to inspect local provincial authorities was removed. The Minister Steward—who was supervised by the Imperial Counselor (and later Excellency of Works)—became the Palace Assistant Imperial Clerk's new superior by early Eastern Han. The Palace Assistant Imperial Clerk also managed the Imperial Library in both Western and Eastern Han, this duty being transferred to a subordinate of the Minister of Ceremonies in 159 CE.

Grand Commandant
The Grand Commandant (also known as the General-in-Chief) was the head commander of the military in Western Han, yet his office was irregularly filled. After 119 BCE, the generals Huo Qubing (d. 117 BCE) and Wei Qing (d. 106 BCE) simultaneously held the title until their deaths, but when the post was revived in 87 BC it became politicized when conferred as a regent's title for Huo Guang (d. 68 BCE). The regent was thus considered one of the Three Excellencies, although he was not technically part of the cabinet.

The Grand Commandant's office witnessed significant changes during the Eastern Han. Wang Mang separated the regent's role from the Grand Commandant's post during the short-lived Xin dynasty (9–23 CE), since he did not want an active regent for his regime. This was retained by Eastern Han, while the third Grand Commandant of Eastern Han appointed in 51 CE transformed his ministry into a primarily civilian one. Although the Eastern Han Grand Commandant shared the same salary-rank as the other two Excellencies who were nominally considered his equals, he was nonetheless given de facto privilege as the most senior civil official. However, his censorial jurisdiction now overlapped with the other two Excellencies (i.e. he was able to investigate the same officials in central and local government), who shared an advisory role to the emperor (policy suggestions could be submitted independently or jointly by all three cabinet members). His various bureaus handled appointment, promotion, and demotion of officials, population registers and agriculture, the upkeep of transportation facilities, post offices, and couriers, civil law cases, granary storage, and military affairs. He was also given formal powers to supervise three of the Nine Ministers: the Minister of Ceremonies, Minister of the Household, and Minister of the Guards.

Excellency over the Masses
The Excellency over the Masses shared the same censorial and advisory roles as the other two Excellencies, the Excellency of Works and Grand Commandant. Like his previous counterpart, the Chancellor, he must have been responsible for drawing up the annual budget, although contemporary sources fail to mention this point. Aside from the court conference, the Great Conference of leading officials across the empire was conducted by his ministry. The Chancellor's bureaus were also retained by the Excellency over the Masses, and were nearly identical to that of the new Eastern Han Grand Commandant's bureaus. He was given formal powers to supervise three of the Nine Ministers: the Minister Coachman, Minister of Justice, and Minister Herald.

Excellency of Works
The Excellency of Works was less powerful than his previous counterpart, the Imperial Counselor. This official's advisory and censorial responsibilities coincided with those of two other Excellencies, forming a tripartite cabinet arrangement. Unlike the abolished Imperial Counselor, he was given the specialized role of overseeing public works projects throughout the empire. The Excellency of Works was responsible for the construction of city walls, towns, canals, irrigation ditches, dykes and dams, and other structural engineering projects. The Court Architect supervised only imperial building projects. The Excellency of Works made annual reports to the throne about the progress of local administrations' conduct of construction projects. He was given formal powers to supervise three of the Nine Ministers: the Minister of the Imperial Clan, Minister of Finance, and Minister Steward.

Nine Ministers
The Nine Ministers, who were supervised by the Three Excellencies but not direct subordinates of the cabinet, each headed a specialized government ministry and held a salary-rank of Fully 2,000-Bushels (There were three grades of "Fully X-Bushels," "X-Bushels" and "Equivalent to X-Bushels." I don't really get it either). Along with the tripartite cabinet members, these ministers usually attended court conferences.

Minister of Ceremonies

The Minister of Ceremonies was the chief official in charge of religious rites, rituals, prayers, and the maintenance of ancestral temples and altars. The role's title was changed to Upholder of Ceremonies from 195 to 144 BCE before reverting to the original title. Although his main concern was to link the emperor with the supernatural world and Heaven, he was also given the task of setting educational standards for the Imperial University (est. 124 BCE) and the academic chairs who specialized in the Five Classics, the canon of Confucianism.

One of the Minister of Ceremonies' many subordinates was the Court Astronomer (the actual court of rank of Sima Qian, even though his incredible work of history is translated as Records of the Grand Historian), who made astronomical observations and drafted the annual luni-solar calendar. The Court Astronomer also upheld a literacy test of 9,000 characters for nominees aspiring to become subordinate officials for either the Minister Steward or Palace Assistant Imperial Clerk. These nominees were often recommended subordinates of commandery-level Administrators. Other subordinates of the Minister of Ceremonies reported illegal acts at ancestral temples, prepared sacrificial offerings of food and wine at shrines and temples, and arranged for the music and dancing that accompanied ceremonies.

Minister of the Household
The Minister of the Household was responsible for the emperor's security within the palace grounds, external imperial parks, and wherever the emperor made an outing by chariot. However, to ensure that the emperor's entire safety was not entrusted to a single officer, the subordinates of the Minister of the Guards were given sole right to patrol the palaces' entrances and walls while the eunuchs guarded the emperor's private apartments and harem. Three of the five cadet corps commanded by the Minister of the Household were actually armed civilian nominees serving a period of probation before appointment to a government office; the other two corps were composed of imperial bodyguards who were never appointed to civilian offices. The former were often recommended by commandery-level Administrators as "Filial and Incorrupt," while others could be relatives of high officials in central government. The Minister of the Household oversaw subordinate Court Advisors who advised the emperor and engaged in scholarly debates. They were allowed to openly criticize the emperor, participate in provincial inspections, and conduct mourning ceremonies for recently deceased kings and marquesses while installing their successors. Internuncios, led by a Supervisor of the Internuncios, were subordinates of the Minister of the Household who participated in state ceremonies, condoled on behalf of the emperor for recently deceased officials, inspected public works and military camps along the frontiers, and acted as diplomats to the semi-autonomous fiefs and non-Han-Chinese peoples along the borders.

Minister of the Guards
The Minister of the Guards was responsible for securing and patrolling the walls, towers, and gates of the imperial palaces. The duties of his ministry were carried out by prefects, one of whom controlled the gates where nominees for office were received and officials sent memorials to the throne. To control and monitor the flow of traffic through the palace gates, the prefects used a complex passport system involving wooden and metal tallies. During an emergency, the tallies were collected and no-one was allowed to enter unless they breached the gates by force. The guards were conscripted peasants who served for a year's term as soldiers and were invited to attend a celebratory feast hosted by the emperor before demobilization.

Minister Coachman
The Minister Coachman was responsible for the maintenance of imperial stables, horses, carriages and coach-houses for the emperor and his palace attendants, and for the supply of horses for the armed forces. His latter duty entailed the supervising of large breeding grounds of frontier pastures, tended by tens of thousands of government slaves (yes, ancient China had slavery). By the reign of Emperor Wu of Han (r. 141–87 BCE) these contained 300,000 warhorses intended for use in campaigns against the nomadic Xiongnu Confederation. Some of the Minister Coachman's subordinates managed stables outside the capital city. These stables housed Ferghana horses that were imported or gathered as tribute from Central Asian countries.

In Eastern Han—possibly due to the Coachman's influence over the transport of arms—a prefect in charge of manufacturing bows, crossbows, swords, and armor for the military was transferred from the Minister Steward's ministry to that of the Minister Coachman.

Minister of Justice
The Minister of Justice was the chief official in charge of upholding, administering, and interpreting the law. Only the emperor, in his role as judge, was superior to this minister. The Minister of Justice was the supreme civil-appointed judge for cases deferred to the capital from provincial lawsuits. His judicial powers, however, were similar to those of the Chancellor. He could recommend changes to the law code and the granting of general amnesties to those charged with crimes. His ministry was responsible for maintaining the Imperial Prison, where trials were conducted, and carrying out executions. It is unknown whether he oversaw all of the twenty-six prisons in Western Han Chang'an, which were built to house convicted ex-officials. However, during Eastern Han, the Imperial Prison in Luoyang was the only prison managed by the Minister of Justice.

Minister Herald

The Minister Herald was the chief official in charge of receiving honored guests, such as nobles and foreign ambassadors, at the imperial court. Alongside the Minister of the Imperial Clan, his ministry oversaw the inheritance of titles and fiefs by condoling on behalf of the emperor at kings' funerals and memorializing the posthumous names of kings and marquises. The Minister Herald's office received the annual reports from the commanderies and kingdoms when they arrived in the capital at the beginning of the year, before passing them on to the Excellencies. His subordinates acted as seating guides and ushers for officials, nobles, and foreign delegates at imperial ceremonies and sacrifices. One of his subordinates maintained living quarters for officials in the commanderies and kingdoms who were traveling to the capital. While the Minister Herald had always conducted the formal reception of foreign envoys and enlisted the aid of interpreters, his powers in matters of foreign affairs were expanded further when the post of Director of Dependent States was abolished in 28 BCE. However, by Eastern Han his duties involving the affairs of Dependent States were transferred to local administrations along the borders

Minister of the Imperial Clan

While eight of the Nine Ministers could be of commoner origin, the post of Minister of the Imperial Clan was always occupied by a member of the imperial family. He oversaw the imperial court's interactions with the empire's nobility and extended imperial family, such as granting fiefs and titles. His ministry was responsible for record-keeping of all nobles, a register being updated at the beginning of each year. When a serious infraction was committed by a member of the imperial family, the Minister of the Imperial Clan was the first high official to be notified before the emperor, who made the ultimate decision about any possible legal action. This minister's subordinates heard grievances of imperial family members and informed them about new ordinances. Unlike kings and marquesses, who were not responsible to any of the Nine Ministers, imperial princesses and their fiefs were kept under surveillance by the Minister of the Imperial Clan.

Minister of Finance
The Minister of Finance was the central government's treasurer for the official bureaucracy and the armed forces. While the Chancellor drafted the state budget, the Minister of Finance was responsible for funding it. He was in charge of storing the poll taxes, which were gathered in coin cash, and land tax, which was gathered as a proportion of farmers' annual crop yields. He was also responsible for setting the standards for units of measurement. In addition to reviewing tax collections, he could implement policies for price control exacted on certain commercial commodities.

During Western Han, the Minister of Finance's powers were limited to the public treasury, the Minister Steward being responsible for the emperor's private wealth. However, in Eastern Han, the responsibilities for the public treasury and the emperor's private wealth were amalgamated and entrusted solely to the Minister of Finance, which later proved disastrous when handled by irresponsible emperors. During Western Han, the Minister of Finance managed the government's monopolized salt and iron agencies, which were abolished during Eastern Han and transferred to local administrations and private entrepreneurship. He also managed the government's brief monopoly over liquor from 98–81 BCE, before it was returned to private production. Although the Minister Steward and then the Superintendent of Waterways and Parks managed the imperial mint for issuing standard coins during Western Han, in Eastern Han the imperial mint was transferred to the office of the Minister of Finance.

Minister Steward

The Minister Steward served the emperor exclusively, providing him with entertainment and amusements, proper food and clothing, medicine and physical care, valuables and equipment. For this purpose he was given responsibility for the emperor's personal finances during Western Han, yet this responsibility was transferred to the Minister of Finance during Eastern Han. Although he was not a castrated eunuch, many of his subordinates were, since his ministry managed the imperial harem housing concubines. His secretaries were headed by a Prefect of the Masters of Writing. The secretaries were responsible for relaying all written messages to the emperor, official correspondence with Excellencies, senior ministers, provincial authorities, common people who submitted memorials to the throne, and non-Han-Chinese peoples within and outside the empire. Since the Masters of Writing were not eunuchs, and thus not allowed into the imperial harem, Emperor Wu established an all-eunuch office of secretaries for the inner palace, which was abolished in 29 BCE.

The Minister Steward had many subordinates, including the Court Physician who checked the emperor's health every morning and accompanied him on imperial hunting trips. The Court Provisioner was responsible for managing the kitchen, its cooks, and supplying food for the emperor. Other subordinates managed the weaving houses which supplied the clothes for the emperor, the workshops which produced wares, utensils, and funerary items for the emperor, and the imperial parks and gardens where the emperor could hunt and attend outings. The Bureau of Music was overseen by the Minister Steward and was in charge of musical performances at imperial ceremonies and entertaining the emperor with folk songs gathered from throughout the empire; it was disbanded in 7 BCE and its musicians transferred to the Minister of Ceremonies.

Staffs of the heir apparent, empress, and harems
When a Liu-family relative of an emperor—usually a princely son—was designated as his heir apparent, he was provided living quarters within the palace and a personal staff which was not disbanded until he became the next emperor. During Western Han, the staff had two divisions: one was led by educators of the heir apparent, known as the Grand Tutor of the Heir Apparent and Junior Tutor of the Heir Apparent, the other led by a Supervisor of the Household (all three were ranked at 2,000-Bushels). During Eastern Han, the Grand Tutor of the Heir Apparent lost his administrative role but remained the chief educator and was promoted in rank to Fully 2,000-Bushels; the Junior Tutor remained an administrator with his original rank. The post of Supervisor of the Household was abolished. Other Western Han staff offices of the heir apparent were abolished during Eastern Han, such as the Chief of the Kitchen and the Household Prison of the Heir Apparent. If he reached adulthood, the heir apparent could be married to a principal wife who led a harem of his concubines.

The empress, the legal wife of the emperor, also had an area of the palace separate from that of the emperor's private apartments, where the empress was expected to spend every fifth night with the emperor. Both the empress and the heir apparent received an income from the taxes of forty counties. She also had a Supervisor of the Household (ranked 2,000-Bushels), and many other subordinates, either male eunuchs or female maids, who took care of domestic needs. The concubines of the harem were subordinates of the empress and were ranked below her in fourteen grades by the reign of Emperor Yuan of Han (r. 49–33 BCE). However, the founder of Eastern Han abolished the fourteen salary-ranks in favor of three ranks with no definite salary; instead, the concubines were irregularly granted gifts. The chief concubine of Western Han, the Brilliant Companion, shared the same salary-rank as the Chancellor, while the concubine ranked just below her, the Favorite Beauty, shared the same salary-rank as any one of the Nine Ministers.

Metropolitan offices
The metropolitan areas of both Western Han Chang'an and Eastern Han Luoyang were governed and secured by several officials and officers. The county and municipal divisions of the capital cities were governed by a Prefect. The Prefect was also responsible for a prison and could arrest officials of high rank. The Colonel of the City Gates commanded the garrisons at the twelve city gates, each guarded by a captain, in both Western Han Chang'an and Eastern Han Luoyang.

Bearer of the Mace
The Bearer of the Mace maintained law and order in the capital city—excluding the imperial palaces—in both Western Han Chang'an and Eastern Han Luoyang. During Western Han, his salary-rank was Fully 2,000-Bushels, thus his prestige was similar to that of the Nine Ministers. However, during Eastern Han his salary-rank was reduced from Fully 2,000-Bushels to Equivalent to 2,000-Bushels.

While his subordinates were on constant patrol, the Bearer of the Mace personally inspected the city three times each month. He was responsible for the military arsenal as well as disaster relief efforts during floods and fires. The Bearer of the Mace had a large staff of subordinates during Western Han, whose posts were abolished or transferred elsewhere during Eastern Han. This included the abolition of the Captains of the Standard Bearers, and the emperor's entourage became responsible for clearing the roadways when the emperor left the palace and hoisting colored standards to signal his return.

Court Architect
The Court Architect was in charge of the construction, maintenance, and repair of imperial palace halls, government halls, temples, grave tumuli, buildings in funerary parks, roads leading out of the capital, and flood control works. His salary-rank was 2,000-Bushels. He directed the efforts of conscripted corvée laborers until this duty was transferred to the ministry of the newly created Excellency of Works in 8 BCE. The Court Architect's subordinates were responsible for gathering timber for carpenters and stone for masons. Although his office existed at the establishment of Eastern Han, it was abolished in 57 CE and his duties were transferred to an Internuncio in the Ministry of the Household. However, the post was reinstated in 76 CE with the original salary-rank, yet many of his subordinates remained abolished. Since most buildings were constructed from wood, with ceramic roof tiles, a large workforce was needed to maintain buildings that fell into disrepair. The restoration of the Imperial University during Emperor Shun's (r. 125–144 CE) reign required 100,000 laborers to work for a year under the supervision of the Court Architect.

Colonel Director of Retainers
The Colonel Director of Retainers was originally called the Director of Retainers. His task was to supervise 1,200 convicts in their construction of roads and canals. In 91 BCE, an unsuccessful five-day rebellion in Chang'an was instigated by Crown Prince Liu Ju and his mother Empress Wei Zifu, who had been accused of witchcraft and black magic. For this event, Emperor Wu prefixed "colonel" to the Director of Retainers' title in 89 BCE, promoting him to the salary-rank 2,000-Bushels, and granted him the Staff of Authority, allowing him to arrest and punish those allegedly practicing witchcraft.

Following the crisis, the Colonel Director of Retainers retained his privileged possession of the Staff of Authority and was granted the same investigative and censorial powers as the Chancellor and Imperial Counselor over officialdom. He routinely inspected the conduct of officials in the capital region and seven nearby commanderies. His investigative powers matched those of a provincial Inspector, although his Staff of Authority made him more powerful than the latter. The Colonel Director of Retainers was a personal servant of the emperor, answering only to him, allowing the emperor to greatly enhance his control over the bureaucracy. However, the Staff of Authority was removed from the Colonel in 45 BCE, limiting his powers to inspection, investigation, and impeachment and he was distinguished from a provincial Inspector only by a higher salary-rank. The office of Colonel Director of Retainers was abolished in 9 BCE, and reinstated once more as the Director of Retainers in 7 BCE. He was now a subordinate of the new Excellency of Works and supervised convicts in public works projects, like his early Western Han counterpart. In Eastern Han, the Colonel Director of Retainers was reappointed without the Staff of Authority, with powers to inspect the capital region, but his salary-rank was reduced from 2000–Bushels to Equivalent to 2000–Bushels.

Superintendent of Waterways and Parks
The Superintendent of Waterways and Parks was once a subordinate of the Minister Steward until 115 BCE, when he, and other former subordinates of that ministry, became independent officers. His salary-rank was Equivalent to 2000–Bushels. The Superintendent of Waterways and Parks managed a large imperial hunting park located outside Chang'an, including its palaces, rest stops, granaries, and cultivated patches of fruit and vegetable gardens, which, along with game meat, provided food for the emperor's household. He also collected taxes from commoners using the park's grounds and transmitted these funds to the Minister Steward, who managed the emperor's finances. One of the Superintendent's subordinates supervised convicted criminals in their care of the park's hunting dogs.

In 115 BCE the central government's mint was transferred from the Minister Steward's ministry to the park managed by the Superintendent of Waterways and Parks. In 113 BCE the central government closed all commandery-level mints; private minting had previously been outlawed in 144 BCE. The Superintendent's imperial mint in the park outside Chang'an had the sole right to issue coinage throughout the empire. However, Emperor Guangwu of Han (r. 25–57 CE) abolished the Superintendent of Waterways and Parks and revived his post annually during autumn to conduct a ritual sacrifice. The imperial mint became the responsibility of the Minister of Finance and the imperial park located outside Eastern-Han Luoyang was administered by a prefect.

Director of Dependent States

The Director of Dependent States, whose salary-rank was 2,000-Bushels, was responsible for embassies to foreign countries and nomadic peoples along Han's borders and the annual exchange of hostages—usually foreign princes—submitted to the Han court. Dependent States were first established in 121 BCE and composed mostly non-Han-Chinese nomadic tribes and confederations who surrendered after negotiation or armed conflict and accepted Han suzerainty. They served as a buffer between Han territory and hostile tribes, such as the Xiongnu, and as a means to quell tribes in the Ordos Desert. The Han court appointed a Commandant, ranked Equivalent to 2,000-Bushels, to govern the non-Han-Chinese populations of each Dependent State. The Director of Dependent States' title was abolished in 28 BCE; his duties and his subordinates, the Commandants, became the responsibilities of the Minister Herald. The Protectorate of the Western Regions, established in 60 BCE, which conducted foreign affairs with the oasis city-states in the Tarim Basin of Central Asia, was not the responsibility of the Director of Dependent States.
 
Provincial Government in the Han Dynasty

The Han Empire was divided by hierarchical political divisions in the following descending order: provinces, commanderies and counties. This model of local government was adopted from the previous government structure of the Qin dynasty.

A Han province consisted of a group of commanderies, the administrations of which were subject to scrutiny and inspection by centrally appointed officials. These were the Inspectors, who were first appointed in 106 BC at a salary-rank of 600-dan. In Western Han they were supervised by the Palace Assistant Imperial Clerk and were subordinates of the Imperial Counselor. Aside from the province-sized capital region which was entrusted to the Colonel Director of Retainers from 89–9 BCE, there were thirteen provinces during Western Han. Eventually, the title of Inspector was changed to Governor (the actual word translates literally as "Shepherd"), a post with a considerably higher salary-rank of 2,000-Bushels.

During early Eastern Han, the loss of Han's control over the Ordos Desert prompted the Han court to reduce the provinces to twelve—excluding the capital region—in 35 CE. In that year, the Inspectors-cum-Governors were still appointed by the central government, but their staffs were recruited from local administrations where they were transferred. By 42 CE, the title Governor once more became Inspector, who remained the head of provincial authorities until 188 CE. In that year, at the urging of the official Liu Yan (the father of Liu Zhang, who realized Han was collapsing an wanted a nice cozy corner of the empire to hide in with his armies while sh*t went down), Emperor Ling reinstated the office of Governor, yet some of the provinces were still administered by Inspectors; this arrangement remained in place until the end of the Han dynasty in 220 AD. A key difference between the roles was that an Inspector had no executive powers and only an advisory role, whereas a Governor could execute decisions on his own behalf. There were exceptions to this rule. If banditry or rebellion simultaneously arose in several commanderies under his jurisdiction at once, the Inspector was authorized to raise troops throughout all commanderies under his watch and lead this united force as commander to quell the disruption. In other words, until 188 CE no one actually commanded anything bigger than a single commandery; it wasn't until Liu Yan made his suggestion that warlords could officially take control of entire provinces by calling themselves Governors.

Both the Inspector and Governor were responsible for inspecting commandery-level Administrators and their staffs, as well as the semi-autonomous kingdoms and their staffs. They evaluated officials on criteria of competence, honesty, obedience to the imperial court, adherence to the law, their treatment of convicts, and any signs of extortion, nepotism, or factionalism. These reports were submitted to the Palace Assistant Imperial Clerk and Imperial Counselor during Western Han, but by Eastern Han these reports were submitted to each of the Three Excellencies. The reports were then used to promote, demote, dismiss, or prosecute local officials.

Commandery administration
There were thirteen commanderies, including the capital region, and ten kingdoms at the beginning of Western Han. Many kingdoms were reduced in size and the empire's territory expanded through conquest. By 2 CE there were eighty-three commanderies and twenty kingdoms containing an aggregate total of approximately 58 million people according to the census. A commandery consisted of a group of counties and was governed by an Administrator, who was appointed by the central government and earned a 2,000-Bushels salary-rank. The Administrator was the civil and military leader of the commandery. He was not allowed to govern over his native commandery.

An Administrator was assisted by one or several Commandants, who handled all local military affairs such as raising militias, suppressing bandit groups, and building beacon towers. The Commandants' salary-rank was Equivalent to 2,000-Bushels. After 30 CE, all Commandants who were not located in distant frontier commanderies were abolished, yet if the commandery was located along borders where raids and armed incursions by hostile nomadic groups were frequent, he was still appointed. A Commandant in an interior commandery could only be appointed temporarily to deal with crises as they arose. Each commandery also had secretaries, a treasurer, and an Official in Charge of Accounts who submitted annual reports to the imperial court on the Administrator's performance.

Many of the Administrators' duties were seasonal, such as inspections of counties every spring to check on agriculture and maintain roads, bridges, dikes and other public works. In the fall he sent subordinates into the counties to report whether local criminal lawsuits had been conducted fairly. He was responsible for recommending worthy nominees, known as Filial and Incorrupt, to the capital at the end each year during winter; the nominees would then be considered for an appointment to a central or local government office. This followed a system of quotas for each of the commanderies that was first established during Emperor Wu's reign, when two Filial and Incorrupt men from each commandery were sent to the capital. This was changed in 92 CE to one man for every 200,000 households in a commandery. After the Commandants of interior commanderies were abolished, the Administrators assumed their duties, yet they were still not allowed to raise militias, mobilize troops, or send troops outside their commandery without permission from the central government.

County administration
The nationwide census conducted in 2 CE listed 1,587 counties. The Han county was the smallest political division containing a centrally appointed official. In larger counties of about 10,000 households he was known as the Prefect; in smaller counties he was known as the Chief. Depending on the size of the county, the Prefect's salary-rank was 600-Bushels or 1,000-Bushels, while a Chief was ranked at 300-Bushels or 500-Bushels. Some translators prefer to just refer to both as "Magistrates," which I'll be using when referring to them in a plurality so I don't have to say "Prefects and Chiefs." The county's head civil servants, usually respected scholars or elders in their local communities, were appointed directly by the Magistrate.

A county Magistrate was in charge of maintaining law and order, storing grain in case of famine, registering the populace for taxation, mobilizing conscripted commoners for corvée labor projects, supervising public works, renovating schools, and performing rituals. They were also given the duty to act as judge for all lawsuits brought to the county court. The judicial jurisdictions of the commandery Administrator and county Magistrate overlapped, so it was generally agreed that whoever arrested a criminal first would try him or her. Under Emperor Wu, commanderies and kingdoms operated public schools, and although counties could operate their own public schools, not all of them did.

The county was further divided into districts, each consisting of at least several hamlets grouped together; typically a community of approximately one hundred families. A chief of police was assigned to each district by the county Magistrate. A county Magistrate heavily relied on the cooperation of local elders and leaders at the district level; these carried out much of the day-to-day affairs of arbitrating disputes in their communities, collecting taxes, and fighting crime.

Kingdoms, marquisates, and fiefs of princesses
A Han kingdom was much like a commandery in size and administration, except it was officially, and after 145 BCE nominally, the fief of a relative to the emperor, including brothers, uncles, nephews, and sons—excluding the heir apparent. The policy of awarding kingdoms only to imperial relatives was gradually adopted by the founder Emperor Gaozu of Han (r. 202–195 BCE), as many of the early kings were non-relatives who were leading officers during the Chu-Han contention (206–202 BCE). Kingdoms were usually inherited by the king's eldest son born to his queen.

The number of kingdoms fluctuated between Western and Eastern Han, but there were never fewer than eight nor greater than twenty-five. In the early Western Han, the kingdoms accounted for approximately two-thirds of the empire. The imperial court ruled over the commanderies located in the western third of the empire, while kings ruled their fiefs with little or no central government intervention. The administrative staffs of each kingdom paralleled the model of central government, as each kingdom had a Grand Tutor, Chancellor, and Imperial Secretary (each ranked 2,000-Bushels). No kingdom was allowed to have a Grand Commandant, since they were not allowed to initiate war campaigns on their own behalf. Although the kingdoms' Chancellors were appointed by the imperial court, the king had the right to appoint all other officials in his fief.

The power of the kings declined after the Rebellion of the Seven States in 154 BCE; the number of kingdoms and their sizes were reduced. An imperial edict in 145 BCE removed the kings' rights to appoint officials above the salary-rank of 400-Bushels, and all officials ranked higher than this were appointed directly by the central government. Excluding the kingdom-level Minister Coachman, the kingdoms' Nine Ministers and Imperial Counselors were abolished. The Chancellor, now the equivalent of a commandery Administrator, was retained, although he was still appointed by the central government. After these reforms, the kings were no longer administrative heads and merely took a portion of the taxes collected by the government in their kingdoms as personal income.

Han society below the level of kings was divided into twenty ranks, which awarded certain privileges such as exemption from certain laws, the nineteenth being a marquess and the twentieth being a grand marquess—the difference being the former was only given a pension while the latter was given a marquessate—typically the size of a county. If the kings' sons were grandsons of the emperor, they were made full marquesses; if not, they were considered commoners. However, this rule was changed in 127 BCE so that all the kings' sons were made full marquesses. It is unknown whether early Western-Han marquessates enjoyed the same level of autonomy as early Western-Han kingdoms; by 145 BCE, all marquessates' staff were appointed by the central government. The marquess had no administrative role over his marquessate; he merely collected a portion of the tax revenues. His Chancellor was the equivalent of a county Prefect.

The emperor's sisters and daughters were made either senior princesses, who shared the same rank as kings, or princesses, who shared the same rank as full marquesses; a princess's fief was typically the size of a county. The husband of a princess was ranked as a marquess. The daughters of kings were also princesses, but their fiefs were typically the smaller size of county districts, and could not be inherited by sons. Unlike the fiefs of kings and marquesses, the staffs of the princesses' fiefs answered directly to one of the Nine Ministers: the Minister of the Imperial Clan.
 
Glad to hear that; part of the point of this thread is in the hopes that it might give other people ideas for stuff.

I have a Quest that's sorta set in a fantasy...I guess, take on China, though obviously quite different. So stuff like this is always good to steal, even if the time period/technology is more Ming/Qing, and in other ways very different.

Still, every little scrap I can throw together for Behind the Serpent Throne is good, since I've done generalized worldbuilding, but still haven't actually, like, made a full made-up governmental chart.
 
I have a Quest that's sorta set in a fantasy...I guess, take on China, though obviously quite different. So stuff like this is always good to steal, even if the time period/technology is more Ming/Qing, and in other ways very different.

Still, every little scrap I can throw together for Behind the Serpent Throne is good, since I've done generalized worldbuilding, but still haven't actually, like, made a full made-up governmental chart.

Well, here, let me help with that:

Started in the Han Dynasty and codified in the Sui Dynasty, the governmental structure of "Three Departments and Six Ministries" was adopted in some form by most dynasties afterward, though each dynasty had its own spin on the concept. Speaking generally:

The Three Departments were the top-level offices of the government. They were the Central Secretariat, the Chancellery and the Department of State Affairs. The Central Secretariat was the main policy-forming agency responsible for proposing and drafting imperial decrees. The Department of State Affairs controlled the Six Ministries and was the highest executive institution of the imperial government. The Chancellery advised the emperor and the Central Secretariat, and reviewed all edicts and commands, making it the least important of the Three Departments as a solely advisory body.

The Six Ministries were the next step down in central government. Each one also had many bureaus responsible for grassroots administration. In general terms, they ministries were made up of:
  • Ministry of Personnel - In charge of appointments, merit ratings, promotions, promotions and demotions of officials, as well as the granting of honorific titles.
  • Ministry of Revenue - In charge of gathering census data, collecting taxes, and handling state revenues, while there were two offices of currency that were subordinate to it.
  • Ministry of Rites - In charge of state ceremonies, rituals, and sacrifices. It also oversaw registers for Buddhist and Daoist priesthoods and reception of envoys from tributary states and managed the imperial examinations.
  • Ministry of Defense - In charge of the appointments, promotions, and demotions of military officers, the maintenance of military installations, equipment, and weapons, as well as the courier system. In times of war, high-ranking officials in the Ministry of Defense were also responsible in providing strategies for commanding generals, and sometimes even serving as commanding generals themselves.
  • Ministry of Justice - In charge of judicial and penal processes, but had no supervisory role over the Censorate or the Grand Court of Revision.
  • Ministry of Works - In charge of government construction projects, hiring of artisans and laborers for temporary service, manufacturing government equipment, the maintenance of roads and canals, standardization of weights and measures, and the gathering of resources from the countryside.

The Ming Dynasty ditched the "Three Departments" part and just created the Grand Secretariat to manage all the paperwork that was sent to the emperor.
 
Well, here, let me help with that:

Started in the Han Dynasty and codified in the Sui Dynasty, the governmental structure of "Three Departments and Six Ministries" was adopted in some form by most dynasties afterward, though each dynasty had its own spin on the concept. Speaking generally:

The Three Departments were the top-level offices of the government. They were the Central Secretariat, the Chancellery and the Department of State Affairs. The Central Secretariat was the main policy-forming agency responsible for proposing and drafting imperial decrees. The Department of State Affairs controlled the Six Ministries and was the highest executive institution of the imperial government. The Chancellery advised the emperor and the Central Secretariat, and reviewed all edicts and commands, making it the least important of the Three Departments as a solely advisory body.

The Six Ministries were the next step down in central government. Each one also had many bureaus responsible for grassroots administration. In general terms, they ministries were made up of:
  • Ministry of Personnel - In charge of appointments, merit ratings, promotions, promotions and demotions of officials, as well as the granting of honorific titles.
  • Ministry of Revenue - In charge of gathering census data, collecting taxes, and handling state revenues, while there were two offices of currency that were subordinate to it.
  • Ministry of Rites - In charge of state ceremonies, rituals, and sacrifices. It also oversaw registers for Buddhist and Daoist priesthoods and reception of envoys from tributary states and managed the imperial examinations.
  • Ministry of Defense - In charge of the appointments, promotions, and demotions of military officers, the maintenance of military installations, equipment, and weapons, as well as the courier system. In times of war, high-ranking officials in the Ministry of Defense were also responsible in providing strategies for commanding generals, and sometimes even serving as commanding generals themselves.
  • Ministry of Justice - In charge of judicial and penal processes, but had no supervisory role over the Censorate or the Grand Court of Revision.
  • Ministry of Works - In charge of government construction projects, hiring of artisans and laborers for temporary service, manufacturing government equipment, the maintenance of roads and canals, standardization of weights and measures, and the gathering of resources from the countryside.

The Ming Dynasty ditched the "Three Departments" part and just created the Grand Secretariat to manage all the paperwork that was sent to the emperor.

I think I've mentioned some of that (in my updates so far), and created that as part of the framework, though other parts are more complicated, especially the Council of Generals. But there is a Ministry of Rites and another of Works, and certain other elements.

Hrm, I definitely do have to think of how the very top levels of power work...both in theory and practice.

Though, a lot of this discussion gets complicated by the specifics of the situation. Hrm, how powerful was the Ministry of Rites? It seems like 'managing the Imperial examinations' would actually give a lot of power unless it was a rubber stamp.
 
Last edited:
And if you're wondering why everyone's drinking wine instead of tea in the novel (but really just because I like talking about tea):

History of Tea in China

Scholars hailed tea as a cure for a variety of ailments; the nobility considered the consumption of good tea as a mark of their status, and the common people simply enjoyed its flavor. In 2016, the discovery of the earliest known physical evidence of tea from the mausoleum of Emperor Jing of Han in Xi'an (known back then as Chang'an) was announced, indicating that tea was drunk by Han Dynasty emperors as early as 2nd century BCE.

According to legend, tea was first discovered by the legendary Chinese emperor and herbalist, Shennong, in the 29th century BCE. It is said that the emperor liked his drinking water boiled before he drank it so it would be clean, so that is what his servants did. One day, on a trip to a distant region, he and his army stopped to rest. A servant began boiling water for him to drink, and a dead leaf from the wild tea bush fell into the water. It turned a brownish color, but it was unnoticed and presented to the emperor anyway. The emperor drank it and found it very refreshing, and cha (tea) came into being.

The Erya, a Chinese dictionary dated to the 3rd century BCE, records that an infusion of some kind of leaf was used as early as the Zhou Dynasty (1046–256 BCE).

While historically the origin of tea as a medicinal herb useful for staying awake is unclear, China is considered to have the earliest records of tea drinking, with recorded tea use in its history dating back to the first millennium BCE. The Han Dynasty (206 BCE–220 CE) used tea as medicine. The use of tea as a beverage drunk for pleasure on social occasions dates from the Tang Dynasty (618–907 CE) or earlier.

The Classic of Tea by the Tang dynasty writer Lu Yu (729-804 CE) is an early work on the subject. According to Cha Jing, around CE 760, tea drinking was widespread. The book describes how tea plants were grown, the leaves processed, and tea prepared as a beverage. It also describes how tea was evaluated. The book also discusses where the best tea leaves were produced.

At this time in tea's history, the nature of the beverage and style of tea preparation were quite different from the way we experience tea today. Tea leaves were processed into compressed cakes form. The dried teacake, generally called brick tea was ground in a stone mortar. Hot water was added to the powdered teacake, or the powdered teacake was boiled in earthenware kettles then consumed as a hot beverage.

A form of compressed tea referred to as white tea was being produced as far back as the Tang Dynasty (618-907 CE). This special white tea of Tang was picked in early spring, when the tea bushes had abundant growths which resembled silver needles. These "first flushes" were used as the raw material to make the compressed tea. Tea is one of the "Seven Necessities of (Chinese) Daily Life."

So basically in Han China tea was mostly drunken as medicine and the typical drink of choice for everyone was wine. Or at least, what we translate as wine. More on that in a bit.
 
Though, a lot of this discussion gets complicated by the specifics of the situation. Hrm, how powerful was the Ministry of Rites? It seems like 'managing the Imperial examinations' would actually give a lot of power unless it was a rubber stamp.
My knowledge about Imperial Examinations are pretty spotty, but the ones I do know of were hardcore. Students literally will be confined into a room for 3 Days and 2 Nights, with no communication with the outside world and no written material was allowed to be brought in. If one manages to make it out of it, and knows just the right person you can most likely make a bribe successfully.

Of course, if you got through via bribes, try not to engage someone who legitimately passed in an argument, or you will be destroyed. And even if your pass is there, performing poorly will bring in whispers of bribery, and with it officials making an inquiry.
 
History of Alcohol in China

Chinese alcoholic beverages seem to precede the earliest stages of Chinese civilization. They include rice and grape wine, beer, and various liquors including baijiu, the most-consumed distilled spirit in the world.

In Chinese all alcoholic drinks are called jiu, which basically just means "alcoholic beverage." It's often translated into English as "wine," which is a misrepresentation of its usage. In modern times, jiu refers to pure alcohol, distilled liquor, and strong rice wine, while wine and beer are called putaoju ("grape jiu") and pijiu ("'beer' jiu") respectively.

Nonetheless, there are many cultural parallels with the use of wine in European culture. Chinese food employs jiu in its recipes and formal dining in an analogous manner; likewise, there are many parallels in upper-class etiquette and religious observance. It appears prominently in the Chinese classics, including the Rites of Zhou and the Record of Rites, and has been a constant theme of Chinese poetry since its origins, all similar to the treatment of wine in Europe.

Ancient China
Chinese alcohol predates recorded history. Dried residue extracted from 9,000-year-old pottery implies that early beers were already being consumed by the neolithic peoples in the area of modern China. Made from rice, honey, grapes, and hawthorn, it seems to have been produced similarly to that of Mesopotamia and Ancient Egypt.

Within the Yellow River area which gave rise to the Chinese culture, numerous bronze vessels preserved from the later Shang dynasty (whose oracle bones contained the first surviving Chinese characters) include many which were apparently used to warm alcohol. At the time, millet was the area's staple grain and these drinks may have been similar to modern huangjiu ("yellow wine"). Traditional Chinese historical accounts such as Sima Qian's Records of the Grand Historian relate various legends and myths concerning the origin of alcohol in China. One account says that the brewer Yidi presented the first alcoholic beverage as a gift to the emperor Yu the Great c. 2100 BCE. Another credits its invention to Du Kang.

Chinese alcohol figured prominently in Zhou-era accounts of the removal of the Mandate of Heaven. The final ruler of the Xia dynasty, the emperor Jie, was said to have shown his decadence by constructing an entire lake of jiu to please one of his concubines. The pool was said to have been large enough to navigate with a boat. The story was repeated in accounts of Di Xin, the last emperor of the Shang. Alcoholism was said to have been so rampant among Shang culture that reducing it presented one of the principal difficulties for the new Zhou dynasty.

In the far northwest of modern China, the introduction of the irrigation and grape vines responsible for Xinjiang's (which is not a part of China at this time, but is still close enough to trade with it and lies on the Silk Road) raisin and wine production are generally credited to Greek settlers from 4th-century BCE Bactria, one of the successor states to the empire of Alexander the Great.

Imperial China
Following the Yangtze's incorporation into the Chinese state during the Qin dynasty, beer gradually disappeared from use over the course of the Han dynasty in favor of the stronger huangjiu and the rice wines of the southern Chinese. By the Tang dynasty, home brewing seems to have been a familiar domestic chore, albeit the poor had to make do with poorly filtered mash. The sticky rice-based choujiu dates to at least the Tang and was specially praised by the Chinese poet Li Bai. From the Han Dynasty to the Tang, alcohol was the most frequently drunken beverage, and was often drunken in conjunction with mineral-based medicines and recreational drugs, most notably Cold Food Powder, also known as Five Minerals Powder.

As noted in Shen Kuo's 11th-century Dream Pool Essays, much of the socializing among the gentry concerned "drinking guests." A symposium beginning with drinking huangjiu might involve playing the zither and weiqi (Go), meditation, calligraphy and painting, drinking tea, alchemy, and reciting poetry, as well as general conversation.

Distillation may have been practiced in China as early as the later Han but the earliest evidence so far discovered has been dated to the Jin and Southern Song. A still dating to the 12th century was found during an archaeological dig at Qinglong in Hebei. Despite the popularity of Islam in the Mongol Empire and its growth within China during the Mongolian Yuan dynasty, the common consumption of distilled spirits such as baijiu dates to the same era.

Huangjiu

Huangjiu or "yellow wine" is a fermented alcoholic beverage brewed directly from grains such as millet, rice, and wheat. It is not distilled but typically has an alcohol content around 15-20%. It is usually pasteurized, aged, and filtered prior to bottling. Despite its name, huangjiu may be clear, beige, or reddish as well as yellow. The Chinese form of sake, mijiu, is generally considered a form of huangjiu within China.

Baijiu

Baijiu ("white wine") or shaojiu is a distilled alcoholic beverage. It is usually sorghum-based, but some varieties are distilled from huangjiu or other rice-based drinks. All typically have an alcohol content greater than 30% and are so similar in color and feel to vodka that baijiu is sometimes known as "Chinese vodka". There are many varieties, classified by their fragrance, but most are only distilled once, permitting stronger flavors and scent than vodka. The prestige brand within China is the "sauce-scented" Moutai, produced in the southern city of Maotai in Guizhou. More common brands include Wuliangye and varieties of erguotou.

Wine

Traditional Uyghur wine from Xinjiang is known as museles (Arabic for "the triangle"). Its production requires crushing the grapes by hand, then straining them through atlas silk and boiling the juice with an equal volume of water, as well as added sugar. This is cooked until the original volume of the juice is reached and then stored in clay urns along with various flavorings.

Other

Other fermented beverages include choujiu (made from sticky rice), lychee wine, gouqi jiu (made from wolfberries), Qingke jiu (made from Tibetan highland barley), and kumis (a traditional drink of steppe peoples made from mare or yak milk). The peach-scented Luzhou Laojiao prides itself on continuous production since 1573 during the Ming dynasty. The ginger-flavored liqueur Canton is no longer produced in China but is instead imported for consumption in the United States from a distillery in France unrelated to its original production.

Culture

Chinese alcoholic beverages have a long history both as a part of diet and ceremonies (both secular and religious), as well as being a part of the productive activities of many households and commercial establishments.

Chinese alcoholic beverages were traditionally warmed before being consumed, a practice going back to the early dynastic period. The temperature to which the liquor may be warmed ranges between approximately 35 and 55 degrees Celsius, well below the boiling point of ethanol. Warming the liquor allows its aromas to be better appreciated by the drinker without losing too much alcohol. The optimal temperature for warming depends on the type of beverage as well as the preference of the drinker.

Traditionally, also, the drinks are consumed together with food rather than on their own. Neither practice is binding in modern China. In addition to being used to brew liquor, the seed mash described above can also be made to be eaten or drunk as a sweet dessert.

Traditional Chinese medicine frequently employed alcoholic beverages (associated with yin) and alcoholic drinks were likewise used as medicine. Alcohol including extracts of plants, herbs, animal parts, or minerals are not as common as they once were but may still be encountered. One example of such a medicinal alcoholic drink is realgar wine: consumed during the Dragon Boat Festival, realgar wine consisted of huangjiu mixed with an arsenic sulfide also used as an insecticide. It appears in the Chinese legend of the White Snake as the substance which forces the snake to reveal her true form. The drink was thought to prevent disease and misfortune (particularly snake bites and digestive worms) and to promote health; although modern Chinese authorities discourage the practice, it is still legally available for consumption.
 
One thing about wine etiquette: One way to portray a drunkard is to have him lug around a Hu and drink directly from it. Normally, Wine is poured into a small container of any shape before being drunk.
 
I think I've mentioned some of that (in my updates so far), and created that as part of the framework, though other parts are more complicated, especially the Council of Generals. But there is a Ministry of Rites and another of Works, and certain other elements.

Hrm, I definitely do have to think of how the very top levels of power work...both in theory and practice.

Though, a lot of this discussion gets complicated by the specifics of the situation. Hrm, how powerful was the Ministry of Rites? It seems like 'managing the Imperial examinations' would actually give a lot of power unless it was a rubber stamp.
My knowledge about Imperial Examinations are pretty spotty, but the ones I do know of were hardcore. Students literally will be confined into a room for 3 Days and 2 Nights, with no communication with the outside world and no written material was allowed to be brought in. If one manages to make it out of it, and knows just the right person you can most likely make a bribe successfully.

Of course, if you got through via bribes, try not to engage someone who legitimately passed in an argument, or you will be destroyed. And even if your pass is there, performing poorly will bring in whispers of bribery, and with it officials making an inquiry.

Well, it doesn't really have much bearing on the Han Dynasty, but...

Imperial Examinations

The imperial examinations were a civil service examination system in Imperial China to select candidates for the state bureaucracy. Although there were imperial exams as early as the Han dynasty, the system became the major path to office only in the mid-Tang dynasty, and remained so until its abolition in 1905. Since the exams were based on knowledge of the classics and literary style, not technical expertise, successful candidates were generalists who shared a common language and culture, one shared even by those who failed. This common culture helped to unify the empire and the ideal of achievement by merit gave legitimacy to imperial rule.

The examination system helped to shape China's intellectual, cultural, and political life. The increased reliance on the exam system was in part responsible for Tang dynasty shifting from a military aristocracy to a gentry class of scholar-bureaucrats. Starting with the Song dynasty, the system was regularized and developed into a roughly three-tiered ladder from local to provincial to court exams. The content was narrowed and fixed on texts of Neo-Confucian orthodoxy. By the Ming dynasty, the highest degree, the jinshi, became essential for highest office, while there was a vast oversupply of holders of the initial degree, shengyuan, who could not hope for office, though these were granted social privilege. Critics charged that the system stifled creativity and created officials who dared not defy authority, yet the system also continued to promote cultural unity. Wealthy families, especially merchants, could opt into the system by educating their sons or purchasing degrees. In the 19th century, critics blamed the imperial system, and in the process its examinations, for China's lack of technical knowledge and its defeat by foreign powers.

The influence of the Chinese examination system spread to neighboring Asian countries, such as Vietnam, Korea, Japan (though briefly) and Ryukyu. The Chinese examination system was introduced to the Western world in reports by European missionaries and diplomats, and encouraged the English East India Company to use a similar method to select employees. Following the initial success in that company, the British government adopted a similar testing system for screening civil servants in 1855. Other European nations, such as France and Germany, followed suit. Modeled after these previous adaptations, the U.S established its own testing program for certain government jobs after 1883.

Although, in a general way, the formative ideas behind the imperial exams can be traced back at least to Zhou dynasty times (or, more mythologically, Emperor Yao), such as imperial promotion for displaying skill in archery contests, the imperial examination system in its classical manifestation is historically attested to have been established in 605 CE, during the Sui dynasty; which in the quickly succeeding Tang dynasty was used only on a relatively small scale, especially in its early phase. However, the structure of the examination system was extensively expanded during the reign of Wu Zetian: the impact of Wu's use of the testing system is still a matter for scholarly debate. During the Song dynasty the emperors expanded both examinations and the government school system, in part to counter the influence of military aristocrats, increasing the number of those who passed the exams to more than four to five times that of the Tang. Thus the system played a key role in the selection of the scholar-officials, who formed the elite members of society. During the Ming and Qing dynasties, the system contributed to the narrowness of intellectual life and the autocratic power of the emperor. The system continued with some modifications until its 1905 abolition under the Qing dynasty. The system had a history (with brief interruptions; for example, at the beginning of the Yuan dynasty), in the 13th century. The modern examination system for selecting civil servants also indirectly evolved from the imperial one.

The operations of the examination system were part of the imperial record keeping system, and the date of receiving the jinshi degree is often a key biographical datum: sometimes the date of achieving jinshi is the only firm date known for even some of the most historically prominent persons in Chinese history.

History by Dynasty

The civil service examination for recruitment into service of the imperial government spanned several dynasties, although the degree to which this process was utilized varied over its existence, and its use was even discontinued for periods of time. In the modern sense of an open examination system, the imperial civil service examinations did not take place until the Sui dynasty, when they then began to recognizably take on the form of standardized tests. Nevertheless, the tests had a lengthy historical background in Chinese thought, including evaluating the potential of possible people to fill positions through various contests, competitions, or interviews: even as early as the Zhou dynasty promotions might be won through winning archery competitions.

Even more, the bureaucratic system which the examination system was intended to recruit persons of merit to fill the ranks of service first had to be developed: much of the development of the imperial bureaucracy in the Confucian form in which it was known in later times had much of its origin in the Han dynasty rule of Han Wudi (Emperor Wu of Han). Through the Three Kingdoms and the Sui dynasty recruitment was viewed as basically a bottom-up process: promotions being generally through preferment from the local and lower levels of government up to each successively higher level until recommendations finally might be offered to the emperor himself, in continuation of the Zhou idea that the lower levels of government were responsible for finding recruits for the higher ones.

This changed during the Sui, when recruitment into the imperial civil service bureaucracy became to be considered an imperial prerogative, rather than a duty to be performed by the lower levels. By the Tang dynasty, most of the recruitment into central government bureaucrat offices was being performed by the bureaucracy itself, at least nominally by the reigning emperor. However, the historical dynamics of the official recruitment system involved changes in the balances of the various means used for appointments (all theoretically under the direction of the emperor); including, the civil service examinations, direct appointments (especially of members of the ruling dynastic family), nominations by quotas allotted to favored important families, recommendations, clerical promotions, direct sale of official rank, and special induction procedures for eunuchs.

The regular higher level degree examination cycle was nominally decreed in 1067 CE to be 3 years. In practice both before and after this, the examinations were irregularly implemented for significant periods of time: thus, the calculated statistical averages for the number of degrees conferred annually should be understood in this context. The jinshi tests were not a yearly event and should not be considered so; the annual average figures are a necessary artifact of quantitative analysis.

Han Dynasty
From the time of the Han dynasty (206 BCE – CE 220) until the later, fuller implementation of the imperial examination system, most appointments in the imperial bureaucracy were based on recommendations from prominent aristocrats and local officials whilst recommended individuals were predominantly of aristocratic rank. Oral examination on policy issues were sometimes conducted personally by the emperor himself, during Western Han. Emperor Wu of Han (141 - 87 BCE) started an early form of the imperial examinations, in which local officials would select candidates to take part in an examination of the Confucian classics, from which he would select officials to serve by his side. While connections and recommendations remained much more meaningful than the exams in terms of advancing people to higher positions, the initiation of the examination system by emperor Wu had a cultural significance, as the state determined what the most important Confucianist texts were. During the Han dynasty, the examinations were primarily used for the purpose of classifying candidates who had been specifically recommended; and, through the Tang dynasty the quantity of placement into government service through the examination system was only averaged about 9 persons per year, with the known maximum being less than 25 in any given year.

Three Kingdoms to the Sui
Beginning in the Three Kingdoms period (with the nine-rank system in the Kingdom of Wei), imperial officials were responsible for assessing the quality of the talents recommended by the local elites. This system continued until Emperor Yang of Sui established a new category of recommended candidates for the mandarinate in CE 605. For the first time, an examination system was explicitly instituted for a category of local talents. However, the Sui dynasty was short-lived, and the system did not reach its mature development until afterwards.

Tang Dynasty and Wu's Reign

Over the course of the Tang dynasty and during the Zhou dynasty of Wu Zetian's interregnum, the examination system developed into a more comprehensive system, developing beyond the basic Sui process of qualifying candidates based on questions on policy matters and then followed by an interview. Oral interviews as part of the examination and selection system were theoretically supposed to be an unbiased process, but in practice favored candidates from elite clans based in the capitals of Chang'an and Luoyang (speakers of solely non-elite dialects could not succeed).

A pivotal point in the development of imperial examinations arose with the rise of Wu Zetian. Up until that point, the rulers of the Tang dynasty were all male members of the Li family. Wu Zetian was exceptional: a woman not of the Li family, she came to occupy the seat of the emperor in an official manner in the year of 690, and even beforehand she had already begun to stretch her power within the imperial courts behind the scenes. Reform of the imperial examinations to include a new class of elite bureaucrats derived from humbler origins became a keystone of Wu's gamble to retain power.

In 655, Wu Zetian graduated 44 candidates with the jinshi degree, and during one 7-year period the annual average of exam takers graduated with a jinshi degree was greater than 58 persons per year. Wu lavished favors on the newly graduated jinshi degree-holders, increasing the prestige associated with this path of attaining a government career, and clearly began a process of opening up opportunities to success for a wider population pool, including inhabitants of China's less prestigious southeast area. Most of the Li family supporters were located to the northwest, particularly around the capital city of Chang'an. Wu's progressive accumulation of political power through enhancement of the examination system involved attaining the allegiance of previously under-represented regions, alleviating frustrations of the literati, and encouraging education in various locales so even people in the remote corners of the empire would work on their studies in order to pass the imperial exams, and thus developed a nucleus of elite bureaucrats useful from the perspective of control by the central government.

In 681, a written test on knowledge of the Confucian classics was introduced, meaning that candidates were required to memorize these works and fill in the blanks on the test.

In 693, Wu Zetian's government further expanded the civil service examination system, part of a policy to reform society and to consolidate power for her self-proclaimed "Zhou dynasty." She introduced major changes in regard to the Tang system, increasing the pool of candidates permitted to take the test by allowing commoners and gentry previously disqualified by their non-elite backgrounds to attempt the tests. Successful candidates then became an elite nucleus of bureaucrats within her government.

Sometime between 730 and 740, after the Tang restoration, a section requiring the composition of original poetry (including both shi and fu) was added to the tests, with rather specific set requirements: this was for the jinshi degree, as well as certain other tests. The less-esteemed examinations tested for skills such as mathematics, law, and calligraphy. The success rate on these tests of knowledge on the classics was between 10 and 20 percent, but for the thousand or more candidates going for a jinshi degree each year in which it was offered, the success rate for the examinees was only between 1 and 2 percent: a total of 6504 jinshi were created during course of the Tang dynasty (an average of only about 23 jinshi awarded per year).

During the early years of the Tang restoration, the following emperors expanded on Wu's policies since they found them politically useful, and the annual averages of degrees conferred continued to rise; however with the upheavals which later developed and the disintegration of the Tang empire into the "Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period", the examination system gave ground to other traditional routes to government positions and favoritism in grading reduced the opportunities of those taking the tests who lacked political patronage. Ironically this period of fragmentation resulted in the utter destruction of old networks established by elite families that had ruled China throughout its various dynasties since its very conception. With the disappearance of the old aristocracy, Wu's system of bureaucrat recruitment once more became the dominant model in China, and eventually coalesced into the class of nonhereditary elites who would become known to the West as "mandarins," in reference to Mandarin, the dialect of Chinese employed in the imperial court.

Song Dynasty

In the Song dynasty (960 to 1279) more than a hundred higher level examinations were held. Officials selected through the exams became dominant in the bureaucracy. Theoretically, the examinations were open to adult Chinese (at least in terms of literacy) males, with some restrictions, as, in parallel was the opportunity to become a high-ranking government official. This included even individuals from the occupied northern territories. Many individuals moved from a low social status to political prominence through success in imperial examination. Examples include Wang Anshi, who proposed reforms to make the exams more practical, and Zhu Xi, whose interpretations of the Four Classics became the orthodox Neo-Confucianism which dominated later dynasties. Two other prominent successful entries into politics through the examination system were Su Shi and his brother Su Zhe: both of whom became political opponents of Wang Anshi. Indeed, one of the major objectives of the examination system was to promote diversity of viewpoints and to avoid over-filling of offices with individuals of particular political or partisan alignment, as might occur with alternative, more biased methods, which could allow for active recruitment. Yet the process of studying for the examination tended to be time-consuming and costly, requiring time to spare and tutors. Most of the candidates came from the numerically small but relatively wealthy land-owning scholar-official class.

Since 937, by the decision of the Taizu Emperor of Song, the palace examination was supervised by the emperor himself. In 992, the practice of anonymous submission of papers during the palace examination was introduced; it was spread to the departmental examinations in 1007, and to the prefectural level in 1032. The practice of recopying the papers in order not to allow biases by revealing the candidate by his calligraphy was introduced at the capital and departmental level in 1105, and in the prefectures in 1037. Statistics indicate that the Song imperial government degree-awards eventually more than doubled the highest annual averages of those awarded during the Tang dynasty, with 200 or more per year on average being common, and at times reaching a per annum figure of almost 240.

Various reforms or attempts to reform the examination system were made during the Song dynasty, including by Fan Zhongyan and those by Wang Anshi. Fan's memorial to the throne actually initiated a process which lead ending up resulting in major educational reform, through the establishment of a comprehensive public school system.

Yuan Dynasty
Governmental examinations ended with the defeat of the Song in 1279 by a disintegrating Mongol empire. After a period of turmoil, the part of the Mongol empire that was led by Kublai Khan established itself in China as the Yuan dynasty. Kublai ended the imperial examination system, as he believed that Confucian learning was not needed for government jobs.

The examination system was revived in 1315, with significant changes, during the reign of Emperor Renzong. The new examination system was one of regionalism with Mongol characteristics. The northern areas of Mongolia and its vicinity were favored, and a quota system (both for number of candidates and number of degrees awarded) which was based on the classification of the imperial population into four racially-based groups (or castes and/or ethnicities) was instituted, the groups being Mongols, their non-Han allies (Semu-ren), Northern Chinese, and Southern Chinese, with further restrictions by province. Under the revived and revised system the yearly averages for examination degrees awarded was about 21. As the degrees were arithmetically divided between the four "races" (although with further modification), rather than being proportionally based on either population or number of qualified candidates, this tended to favor the Mongols, Semu-ren, and North Chinese: the South Chinese were by far the greatest part of the population, the 1290 census figures recording some 12,000,000 households (about 48% of the total Yuan population), versus 2,000,000 North Chinese households, and the populations of Mongols and Semu-ren were both less. The restrictions on candidates by the new quota system allowed only 300 candidates for each testing session of the three year examination cycle. The provincial restrictions resulted in a greater effect; for example, only 28 Han Chinese from South China were included among the 300 candidates, the rest of the South China slots (47) being occupied by resident Mongols or Semu-ren, although 47 "racial South Chinese" who were not residents of South China were approved as candidates.

Ming Dynasty
The Ming dynasty (1368-1644) retained and expanded the system it inherited. Shortly after the inauguration of the dynasty, the Hongwu emperor in 1370 declared that the exams should cover the Four Books, discourses, and political analysis, accepting the Neo-Confucian canon put forth by Zhuxi in the Song dynasty. But he firmly insisted on including the martial arts. The curriculum at the National Academy emphasized law, mathematics, calligraphy, horse riding, and archery in addition to Confucian classics required in the exams. The emperor especially emphasized archery.

The Ming established Neo-Confucian interpretations as the orthodoxy guidelines and created what the historian Benjamin Elman called a "single-minded and monocular political ideology" that "affected politically and socially how literati learning would be interpreted and used." The imperial civil service system adopted this rigid orthodoxy at a time when commercialization and population growth meant that there was an inflation in the number of degree candidates at the lower levels. As a result, all of the higher and more prestigious offices were dominated by jinshi (Palace) degree-holders, who tended to come from elite families. The Ming thus started a process in which access to government office became harder and harder and officials became more and more orthodox in their thought. Near the end of the Ming dynasty, in 1600, there were roughly half a million licentiates in a population of 150 million, that is, one per 300 people; by the mid-19th century the ratio had shrunk to one civil licentiate for each 1,000 people.

Qing Dynasty
The Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, which attempted to overthrow the Qing dynasty in the middle of the 19th century, in 1853 offered the first exam in Chinese history to admit women as exam candidates. The exams administered by the Heavenly Kingdom differed from those administered by the Qing dynasty, in that they required knowledge of the Bible. Fu Shanxiang took the exam and became the first female zhuangyuan in Chinese history.

End of the Imperial Examination System

With the military defeats in the 1890s and pressure to develop a national school system, reformers such as Kang Youwei and Liang Qichao called for abolition of the exams, and the Hundred Days' Reform of 1898 proposed a set of modernizations. After the Boxer Rebellion, the government drew up plans to reform under the name of New Policies, then abolish the exams. On 2 September 1905, the throne endorsed a memorial which ordered that the old examination system be discontinued at all levels in the following years. The new system provided equivalents to the old degrees; a bachelor's degree, for instance, would be considered equivalent to the xiu cai. The details of the new system remained to be worked out by the fall of the dynasty in 1911, but the end of the system meant the end of Confucianism as an official state ideology and of the scholar official as a legal group.

Reformers charged that the set format of the "Eight-legged essay" stifled original thought and satirists portrayed the rigidity of the system in novels such as The Scholars. In the twentieth century, the New Culture Movement portrayed the examination system as a cause for China's weakness in such stories as Lu Xun's "Kong Yiji." Some have suggested that limiting the topics prescribed in examination system removed the incentives for Chinese intellectuals to learn mathematics or to conduct experimentation, perhaps contributing to the Great Divergence, in which China's scientific and economic development fell behind Europe.

In late imperial China, the examination system was the major mechanism by which the central government captured and held the loyalty of local-level elites. Their loyalty, in turn, ensured the integration of the Chinese state, and countered tendencies toward regional autonomy and the breakup of the centralized system. The examination system distributed its prizes according to provincial and prefectural quotas, which meant that imperial officials were recruited from the whole country, in numbers roughly proportional to each province's population. Elite individuals all over China, even in the disadvantaged peripheral regions, had a chance at succeeding in the examinations and achieving the rewards and emoluments office brought.

The examination based civil service thus promoted stability and social mobility. The Confucian-based examinations meant that the local elites and ambitious would-be members of those elites across the whole of China were taught with similar values. Even though only a small fraction (about 5%) of those who attempted the examinations actually passed them and even fewer received titles, the hope of eventual success sustained their commitment. Those who failed to pass did not lose wealth or local social standing; as dedicated believers in Confucian orthodoxy, they served, without the benefit of state appointments, as teachers, patrons of the arts, and managers of local projects, such as irrigation works, schools, or charitable foundations.

Taking the exams

The examinations consisted of tests administered at the district, provincial, and metropolitan levels. Tight quotas restricted the number of successful candidates at each level — for example, only three-hundred students could pass the metropolitan examinations. Students often took the examinations several times before earning a degree.

Entry-level examinations were held annually and accessible to educated individuals from their early teenage years. These were held locally and were collectively called haizi kaoshi ("Child Exams"). The Child Exam was broken down hierarchically into the xian kaoshi ("County Exam"), the fufu kaoshi ("Prefectural exam") and yuanshi ("college exam").
  • Provincial exams: xiangshi ("township exams") were held every three years in provincial capitals.
  • Metropolitan exams: huishi ("conference exams") were held every three years in the national capital.
  • Palace exams: dianshi ("court exams") were held every three years in the Imperial palace and often supervised by the emperor himself.

Each candidate arrived at an examination compound with only a few amenities: a water pitcher, a chamber pot, bedding, food (which he had to prepare himself), an inkstone, ink and brushes. Guards verified a student's identity and searched for hidden printed materials. In the Ming and Qing periods, each exam taker spent three days and two nights writing "eight-legged essays" — literary compositions with eight distinct sections — in a tiny room with a makeshift bed, desk and bench. There were no interruptions during those three days, nor were candidates allowed any communication. If a candidate died, officials wrapped his body in a straw mat and tossed it over the high walls that ringed the compound.

Intense pressure to succeed meant that cheating and corruption were rampant, often outrunning strenuous attempts to prevent or defeat them. In order to discourage favoritism which might occur if an examiner recognized a student's calligraphy, each exam was recopied by an official copyist. Exact quotes from the classics were required; misquoting even one character or writing it in the wrong form meant failure, so candidates went to great lengths to bring hidden copies of these texts with them, sometimes written on their underwear.

Curriculum
By 115 CE, a set curriculum had become established for the so-called First Generation of examination takers. They were tested on their proficiency in the "Six Arts":
  • Scholastic arts: music, arithmetic, writing, and knowledge of the rituals and ceremonies in both public and private life.
  • Militaristic: archery and horsemanship
The curriculum was then expanded to cover the "Five Studies": military strategy, civil law, revenue and taxation, agriculture and geography, and the Confucian classics. In this form, the examinations were institutionalized during the sixth century CE, under the Sui dynasty. These examinations are regarded by most historians as the first standardized tests based on merit.

Degree Types
The examinations and degrees formed a "ladder of success", with success generally being equated with being graduated as jinshi, which is a degree similar to a modern Doctor of Literature degree, or PhD. Modifications to the basic jinshi or other degree were made for higher-placing graduates, similar to the modern Summa cum Laude. The examination process extended down to the county level, and included examinations at the provincial and national levels. The highest level tests would be at the imperial court or palace level, of which the jinshi was the highest regular level, although occasional special purpose tests were occasionally offered, by imperial decree:
  • Tongsheng ("child student"), an entry-level examinee who had passed the county/prefecture exams.
  • Shengyuan ("student member"), also commonly called xiucai ("distinguished talent"), an entry-level licentiate who had passed the college exam. Xiucai enjoyed officially sanctioned social privileges such as exemption from statute labor, access into local government facilities and limited immunity against corporal punishments. They were further divided into three classes according to exam performance.
    • Linsheng ("granary student"), the first class of shengyuan, who were the best performers in the college exam, and got to receive government-issued rations and pay for their academic achievements. The top performers within this class would get accepted into the Imperial Academy as gongsheng ("tribute student"), who will then be eligible to sit the provincial or even the national exam directly.
      • Anshou ("first on the desk"), the highest ranking linsheng, and thus the top shengyuan who ranked first in college exam.
    • Zengsheng ("expanded student"), the second class of shengyuan, who performed less well than linsheng and enjoyed similar legal perks, but not the material allowance.
    • Fusheng ("attached student"), the third class of shengyuan and considered substitute recruits outside the official quota of enrollment. They were considered passable in exams but needed more improvements.
  • Juren ("recommended man"), a qualified graduate who passed the triennial provincial exam.
    • Jieyuan ("top escorted examinee"), the juren who ranked first in provincial exam.
  • Gongshi ("tribute scholar"), a recognized scholarly achiever who passed the triennial national exam.
    • Huiyuan ("top conference examinee"), the gongshi who ranked first in national exam.
  • Jinshi ("advanced scholar"), a graduate who passed the triennial court exam.
    • Jinshi Jidi ("distinguished jinshi"), graduates ranked first class in the court exam, usually only the top three individuals were qualified for this title.
      • Zhuangyuan ("top thesis author"), the jinshi who ranked first overall nationwide.
      • Bangyan ("eyes positioned alongside"), the jinshi who ranked second overall just below zhuangyuan.
      • Tanhua ("flower snatcher"), the jinshi ranked third overall.
    • Jinshi Chushen ("jinshi background"), the graduates who ranked second class in court exam, ranking immediately after the tanhua.
    • Tong Jinshi Chushen ("along with jinshi background"), graduates ranked third class in the court exam.

Decree Examinations
Besides the regular tests for the jinshi and other degrees, there were also occasionally special purpose examinations, by imperial decree. These decree examinations were for the purpose of particular promotions or to identify talented men for dealing with certain, specific, especially difficult assignments. During the Song dynasty, in 1061, Emperor Renzong of Song decreed special examinations for the purpose of finding men capable of "direct speech and full remonstrance": the testing procedure required the examinees to submit 50 previously prepared essays, 25 on particular contemporary problems, 25 on more general historical governmental themes. In the examination room, the examinees then had a day to write essays on six topics chosen by the test officials, and finally were required to write a 3,000 character essay on a complex policy problem, personally chosen by the emperor, Renzong. Among the few successful candidates were the Su brothers, Su Shi and Su Zhe (who had already attained their jinshi degrees, in 1057), with Su Shi scoring exceptionally high in the examinations, and subsequently having copies of his examination essays widely circulated.

Military Examinations
In addition to the civil examinations, the imperial government also held specialized military examinations for the selection of army officers. Before the military exams, the participants who were from military families studied at military schools. Successful candidates were awarded military versions of Jinshi and Juren degrees: Wujinshi and Wujuren, and so on. In the traditional Confucian scheme of things, civil affairs and service were much more prestigious than the military. Nevertheless, the civil and military elements of government were in Chinese political theory sometimes compared to the two wheels of a chariot; if either were neglected, government would not run smoothly. Thus, the military examinations had the same general arrangement as the regular exams, with provincial, metropolitan and palace versions of the exams. The ideal candidate was expected to master the same Confucian texts as the civilians, in addition to martial skills such as archery and horsemanship as well as Chinese military texts, especially Sun Tzu. At the entry level exam, for instance, which was conducted by the district magistrate, the candidate had to shoot three arrows while riding his horse toward the target, which was the shape of a person. A perfect score was three hits, a good score two, and one hit earned a pass. The candidate failed if he made no hits or fell from his horse. The higher levels were made up of more and more challenging exams until the highest level, conducted at the palace in the presence of the emperor, which included not only mounted archery, but bow bending, halberd brandishing, and weight lifting. The practices of the Qing and Ming military exams was incorporated into physical education during the Republic of China.

Besides China, the military examinations were also a practice of certain Korean and Vietnamese dynasties.

Examination Procedures
By 1370, the examinations lasted between 24 and 72 hours, and were conducted in spare, isolated examination rooms; sometimes, however, it was held within cubicles. The small rooms featured two boards which could be placed together to form a bed or placed on different levels to serve as a desk and chair. In order to obtain objectivity in evaluation, candidates were identified by number rather than name, and examination answers were recopied by a third party before being evaluated to prevent the candidate's handwriting from being recognized.

In the main hall of the imperial palace during the Tang and Song Dynasties there stood two stone statues. One was of a dragon and the other of Ao, the mythical turtle whose chopped-off legs serve as pillars for the sky in Chinese legend. The statues were erected on stone plinths in the center of a flight of stairs where successful candidates (jinshi) in the palace examination lined up to await the reading of their rankings from a scroll known as the jinbang. The first ranked scholar received the title of Zhuangyuan, and the honor of standing in front of the statue of Ao. This gave rise to the use of the phrases "to have stood at Ao's head" or "to have stood alone at Ao's head" to describe a Zhuangyuan, and more generally to refer to someone who excels in a certain field.

Restrictions
Some people were banned from taking the imperial exam, although this varied to some extent over history. Traditionally, Chinese society was divided into officials/nobility and commoners. The commoners were divided by class or status into 4 groups by occupation, ranked in order of prestige: scholars, farmers, artisans, and merchants. Beneath these in terms of prestige were the so-called "mean" (as in "small" or "unworthy") people, with various regional names and attributes; but, boat-people, beggars, sex-workers, entertainers, slaves, and low-level government employees were all people included among the "mean" class: among other forms of discrimination, "mean" people were forbidden to serve as government officials or to take the imperial exam. This was the case for the caste of "degraded" outcasts in Ningbo city, where around 3,000 people, said to be Jin dynasty (the one made by nomad conquerors, not the one founded by Sima Yan) descendants, were barred from taking the Imperial Exams, among numerous other restrictions. Women were generally excluded from taking the exams. Butchers and sorcerers were also excluded at times. Merchants were generally restricted from taking the exams until the Ming and Qing dynasties. During Sui and Tang artisans were also restricted from official service; during the Song dynasty artisans and merchants were specifically excluded from the jinshi exam; and, in the Liao dynasty, physicians, diviners, butchers, and merchants were all prohibited from taking the examinations. At times, quota systems were also used to restrict the number of candidates allowed to take or to pass the imperial civil service examinations, by region or by other criteria.

Cultural Context

Chinese traditional religion responded to concerns about the imperial examination system. The examination system was also influential on the contemporary literary tradition.

From a certain viewpoint, the examination system represented the Confucian system in its most rationalist aspect. The system of testing was designed according to the principle of a society ruled by men of merit, and to achieve this by objectively measuring various candidates' knowledge and intelligence. However, in actual operation, the examination system also included various aspects of religious and mythical or irrational beliefs which made the actual reality of the examination structure more complex than the Confucian ideal.

A less scientifically rational idea which had a significant role in the cultural context of the examination system involved traditional beliefs about fate; that is, that cosmic forces predestine the certain results of certain human affairs, and particularly that individual success or failure was subject to the will of Heaven, or that the results of taking the tests could be influenced by the intervention of various deities.

Zhong Kui was a deity associated with the examination system. The story is that a certain scholar took the tests, and, despite his most excellent performance, which should have won him first place, he was unfairly deprived of the first place prize by a corrupt system: in response, he killed himself, the act of suicide condemning him to be a ghost. Many people afraid of traveling on roads and paths that may be haunted by evil spirits have worshiped Zhong Kui as an efficacious protective deity.

Also known as Kechang Yiwen Lu, the Strange Stories from the Examination Halls was a collection of stories popular at least among Confucian scholars of the Qing dynasty. The theme of many of the stories is that the good or bad deeds of individual persons during the course of their lives are causally rewarded or punished according to karmic principles, by which good deeds are cosmically rewarded by success in the examination halls, often by Heavenly-inspired deities; and, bad deeds result in failure, often resulting from the actions of the ghosts of the victims of those deeds.

Some individuals were discriminated against because of their names, due to a naming taboo. For example, because the Tang dynasty poet Li He's father's name sounded like the "jin" in "jinshi," he was discouraged from taking the tests. The claim was that if Li He was called a jinshi, it would be against the rule of etiquette that a son not be called by his father's name.
 
So many words.

According to legend, tea was first discovered by the legendary Chinese emperor and herbalist, Shennong, in the 29th century BCE. It is said that the emperor liked his drinking water boiled before he drank it so it would be clean, so that is what his servants did. One day, on a trip to a distant region, he and his army stopped to rest. A servant began boiling water for him to drink, and a dead leaf from the wild tea bush fell into the water. It turned a brownish color, but it was unnoticed and presented to the emperor anyway. The emperor drank it and found it very refreshing, and cha (tea) came into being.
Shennong didn't do a lot to get credit for and I'm not sure this deserves to be a legend either.
 
*being the mythical inventor of agriculture and medicine for the Chinese*

I dunno, that seems pretty major to me. As for the bit about tea, I have never heard of there being criteria for myths.
I don't care if he invented agriculture and medicine all he did to discover tea was not notice how manky his water looked. And his attendants did that first.

As for a criteria for myths theres definitely one, the story has to be interesting enough to pass onto the next person to tell it. Thats why Nordic, Greek, Hindu and just about any other society with some kind of oral history tradition has an interesting one.
 
I don't care if he invented agriculture and medicine all he did to discover tea was not notice how manky his water looked. And his attendants did that first.

As for a criteria for myths theres definitely one, the story has to be interesting enough to pass onto the next person to tell it. Thats why Nordic, Greek, Hindu and just about any other society with some kind of oral history tradition has an interesting one.
And yet people found Shennong's discovery of tea interesting enough to pass down to future generations. Seems like it fits those criteria to me. :V
 
I don't care if he invented agriculture and medicine all he did to discover tea was not notice how manky his water looked. And his attendants did that first.

As for a criteria for myths theres definitely one, the story has to be interesting enough to pass onto the next person to tell it. Thats why Nordic, Greek, Hindu and just about any other society with some kind of oral history tradition has an interesting one.

It's less a myth and more a folk tale, which are just ways of not having to find the real answer when your kids ask "how'd we figure out how to make tea?" and get them to stop bugging you.


So the Romance of the Three Kingdoms video game series includes an item system (or at least some of the games do). Here's the list from RTK X, which is the one I'm most familiar with along with XI (which has no new items and takes some out). There are going to be new ones I make using these ones as a guideline, but it isn't going to be a lot. I've also included some extra explanation of my own to some of the items that I actually know about.

Red Hare
Retreat Certain/Speed Up Value: 30
A horse colored as though its body was made of flame. Said to be capable of running 1,000 li (250 miles) in one day.

Hex Mark
Retreat Certain/Speed Up Value: 25
A "cursed" horse, believed by its very nature to bring misfortune to any who ride it.

Gray Lightning
Retreat Certain/Speed Up Value: 20
A favorite horse of Cao Cao's that he rode at the hunting party in Hutian with Emperor Xian.

Shadow Runner
Retreat Certain/Speed Up Value: 20
A Persian horse; a favorite of Cao Cao's. Believed capable of such speed that it casts no shadow when running.

Firestar
Retreat Certain/Speed Up Value: 15
A famous red horse from Central Asia, also called "Blood-Sweat" as it was thought to sweat blood when running.

Stout Runner
Retreat Certain/Speed Up Value: 15
A famous horse from the Korean Peninsula. Of small stature, said to be capable of carrying a rider under the low branches of a fruit tree.

Pale Stallion

Retreat Certain/Speed Up Value: 15
An entirely white horse. For creating a cavalry unit all riding white horses, Gongsun Zan was called the "Pale Horse General."

Liang's Pride

Retreat Certain/Speed Up Value: 15
A famous horse from Liang Province. Liang was known for producing horses of excellent caliber.

Four Wheeler

Retreat Certain/Speed Up Value: 20
A vehicle made of a wooden seat with four wheels. Zhuge Liang's preferred mode of transport.
Serpent Slayer
WAR +10 Value: 30
Passed down along with the Imperial Seal as a symbol of the Emperor. Said to be the sword of Liu Bang, founder of the Han Dynasty.

Seven Star Sword

WAR +7 Value: 25
A sword inlaid with seven jewels that was sharp enough to pierce armor, which Cao Cao borrowed from Wang Yun for the assassination of Dong Zhuo.

Sword of Heaven
WAR +5 Value: 20
A sword of Cao Cao's and rival to the Sword of Light. Believed to be sharp enough to pierce through Heaven.

Sword of Light

WAR +3 Value: 20
A sword made as a companion to the Sword of Heaven. Said to cut through iron as easily as through mud. Zhao Yun obtained it at Changban.

Swords of Fate

WAR +3 Value: 20
A pair of swords worn by Liu Bei, made for him by a village blacksmith when he first raised an army to battle the Yellow Turbans.

Ancestral Sword
WAR +3 Value: 15
A sword loved by Sun Jian, which he wore when commanding his army in the battle against Dong Zhuo.

Divine Blade
WAR +2 Value: 15
A sharp, straight sword that Zhuge Liang commissioned from Pu Yuan. Said to be the sharpest possible for its time.

Law Makers
WAR +2 Value: 15
A set of five swords made for Cao Cao over three years. Also called "The Five Jeweled Swords" and "The Hundred-Times Tempered Weapons."

Great Scimitar
WAR +1 Value: 5
A broad, curved, single-edged sword. A popular sword in Wu during the Spring & Autumn Period.

Saw-Tooth Blade
WAR +1 Value: 5
A curved sword with a jagged, saw-like blade.

Eyed-Hilt Blade
WAR +1 Value: 5
A double-edged straight sword with a metal ring at the end of its handle. Also called "The Ring-Handled Sword."
Green Dragon Crescent Blade
WAR +5 Value: 20
Guan Yu's beloved guandao, made by a blacksmith when Liu Bei first assembled an army to battle the Yellow Turbans.

War Trident
WAR +3 Value: 15
Ji Ling's beloved polearm, the point of which was split into a trident.

Phoenix Bite

WAR +2 Value: 10
A long-handled weapon with a blade curved like the beak of a phoenix.

Strike Voulge

WAR +1 Value: 5
A long-handled weapon with a blade curved like a man's eyebrow.

Pole Sword

WAR +1 Value: 5
A long-handled weapon with a sword blade at the tip of a pole.
Serpent Blade Halberd
WAR +5 Value: 20
Zhang Fei's beloved steel pike, made by a blacksmith when Liu Bei first raised an army to battle the Yellow Turbans. Over 15 feet in length.

Iron Serpent

WAR +3 Value: 15
Cheng Pu's beloved pike with an end curved like a snake. Used in the battle against Cai Mao.

Golden Lance
WAR +2 Value: 10
A long spear of 15 feet used by cavalry, much like a Western lance. A heavy weapon used for charging.

Jujube Spear
WAR +1 Value: 5
A spear with a handle made from the wood of the jujube tree. Jujube wood is known for its beautiful, glossy color and hardness.

Battering Spear
WAR +1 Value: 5
An ultra-long spear used in kingdoms in the Korean Peninsula. Almost 30 feet in length, each one was wielded by a small group of soldiers.

Crescent Halberd
WAR +8 Value: 25
A trident formed by a crescent shaped blade at its tip. The favorite weapon of Lu Bu.

Twin Crescent

WAR +2 Value: 10
Dian Wei's beloved trident. Stolen by Hu Ju'er in the battle against Zhang Xiu.
Great Axe
WAR +2 Value: 10
An axe with a long handle. Favorite weapon of Xu Huang.
Iron Whip
WAR +2 Value: 10
Though referred to as a whip, a weapon more like a long iron staff. Favorite weapon of Huang Gai.
Thorn Cluster
WAR +2 Value: 10
A type of pike with countless iron spikes at its tip. Favorite weapon of Shamoke, King of the Wuling Barbarians.

Iron Flail

WAR +2 Value: 10
An iron ball on a chain. Favorite weapon of Gan Ning.

Shooting Star

WAR +2 Value: 10
A thrown weapon made from two mace-heads connected at either end of a rope. Favorite weapons of Wang Shuang.

Gourd Mace

WAR +1 Value: 5
A long-handled mace with an iron head shaped like a gourd.

Bronze Mace
WAR +1 Value: 5
A long-handled mace with a bronze head.
Plum Blossom Darts
WAR +2 Value: 10
An aerial weapon modified from Sleeve Darts to allow for rapid fire. Can hold up to five darts.

Sleeve Darts

WAR +1 Value: 5
An aerial weapon, cylindrical in shape and and spring-loaded to fire short arrows. Can be concealed in the shooter's sleeve.

Flying Swords

WAR +1 Value: 5
An aerial weapon that is basically a short sword designed for throwing. Favorite weapon of Queen Zhurong, wife of Meng Huo.

Throwing Blade
WAR +1 Value: 5
An aerial weapon made from a short trident. Favorite secondary weapon of Dian Wei.

Hand Spear
WAR +1 Value: 5
An aerial weapon made from a spear with a shortened handle. Used by both Sun Ce and Taishi Ci.
Yang's Bow
WAR +3 Value: 15
The legendary bow of Yang Youji, a master archer of the Spring & Autumn Period who is said to have never missed a shot.

Li's Bow
WAR +3 Value: 15
The bow of Li Guang, the tragic hero who fought at Xiong Nu in the early Han Period. Said to have a draw so great that arrows fired from it could split boulders.

Donghu Bow

WAR +1 Value: 5
A lightweight bow meant for cavalry, used by nomadic tribes. Named after a place that would Eastern become Wuwan and Xianbei.

Leopard Bow
WAR +1 Value: 5
A sturdy bow from the Korean peninsula. Named for a tribe that used it.

Sandalwood Bow

WAR +1 Value: 5
A bow used in kingdoms in the Korean Peninsula. Made from the wood of the spindle tree, which is also used in bonsai.

Sunzi's Art of War
LDR +10 Value:30
The classic book on war written by Sunzi, famous general of Wu in the Spring & Autumn Period. Divided into 13 sections, each dealing with one important aspect of warfare. Cao Cao's commentary on this book still exists today.

Six Secret Teachings
LDR +7 Value: 25
A book on civil and military strategy accredited to Taigong Wang. Most famous for one of its volumes, "The Tiger Scroll," which discusses military equipment, tactical principles, and essential issues of command.

Three Strategies

LDR +7 Value: 25
A book on war composed by Taigong Wang, given to Zhang Liang of early Han by Huang Shigong. It is divided into three sections and focused mostly on logistics and administration in the military.

Sima's Art of War

LDR +5 Value: 20
A book on war composed by Sima Rangju, a famous general of the Spring & Autumn Period. Composed of five volumes and focused mostly on organization, administration and discipline.

Wuzi's Art of War
LDR +5 Value: 20
A book on war written during the Warring States Period by strategist Wu Qi, who is often mentioned in the same breath as Sunzi. Consists of six sections, each focusing on a critical aspect of military affairs.

Sun Bin's Art of War
LDR +3 Value: 15
A book on war written during the Warring States Period by Sun Bin, a strategist of the state of Qi and a descendant of Sunzi. An extensive work of 89 chapters, mostly devoted to developing and explaining the ideas set forth in Sunzi's Art of War.

Wei Liaozi
LDR +3 Value: 15
A book accredited to Wei Liao, a strategist who served under China's first emperor, Qin Shi Huangdi. Focuses on the necessity of proper civil administration to ensure successful military administration and the ways they affect each other.

Mozi

LDR +2 Value: 10
The collected essays of Mozi, ancestor of Mo Jia. Discusses methods of building castles and fortresses and of engaging enemies, as well as expounding on Mohist philosophy.

Wei Gongzi

LDR +2 Value: 10
A compilation of books on war that were presented by feudal lords to Lord Xinling, one of the Four Lords of the Warring States Period.

Mengde's War Manual

LDR +2 Value: 10
A book on war written by Cao Cao. Cao Cao burned the book himself after it was ridiculed by Zhang Song.

The 24 War Manuals
LDR +2 Value: 10
Zhuge Liang's book on war, which he entrusted to Jiang Wei just before his death. Discusses topics ranging from reading omens and troop formations to categorizing the different personalities and capabilities of generals.
Han Feizi
POL +10 Value: 30
A treatise written by Han Fei, a philosopher of the Warring States Period. Composed of 20 volumes and 15 sections. Its principles on governance are affected by Daoism.

Guanzi

POL +7 Value: 25
A book of sayings composed by Guan Zhong, a Prime Minister of Qi in the Spring & Autumn Period. Source of the proverb, "money makes manners." Includes discussions and overviews of subjects ranging from detailed economic discussions to overviews of soil topography.

The Book of Lord Shang
POL +7 Value: 25
A book written by Shang Yang, a Prime Minister of Qin in the Warring States Period. Known for purporting strict Legalist doctrines.

Annals of Master Yan
POL +5 Value: 20
A book of stories and speeches accredited to Yan Ying, a Prime Minister of Qi in the Warring States Period. Contains elements of both Confucian and Mohist thought.

Secrets of Zhou
POL +2 Value: 10
A book written on the strategies and policies of Taigong Wang. Researched by Su Qin, an academic and diplomat who lived during the Warring States Period.

Customs of the Han
POL +2 Value: 10
A composition of the Eastern Han. Written on the events and agriculture of the Han Period.

Discourses on Salt & Iron

POL +1 Value: 5
A composition of the Western Han. A record of debates on government policy concerning the monopolization of salt and iron by the state.
Spring & Autumn Annals
POL +5 Value: 20
A historical document on the State of Lu during the Warring States Period; one of the Five Classics. Compiled by Kongzi (Confucius).

Records of the Grand Historian

POL +5 Value: 20
A historical document written by Sima Qian during the Western Han. Chronicles people and events from the reigns of the legendary Three Sovereigns and Five Emperors to the reign of Emperor Wudi of Western Han.

History of the Han

POL +3 Value: 15
An authorized historical document written by Ban Gu of Eastern Han numbering over 100 volumes. Written in the style of Sima Qian's work.

Strategies of the Warring States

POL +3 Value: 15
A historical document recording history through policy delivered to feudal lords by academics of the Warring States Period. Edited by Liu Xiang in the Western Han.

Master Lu's Annals of the Warring States
POL +2 Value: 10
An encyclopedia composed by Lu Buwei, a Prime Minister of Qin in the Warring States Period. Details the philosophies of many of the Hundred Schools of Thought. Source of the proverb, "Great words are priceless."

Spring & Autumn Annals of Wu & Yue

POL +2 Value: 10
A historical document written during Eastern Han by Zhao Ye, narrating the history of battles between the states of Wu and Yue during the Warring States Period.

Biographies of Exemplary Women

POL +1 Value: 5
Edited by Liu Xiang of Western Han. A record of 125 prominent women throughout history, taken from various works of history.

Huainanzi
POL +1 Value: 5
A series of essays that record the geography, history and thought since ancient times. Composed by Liu An, a King of Huainan in Western Han.
Daodejing
INT +10 Value: 30
Daoist sutras that are believed to be the work of Laozi, the founder of Daoism. Better known as the Tao Te Ching.

Zhuangzi

INT +5 Value: 20
A record of essays and sayings of the Daoist sage Zhuangzi, whom it is also named for.

Analects of Confucius
INT +5 Value: 20
A Confucian text that records the sayings of Confucius. One of the Four Books of the Confucian canon along with the Great Learning, Doctrine of the Mean, and Mencius.

Book of Poetry
INT +5 Value: 20
A Confucian text and work of literary art edited by Wei Xiang. A collection of ancient poetry and one of the Five Classics.

Book of Documents

INT +3 Value: 15
A Confucian text focusing on legends and historical records of the Zhou Period. One of the Five Classics.

Book of Changes

INT +3 Value: 15
More commonly known as the Yijing or the I Ching. A Confucian text written on fortune-telling of the Zhou Period. One of the Five Classics.

Book of Rites

INT +3 Value: 15
A Confucian text recording the etiquette of the Qin and Han Periods. One of the Five Classics.
Collected Explanations of the Analects
INT +2 Value: 10
A thesis collectively compiled and edited by He Yan, Sun Yong, Zheng Chong, Cao Xi and Sun Yi of Wei in the Three Kingdoms Period, annotating the Analects of Confucius.

Treatise on Society

INT +2 Value: 10
A thesis by Cao Pi of Wei on people and government throughout China since ancient times.

Treatise on Chance

INT +2 Value: 10
A thesis by Sun He arguing to Wei Zhao that board games and games of chance are a pointless form of leisure.

Treatise on Times

INT +2 Value: 10
A thesis by Wang Ji criticizing current affairs while Cao Shuang was in power.

Treatise on Policy

INT +2 Value: 10
A thesis by Wang Chang expounding the harshness of the legal system of Wei and its need for reform.

Treatise on Magic

INT +1 Value: 5
A thesis on magicians written by Cao Zhi.

Treatise on Seasons
INT +1 Value: 5
A thesis by Kan Ze that coordinated the seasons and calendar. Adopted by Sun Quan for the official calendar of Wu.

Classic of Filial Piety

INT +1 Value: 5
A thesis by Yan Jun, scholar of the Book of Poetry, the Book of Records, and the Book of Rites.

Treatise on War

INT +1 Value: 5
A thesis by Qian Zhou of Shu on the advantages and disadvantages of war during the reign of Liu Shan.
Hua Tuo's Journal
Skill: Doctor Value: 30
A medical text by Hua Tuo recording his techniques. Contains techniques in acupuncture, moxibustion, herbal medicine, and a recipe for creating an anesthetic and methods of performing surgery. Called the "Blue Bag Book" because Hua Tuo kept it inside a blue bag with his medical implements.

Books of Healing

Skill: Doctor Value: 30
A sacred text on Daoist healing magic found by the sage Gan Ji near Quyuan Quan.

Discourses on Illness

Skill: Doctor Value: 30
A medical text in ten volumes on the treatment of fevers composed by Zhang Ji in the waning days of Han. The most revered book of Chinese medicine.
Book of Illusions
LDR +1; Skill: Wizard Value: 30
A book of magic found by the sage Zuo Ci at the cliffs of Mt. Emei. Consists of three volumes detailing the workings of Heaven, Earth and Man.

Way of Peace

LDR +1; Skill: Wizard Value: 30
The "book of heaven" that Zhang Jue received from an old sage to instruct him in the way of bringing forward an era of peace and equality. Included methods of controlling the weather.

Land and Sea Classic

LDR +1; Skill: Wizard Value: 25
A mysterious tome on the strange spirits, fairies and beasts that live in the oceans and mountains and in nature.
Map of Western Shu
LDR +1; Skill: Geo Value: 20
A map of Yi Province drawn in secret by Zhang Song and given to Liu Bei to assist him in his conquest of the west.

Map of Nanman

LDR +1; Skill: Geo Value: 20
A map of the lands south of Yi Province drawn by Lu Kai. Given to Zhuge Liang to assist him in his conquest of the south.

Open-Breast Coat
Value: 15
An outer garment worn by women of western China at marriage. Colored in bright blue and crimson.

Hanging Gold Earring

Value: 15
A gilded earring. Originated in western China and valued as a symbol of nobility among women.

Earring
Value: 5
An earring worn by women.

Agate
Value: 25
A jewel patterned in irregular stripes with colors such as red, green and white. Found in western China.

Kingfisher

Value: 25
A beautiful, bright green jewel. Named for the brightly colored species of bird.

Pearl
Value: 25
A shiny white jewel worn as ornamentation on clothes. Found on the eastern shores of China.

Silk Incense Pouch

Value: 10
A small silk bag filled with aromatic herbs and embroidered with designs, such as bats.

Incense Pouch
Value: 5
An incense case worn at the waist.

Topaz

Value: 20
A crystalline shining jewel. Found in western China.

Jasper

Value: 20
A jewel patterned in colors such as red, green and brown, usually in stripes or spots. Often cut into a comma-like shape.

Sapphire
Value: 20
A beautiful semi-transparent blue jewel. A type of corundum. Found in western China.

Ruby
Value: 20
A red jewel that shows many variations in color, particularly red. Found in western China.
Yi Di Brew
Drink with Officers Value: 25
A type of wine purportedly made by Yi Di, the inventor of wine. Known as "the greatest wine under Heaven."

Du Kang Brew
Drink with Officers Value: 25
White wine made by the master wine-maker Du Kang in Luoyang. Praised in a poem by Cao Cao.

Halcyon

Drink with Officers Value: 15
A medical wine made by Zhang Fei specially for his men. A sweet wine also called "Zhang Fei's Wine."

Flotsam
Drink with Officers Value: 20
One of the five wines recorded in the Book of Rites. An unrefined wine made from coarse rice water with floating rice grains.

Nectar

Drink with Officers Value: 20
One of the five wines recorded in the Book of Rites. Mixed Old Standard fermented overnight. Has a mildly sweet flavor.

Spirit
Drink with Officers Value: 20
One of the five wines recorded in the Book of Rites. Made by extracting the dregs from unrefined wine.

Old Standard
Drink with Officers Value: 15
One of the three liquors recorded in the Book of Rites. Made simply of fermented rice water.

Silver Standard

Drink with Officers Value: 15
One of the three liquors recorded in the Book of Rites. Made by aging Old Standard and extracting the dregs.

Pure Standard
Drink with Officers Value: 15
One of the three liquors recorded in the Book of Rites. Old Standard that has been aged longer than Silver Standard, until it is completely clear.

Yellow Wine
Drink with Officers Value: 5
A wine made from fermented millet and rice. A specialty of Jiangnan.

Elder Wine
Drink with Officers Value: 5
Yellow Wine that has been ripened with age. The longer it's aged, the stronger the flavor.

Panacea
Drink with Officers Value: 10
A medicinal variety of Yellow Wine in which medicinal herbs have been dissolved.

Ginseng Wine
Drink with Officers Value: 10
A medicinal wine made from ginseng and drunken for its nutritional value.

Fruit Wine

Drink with Officers Value: 15
A fruit-based wine made with grapes, apricots and apples. Imported to China from Western and Central Asia through the Silk Road.

Grape Wine

Drink with Officers Value: 10
A grape wine imported through the Silk Road from Western and Central Asia. Said to be a favorite of Cao Pi's.

Mother's Love
Drink with Officers Value: 20
A milk wine drunk by nomadic groups in northern China. Made from the milk of horses and sheep.

Sweet Stalk
Drink with Officers Value: 15
A sweet beer made with grass shoots converted to sugar and used as malt.

Tranquility
Drink with Officers Value: 10
A light-flavored wine popular in the Han Dynasty. Mentioned in Zheng Xuan's notes on the Shiming.

Prosperity

Drink with Officers Value: 10
A wine popular in the Han Dynasty. Mentioned in Zheng Xuan's notes on the Shiming.

Grog
Drink with Officers Value: 5
An unfiltered, unrefined wine made from rice water that has been further watered down.
Anodyne
Lifespan Extension Value: 30
The world's oldest known anesthetic, created by Hua Tuo. Allowed Hua Tuo to perform surgery without causing pain to the patient.

Leaf Paste
Lifespan Extension Value: 25
A nutritional supplement made by grinding lacquer tree leaves with rice paste. Believed to have been taught to Fan A by Hua Tuo.

Dog's Blood
Lifespan Extension Value: 25
A medicine invented by Hua Tuo and used to treat patients suffering from vertigo.

Five-Mineral Powder
Lifespan Extension Value: 20
A nerve stimulant concocted from minerals such as limestone, sulfur and white quartz. Popularized by He Yan, who believed it stimulated creativity.

Warrior's Advance

Lifespan Extension Value: 20
A medicine made for Zhuge Liang's soldiers to help them bear the heat during the Southern Campaign. Also called "Zhuge's March."

Eternal Serum

Lifespan Extension Value: 20
A miracle drug created by Hua Tuo from pepper and seven other medicinal herbs to promote long life. Said to be the origin of spiced wine still drunk today.
He's Jade Disc
Value: 30
A jade disc that is the origin of the Japanese word for "perfection." Found by Bian He and given to the King of Chu; it was eventually carved into the Imperial Seal.

Jade Ring
Value: 20
A disc made from white jade, originating in western China and transported on the Silk Road.

Dragon Disc

Value: 20
A white jade disc with an engraving of two dragons.

Jade Coin

Value: 15
A circular stone jade stone, sometimes used in place of currency for trade.

Dragon Vase
Value: 10
A sectioned square pot decorated with the Nine Offspring of the Dragon.

Gold Vase

Value: 10
A bronze pot inlaid with gold. Engraved with birds in the shape of characters that invoke good luck.

Cauldron
Value: 15
A tripod kettle cast of bronze in the Zhou Dynasty.

Mao Gong Kettle
Value: 15
A tripod kettle engraved with 497 characters describing the consignment of the Zhou government to elders.

Da Yu Kettle
Value: 15
A tripod kettle presented by the King of Zhou to one of his retainers. Engraved with 291 characters.

Beast Kettle
Value: 10
A tripod kettle cast in the Shang Dynasty. Engraved with a taotie, a brutal an voracious mythical beast.

Lacquered Kettle
Value: 5
A lacquered wooden tripod kettle with clouds drawn in vermillion and silver on a black background.

Gold Flare Censor
Value: 20
A gilded bronze incense burner. Decorated with delicate gold lines.

Offering Censor
Value: 15
A ceramic incense burner used as furnishing in funerals and tombs.

Bronze Censor

Value: 5
A bronze incense burner used generally in everyday life.

Tripod Decanter

Value: 15
A wine container supported on three legs. Often used for drinking heated wine.

Offering Decanter

Value: 10
An impressive, sturdy container for holding wine that is offered to the gods.

Ornamented Decanter
Value: 10
A strong, beautiful wine container made in the Zhou Dynasty.

Sheep Decanter
Value: 5
A bronze wine container in the shape of a sheep.

Sparrow Decanter

Value: 5
A bronze wine container in the shape of a sparrow.

Lu's Mirror
Value: 15
A copper mirror engraved with a nobleman and a mythical beast.

Longevity Mirror

Value: 15
A copper mirror engraved with rare people and animals. Common in the Han Dynasty.

Four-Spirits Mirror

Value: 15
A copper mirror engraved with four sacred creatures: the azure dragon, white tiger, vermillion bird and black warrior.

Mythical Mirror

Value: 10
A copper mirror with a lifelike engraving of people an animals of legend.

Dragon-Child Mirror
Value: 10
A copper mirror engraved with images of hermits and mountain sages.

Intellectual Mirror

Value: 15
A water mirror used by Zhi Shi in the Spring & Autumn Period. A water mirror is a basin filled with water to reflect one's image.

Beast Mirror
Value: 10
A water mirror engraved with pictures of beasts. People relied on the reflectiveness of water before the proliferation of proper mirrors.

Immortal Charm
Value: 25
A Daoist charm given by Lao Tzu to his disciple Xu Jia, thus granting him eternal life.

Recluse Charm
Value: 15
A Daoist charm that protects ascetics from danger when they retire to the mountains.

Five Summits Charm
Value: 15
A Daoist charm that repels danger and attracts fortune.

Three Rulers Charm
Value: 15
A Daoist charm that prevents all forms of disaster.

Demon Charm
Value: 20
A charm used in shamanism and heretical Taoist sects. Said to have been used by Zhang Lu.

Buddhist Sutra
Value: 25
A sutra on the teachings of the Buddha. Originated in India and reached China through the Silk Road.

Soul Sutra
Value: 20
A Daoist sutra propagated by Zuo Ci and later compiled in the Baopuzi by Ge Hong.

Nine Kettles Sutra
Value: 15
A Daoist sutra on mineral refinement and life preservation. Records methods for tempering minerals into a life-extending potion.

Imperial Sutra
Value: 20
A Daoist sutra on the philosophies of Huangdi and Laozi, which were highly valued by sovereigns of the Western Han Dynasty.

Zither
Value: 10
A stringed instrument loved for centuries for its elegant sound.

Harp

Value: 10
A stringed instrument used in accompaniment to the zither. Origin of the saying, "as happily married as harp and zither."

Cloud Gong
Value: 10
A percussion instrument; a type of chime used in the Zhou period. Comprised of anywhere from 8 to 22 bells of varying sizes.

Great Chime
Value: 5
A percussion instrument made from bells of various sizes and fastened to a wooden crossbar. Produces numerous tones when struck.

Sable Fur
Value: 10
A garment made from the fur of a sable. A sable is a carnivorous animal related to the weasel.

Fox Fur
Value: 10
A garment made from the fur of a fox. Also made in a variety using only the white parts of foxes.

Wool Coat
Value: 10
A garment made of wool. Used mostly by nomadic tribes in northern China.

White Feather Fan
Value: 20
A fan made of pure white feathers. A favorite style of Zhuge Liang.

Feather Fan
Value: 5
A fan made from feathers.

Ginseng
Value: 20
Grown in the Korean peninsula and northern China. Famous for its use in Chinese medicine.

Creamed Milk

Value: 10
A type of yogurt made from the fermented milk of horses or sheep. Often eaten by northern Chinese nomadic tribes.

Tea
Value: 15
Originated in southern China. A luxury item and medicine at this time, it was ground into powder and mixed with hot water.

Elephant Whip

Value: 15
A whip meant for training elephants for use in battle.

Nomad Rug
Value: 15
A rug woven from wool. Used by nomadic tribes from northern China.

Faerie Stone
Value: 5
A gilded bronze inkstone studded with jewels.

Kneeling Lady
Value: 5
A gilded bronze candlestick in the shape of a kneeling court lady.

Bull Lantern

Value: 5
A bronze candlestick in the shape of a bull.

Grain Pot
Value: 5
Green glazed pottery made in the coastal region of southern China and decorated with carvings. Mostly used to store grains.

Bronze Horsecart
Value: 10
A bronze statue in the shape of a horse carriage. Many have been unearthed from the tomb of Qin Shi Huangdi.

Bronze Horse
Value: 10
A bronze statue in the shape of a horse. Many have been unearthed from the tomb of Qin Shi Huangdi.

Lacquer

Value: 5
Used for preserving and assembling weapons and tableware. Mostly a specialty of southern China.

Abacus
Value: 5
A calculating instrument used since ancient times. Invented by Guan Yu according to one legend.

Chinaware
Value: 5
Pottery from western China. Transported on the Silk Road.
Imperial Seal
Charisma 100; Fame +30 Value: 50
A jade seal that Emperor Qin Shi Huangdi had made from the jewels of Lantian, including He's Jade Disc. Proof that one holds the mandate of Heaven and is the legitimate Emperor.

Nine Bestowments
Fame +30 Value: 40
Nine treasures and rights presented especially by the Emperor to people of distinguished service. The precedent set by Wang Mang caused them to become used typically by powerful officials to show their control of the emperor and tacitly announce their intention to usurp the throne.

Bronze Pheasant
Fame +20 Value: 40
Dug up by Cao Cao after subduing northern China. Xun You quoted from the legend of King Shun to interpret it as a lucky omen.
[/SPOILER]
 
Last edited:
For the benefit of everyone, I have taken the liberty to talk a bit more about some of the items listed.
Red Hare
Retreat Certain/Speed Up Value: 30
A horse colored as though its body was made of flame. Said to be capable of running 1,000 li (250 miles) in one day.
Lu Bu's (and later Guan Yu's) Horse. Needs no other explanation.
Hex Mark
Retreat Certain/Speed Up Value: 25
A "cursed" horse, believed by its very nature to bring misfortune to any who ride it.
Liu Bei's horse at one point in time.
Sunzi's Art of War
LDR +10 Value:30
The classic book on war written by Sunzi, famous general of Wu in the Spring & Autumn Period. Divided into 13 sections, each dealing with one important aspect of warfare. Cao Cao's commentary on this book still exists today.
Which I think is something of a bloody miracle and showing off just how well records are kept.
Treatise on Society
INT +2 Value: 10
A thesis by Cao Pi of Wei on people and government throughout China since ancient times.
Which should not exist yet at quest start.
Treatise on Times
INT +2 Value: 10
A thesis by Wang Ji criticizing current affairs while Cao Shuang was in power.

Treatise on Policy
INT +2 Value: 10
A thesis by Wang Chang expounding the harshness of the legal system of Wei and its need for reform.

Treatise on War
INT +1 Value: 5
A thesis by Qian Zhou of Shu on the advantages and disadvantages of war during the reign of Liu Shan.
These too.
Hua Tuo's Journal
Skill: Doctor Value: 30
A medical text by Hua Tuo recording his techniques. Contains techniques in acupuncture, moxibustion, herbal medicine, and a recipe for creating an anesthetic and methods of performing surgery. Called the "Blue Bag Book" because Hua Tuo kept it inside a blue bag with his medical implements.
This was one of the bigger losses form the period. Because the wife of the person who got possession of it burnt it under the logic that Hua Tuo's medical knowledge cost him his life when he tried to treat Cao Cao, which I, frankly speaking find utterly enraging. (the logic under which the book was burnt)
Way of Peace
LDR +1; Skill: Wizard Value: 30
The "book of heaven" that Zhang Jue received from an old sage to instruct him in the way of bringing forward an era of peace and equality. Included methods of controlling the weather.
Maybe add in some effects if one reads it?
Map of Western Shu
LDR +1; Skill: Geo Value: 20
A map of Yi Province drawn in secret by Zhang Song and given to Liu Bei to assist him in his conquest of the west.

Map of Nanman
LDR +1; Skill: Geo Value: 20
A map of the lands south of Yi Province drawn by Lu Kai. Given to Zhuge Liang to assist him in his conquest of the south.
Logically speaking, there should also be maps for almost everywhere. Still, considering the scale of the maps, a complete map of China should give more potent bonuses.
Considering the standards of the time... maybe include some joke/harmful medicine too? Like say... Primitive Gunpowder or Mercury.
Imperial Seal
Charisma 100; Fame +30 Value: 50
A jade seal that Emperor Qin Shi Huangdi had made from the jewels of Lantian, including He's Jade Disc. Proof that one holds the mandate of Heaven and is the legitimate Emperor.
Not that it helped anyone who held it. Damn thing is cursed, I tell you.
 
Last edited:
Lu Bu's (and later Guan Yu's) Horse. Needs no other explanation.

A line I want to use: "They say that as Red Hare is the horse among horses, so Lu Bu is the man among men. But... seeing him fight, I have to wonder if Lu Bu is truly human at all..." It's from Ravages of Time, and I think it really gets across the sense of horrified awe his enemies would see when Lu Bu fought.

Which I think is something of a bloody miracle and showing off just how well records are kept.

I've actually read his commentary, incidentally.

This was one of the bigger losses form the period. Because the wife of the person who got possession of it burnt it under the logic that Hua Tuo's medical knowledge cost him his life when he tried to treat Cao Cao, which I, frankly speaking find utterly enraging. (the logic under which the book was burnt)

First anesthetic ever invented. It's believed to have been made from cannabis and/or alcohol. Then after his death, Chinese medicine just completely disavowed surgery as a medical practice because of beliefs about cutting people open. Damn shame.

Maybe add in some effects if one reads it?

That's what "Skill: Wizard" is for.

Logically speaking, there should also be maps for almost everywhere. Still, considering the scale of the maps, a complete map of China should give more potent bonuses.

If you look at most ancient maps, they weren't really useful for coordinating military forces.

Considering the standards of the time... maybe include some joke/harmful medicine too? Like say... Primitive Gunpowder or Mercury.

Five-Mineral Powder is a psychoactive drug usually made from fluorite, quartz, red bole clay, stalactite and sulfur. It's called "Cold Food Powder" because users would eat cold foods and bathe in cold water to try to counteract the drug-induced hypothermia. It killed a lot of people, believe me. In the Three Kingdoms Period, the physician Huangfu Mi took it to recover from a stroke and died of it. Before his death, he wrote: "The longest one can hope to live when taking the drug is ten years or so; for some, it is only five or six. Even though I myself can still see and breathe, my words resemble the loud laugh of someone who is presently drowning." He Yan of Wei was the one who popularized the drug, BTW.
 
First anesthetic ever invented. It's believed to have been made from cannabis and/or alcohol. Then after his death, Chinese medicine just completely disavowed surgery as a medical practice because of beliefs about cutting people open. Damn shame.
Considering he wanted to cut open Cao Cao's head for brain surgery, I kinda do get why Cao Cao freaked the hell out, though. Honestly, I do wonder if he could have even pulled off the procedure i the first place. Especially brain surgery at the 3rd Century. It is quite possible that the Anesthetic provided would not work enough.
That's what "Skill: Wizard" is for.
I meant in the sense that what effect it has on the reader's personality and thinkng. Especially if this is something that can shake one's thoughts or the reader is still relatively young.
I've actually read his commentary, incidentally.
I am really jealous about that, actually. His commentary is in Chinese, of course, so I have to look around for Chinese sources instead of going for translated English online. (I tried for the English versions, but zilch)
 
Back
Top