Chinese nobility
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[edit] Wang (King) and Huangdi (Emperor)
- The King, or Wang (Chinese: 王 or 國王; wáng), was the title of the Chinese head of state until the Qin dynasty. The title "Wang" should not be confused with the common surname, which has no royal implications. A King can be subordinate to an Emperor.
- The Emperor or Huangdi (皇帝, pinyin: huáng dì) was the title of the Chinese head of state of China from the Qin dynasty in 221 BC until the fall of the Qing dynasty in 1911. The characters huang (皇 huáng "august") and di (帝 "God") came to refer to the Yellow Emperor, the ancient rulers in Chinese mythology. The first emperor of Qin (Qin Shi Huang) combined the two characters to form the title "Huangdi". Since the Han dynasty, Huangdi began to be abbreviated to huang or di.
Although formally The Son of Heaven, the power of the emperor varied between different emperors and different dynasties, with some emperors being absolute rulers and others being figureheads with actual power in the hands of court factions, eunuchs, the bureaucracy or noble families. In addition, royal or official titles from one dynasty generally were not carried over to the next dynasty.
The title of emperor was transmitted from father to son. Usually the first-born son of the queen inherited the office, but this rule was not universal and disputed succession was the cause of a number of civil wars. Unlike the Emperor of Japan, traditional Chinese political theory allowed for a change in dynasty, and an emperor could be replaced by a rebel leader. This was because a successful rebel leader was believed to enjoy the mandate of heaven, while the deposed or defeated emperor had lost favour with the gods, and his mandate was over, a fact made apparent to all by his defeat.
It was generally not possible for a female to succeed to the throne, so that in history of China there has only been one reigning Empress, the Empress Wu of the Tang dynasty, although there are numerous cases in which a woman was the actual power behind the imperial throne (see éminence grise).
[edit] Princehood and Peerage
[edit] Fengjian and Zongfa of the Zhou Dynasty
The social system of the Zhou Dynasty is sometimes referred to as the Chinese proto-feudalism and was the combination of Fengjian (Honours and Awards) and Zongfa (Clan Law). Male aristocracies were classified into, in descending order of rank:
- the nobles - Zhuhou (諸侯 pinyin zhū hóu),
- the gentlemen ministers (of the royal court) - Qing (卿 qīng),
- the gentlemen bureaucrats- Daifu (大夫 dài fū)
- the yeomen - Shi (士 shì)
- the commoners - Shumin (庶民 shù mín).
Fengjian (Honours and Awards) divided the noble class further into (originally) five ranks. The sizes of troops and domains a male noble would command would be determined by his rank of peerage:
- duke or prince (gong, ch. 公(爵) gōng),
- marquis or marquess (hou, ch. 侯(爵) hóu),
- count or earl (bo, ch. 伯(爵) bó),
- viscount (zi, ch. 子(爵) zǐ),
- baron (nan, ch. 男(爵) nán).
While before the Han Dynasty a peer with a place name in his title actually governed that place, it had only been nominally true since. Any male member of the nobility or gentry could be called a gongzi (公子 gōng zǐ) (or wangzi (王子 wáng zǐ) if he is a son of a king, i.e. prince).
Zongfa (宗法, Clan Law), which applied to all social classes, governed the primogeniture of rank and succession of other siblings. The eldest son of the consort would inherit the title and retained the same rank within the system. Other sons from the consort, concubines and mistresses would be given titles one rank lower than their father.
As time went by, all terms had lost their original meanings nonetheless. Qing (卿), Daifu (大夫) and Shi (士) became synonyms of court officials. Physicians were often called Daifu during the Late Imperial China. Referring to a male or self-reference of a male as Gongzi eventually became a way to raise one's mianzi (refer to Face (social custom)), and would indeed be considered flattery today.
[edit] Female Nobility
Titles of female members of the aristocracies varied in different dynasties and eras, each having unique classifications for the spouses of the emperor. Any female member excluding a spouse of an emperor can be called a princess or gongzhu (公主 gōng zhǔ), and incorporated her associated place into her title if she had one.
[edit] History
Before the Qin dynasty, Wang (king) was the title for the ruler of whole China. Under him were the Zhuhou or nobles, who were the local warlords. They had the duty to support the Zhou king during an emergency. In the Spring and Autumn Period, the Zhou kings had lost most of their powers, and the most powerful Zhuhou became the de facto ruler of China. Finally, in the Warring States Period, most Zhuhou declared themselves Wang or kings, and regarded themselves as equal to the Zhou king. After Zheng, king of the state of Qin, later known as Qin Shi Huang, defeated all other Wang and unified China, he took a new title Huangdi (emperor).
The founder of the Han Dynasty, Liu Bang, continued to use the title Huangdi. In order to appease his wartime allies, he gave each of them a piece of land as their own "kingdom" (Wangguo) along with a title of Wang. He eventually killed all of them and replaced them with members of his family. These kingdoms remained effectively independent until the Rebellion of the Seven States. Since then, Wang became merely the highest hereditary title, which roughly corresponded to the title of prince, and, as such, was commonly given to relatives of the emperor. The title Gong also reverted purely to a peerage title, ranking below Wang. Those who bore such titles were entirely under the auspices of the emperor, and had no ruling power of their own. The two characters combined to form the rank, Wanggong, grew to become synonymous with all higher court officials.
During the Tang dynasty, nobles lost most of their power to the mandarins when imperial examination replaced the nine-rank system.
Subsequent dynasties expanded the hereditary titles further. It should be noted, however, that not all titles of peerage are hereditary, and the right to continue the heredity passsage of a very high title was seen as a very high honour; at the end of the Qing dynasty, there were five grades of princes. These titles were usually awarded to the relatives of the Emperor:
- qinwang (親王, prince of the blood or prince of the first rank)
- junwang (郡王, prince of a commandery or prince of the second rank)
- beile (貝勒, 'lord' in Manchu)
- beizi (貝子)
- shizi (世子, the heir apparent to a qinwang)
- zhangzi (長子, the heir apparent to a junwang)
as well as:
- guogong (國公 national duke - two sub-grades)
- jiangjun (將軍 general - four sub-grades, each further divided into sub-classes)
- efu or fuma (額駙/駙馬 originally the spouse of a princess of the blood)
and nine grades of the peerage awarded for valour, achievement, and distinction (All but the lowest two grades are further divided into sub-classes):
- mingong (民公 'commoner'(i.e. non-imperial) duke)
- hou (侯 marquess or marquis)
- bo (伯 count)
- zi (子 viscount)
- nan (男 baron)
- qingche duwei (轻车都尉 roughly equivalent to the rank of Knight Grand Cross of an Order (decoration))
- qi duwei (骑都尉 roughly equivalent to the rank of Knight Commander or Grand Officer of an Order (decoration))
- yunqiwei (云骑尉 roughly equivalent to the rank of Companion or Commander of an Order (decoration))
- enqiwei (恩骑尉 roughly equivalent to the rank of Officer of an Order (decoration))
A few Chinese families enjoyed hereditary titles in the full sense, the chief among them being the Holy Duke of Yen (the descendant of Confucius); others, such as the lineal descendants of Wen Tianxiang, ennobled the Duke of Xingguo, not claiming use of their hereditary title. The Imperial Clansmen consisted of those who trace their descent direct from the founder of the Qing dynasty, and were distinguished by the privilege of wearing a yellow girdle; collateral relatives of the imperial house wore a red girdle. Twelve degrees of nobility (in a descending scale as one generation succeeds another) were conferred on the descendants of every emperor; in the thirteenth generation the descendants of emperors were merged in the general population, save that they retain the yellow girdle. The heads of eight houses, the Iron-capped (or helmeted) princes, maintained their titles in perpetuity by rule of primogeniture in virtue of having helped the Manchu conquest of China.
All titles of nobility were officially abolished when China became a republic in 1912. They were briefly revived under Yuan Shikai's empire and after Zhang Xun's coup. The last emperor was allowed to keep his title but was treated as a foreign monarch until the 1924 coup. Manchukuo also had titles of nobility.
[edit] Other Historical Chinese Titles
Protector General (都護; Duhu) – See e.g. Ban Chao.
[edit] Styles for Foreign Monarchs
Traditional Chinese political theory held that "all lands under Heaven belong to the emperor" (普天之下,莫非王土). Thus, a foreign monarch would also be referred to as Wang, implying that one was inferior in rank and thus subject to the Chinese Emperor.
In modern Chinese, a king is referred to as Wang, while an emperor would be referred to as Huangdi. The king in those times were referred to as the mandate of heaven. Therefore Victoria of the United Kingdom was styled Nü-Wang (Queen) of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and Nü-Huang (Empress) of India.
This article incorporates text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica, which is in the public domain.