- The
Censorate was a high-level
supervisory agency in
Imperial China,
first established during the Qin
dynasty (221–207 BC). The
Censorate was a highly...
- in the
secret police. The
emperor sought order through purges in the
Censorate and
military service reforms in 1428, but
these didn't
fully address inefficiencies...
- Hu
Weiyong in 1380, the
Hongwu Emperor abolished the Secretariat, the
Censorate, and the
Chief Military Commission and
personally took
charge of the Six...
- Yuan and Ming
practice of
three parallel lines, civil, military, and
censorate, or surveillance. Each
province was
administered by a
governor (巡撫, xunfu)...
- the
Privy Council (樞密院; Shūmì Yuàn) to
manage military affairs, and the
Censorate to
conduct internal surveillance and inspection. The
actual functions...
-
important posts in the Secretariat, the
Bureau of
Military Affairs, and the
Censorate.
Taking 1,800 men with him, Kuśala set out for Dadu. On 26 August, he...
- (ancient)
Three Lords:
Chancellor –
executive leader Imperial Secretary (
Censorate chief and also
Deputy Chancellor) –
supervisory leader Grand Commandant...
- Zuo
Guangdou (12
October 1575 – 26
August 1625) was a
prominent censorate official in the
early 17th century. He
detained hundreds of fake
officials and...
- (25–220).
Under Emperor Guangwu, Du Shi was
appointed as an
officer in the
Censorate and was in
charge of
monitoring affairs and
upholding law and
order within...
- as
grand councillors from 1265, and Oz-temur of the
Arulad headed the
censorate. Borokhula's descendant, Ochicher,
headed a
kheshig (Mongolian imperial...