Testimonials
Today, the book of "Sword Shock Mountain" is finally finished, and it was originally planned to take 3,000 chapters to be completed in three years, but the truth is impossible, because I have to eat, drink, and Lazar! I have to bow to real life, start a new book, and continue the content of the rest of the story in that book, the title of the book is "The Legend of the Dao Immortals".
This book lasted one year and three months, first mixed in the book flag for a few months, others introduced here, that sentence is really not wrong, always thought that hard writing can go against the sky, the fact is another ruthless slap in the face, all the way a person quietly walked over, this person wrote the loneliness of the book, who knows? is sad or helpless, first wish everyone a happy 2018 Spring Festival!
Tiren Pavilion Tiren Pavilion is located on the east side of the square in front of the Taihe Palace, facing west. Founded in the eighteenth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1420), it was called Wenlou in the early Ming Dynasty, it was renamed Wenzhao Pavilion in Jiajing, and it was renamed Tiren Pavilion in the early Qing Dynasty. Tiren Pavilion is 25 meters high, located on the top of the Chongji, two floors above and below, the top of the yellow glazed tile palace. The lower floor is 9 rooms wide and 3 rooms deep. During the Kangxi period, Zeng Zhao recommended erudition to the scholars to try poems in the Tiren Pavilion, and the imperial faces of the Qing Dynasty were also collected here. After the reconstruction during the Qianlong period, it was used as the satin warehouse of the Qing Dynasty Internal Affairs Office, and there were 143 wooden frames for storing satin embroidery.
Hongyi Pavilion Hongyi Pavilion is 23.8 meters high and belongs to the first three halls. Yellow glazed tiles, the top of the palace, 9 rooms wide, 3 rooms deep, two floors above and below, corridors on all sides. Hongyi Pavilion stands on the southwest side of the Taihe Palace. It was built in the Yongle year of the Ming Dynasty at the beginning, named Wulou, renamed Wucheng Pavilion in the Jiajing Dynasty of the Ming Dynasty, and changed to the present name in the early Qing Dynasty, which means to carry forward the righteousness. The Hongyi Pavilion of the Qing Dynasty was used for a long time to store gold and silver utensils used in the court. Now it is set up as the exhibition hall of "Imperial Ritual Music Exhibition".
Qianqing Gate Qianqing Gate is the main palace gate of the inner court of the Forbidden City. It was built in the eighteenth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1420) and rebuilt in the twelfth year of Shunzhi in the Qing Dynasty (1655). The Qianqing façade is 5 rooms wide, 3 rooms deep, about 16 meters high, the single eaves rest mountain roof, is located on the white marble Sumeru seat of 1.5 meters high, surrounded by carved stone railings. Three out of three steps in front of the door, the middle is the royal road stone, a pair of bronze gilt lions on both sides, three doors are opened. The east of the Qianqing Gate is the inner left door and the Jiuqing duty room, and the west inner right door and the military aircraft office. The east and west ends of the square in front of the door are Jingyun Gate and Longzong Gate. Qianqing Gate is an important passage connecting the inner court and the outer courts, in the Qing Dynasty and also a place to deal with government affairs, the Qing Dynasty's "Imperial Gate to listen to the government", fasting, please treasure and other ceremonies are held in the Qianqing Gate.
The Qianqing Palace is one of the three palaces after the inner court. It was built in the eighteenth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1420), the Ming and Qing dynasties were burned down several times and rebuilt, and the existing building was built in the third year of Jiaqing in the Qing Dynasty (1798). Qianqing Palace is the top of the yellow glazed tile heavy eaves palace, is located on the single-layer white marble pedestal, the corridor is 9 rooms wide, 5 rooms deep, the construction area is 1400 square meters, from the table top to the ridge is more than 20 meters high, and the eaves corner is placed 9 ridges. On the spacious platform in front of the palace, there are copper turtles, copper cranes on the left and right respectively, sundials, Jialiang, set up gilt incense burners 4 in front, are in the middle of the Dan Majesty, connect with the high platform Yonglu and the Qianqing gate. The Qianqing Palace is the largest building in the inner court, and a total of 14 emperors of the Ming Dynasty have lived here. The Qianqing Palace in the Ming Dynasty was also used as a funeral place for the emperor. Qing Shunzhi and Kangxi also lived here. After Yongzheng, the building storage box of the secret crown prince was stored behind the "Zhengda Guangming" plaque of the Qianqing Palace. The Kangxi and Qianlong dynasties also held a thousand banquets here. It is now displayed in the original state of court life.
Jiaotai Hall is one of the three palaces after the inner court, located between the Qianqing Palace and the Kunning Palace, and was built during the Jiajing period of the Ming Dynasty. The plane of the Jiaotai Hall is square, with 3 rooms deep and wide. Set up the throne in the bright room, hang the Kangxi Emperor's imperial book "Wu Wei" plaque, there is a plate screen behind the throne, and the Qianlong Emperor's imperial system "Jiaotai Palace Inscription" is written. Jiao Tai Hall is the place where the queen is celebrated on the Thousand Autumn Festival. The Qing Dynasty stored twenty-five treasure seals in this hall. In the first month of each year, when Qin Tianjian chooses an auspicious day, he sets up a case to open Chen Bao, and the emperor comes here to pay homage to incense. The iron plate set up by the ancestor of the Qing Dynasty that "the inner palace is not allowed to interfere in political affairs" once stood in this hall. When the emperor got married, the queen's book and Bao'an were set up in the palace on the left and right. Every spring, the silkworm is worshipped, and the queen is here one day before to check the utensils for picking mulberry.
Kunning PalaceKunning Palace is one of the three palaces after the inner court, was built in the eighteenth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1420), the Qing Dynasty was rebuilt in the second year of Shunzhi (1645) along the Ming system, and the Qingning Palace in Shenyang Shengjing was rebuilt again in the twelfth year of Shunzhi (1655). Kunning palace seat north facing south, face wide corridor 9 rooms, into the depth of 3 rooms, yellow glazed tile heavy eaves on the top of the palace. In the Ming Dynasty, it was the queen's dormitory. After the 12th year of Shunzhi in the Qing Dynasty, it was the main place for shamanism to worship the gods. The original bright room door was changed to the east room door opening, and the four rooms on the west side of the door were set up with three kangs on the south, north and west sides, as a place to worship the gods. Emperor Kangxi, Tongzhi and Guangxu of the Qing Dynasty got married here, and Puyi's marriage was also held in Kunning Palace. It is now displayed in the original state of court life. [37]
The Imperial Garden is located on the central axis of the Forbidden City, behind the Kunning Palace, called the "Palace Garden" in the Ming Dynasty and the Imperial Garden in the Qing Dynasty. It was built in the eighteenth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1420), and there were additions and repairs later, and the basic pattern of the initial construction is still retained. The whole park is 80 meters long from north to south, 140 meters wide from east to west, and covers an area of 12,000 square meters. The main building in the park, the Qin'an Palace, is a heavy eaves dome type, located on the north-south axis of the Forbidden City, with it as the center, with pavilions and pavilions spread out in front and on both sides. The pine, cypress, bamboo and mountain rocks in the garden form an evergreen garden landscape in all seasons.
The Imperial Pavilion is located on the top of a rockery on the east side of the Imperial Garden. It was originally the former site of the Ming Dynasty Flower Palace, and it was changed to a rockery in Wanli. There is a climbing road between the east and west rocks of the mountain, and you can climb the steps to reach the Yujing Pavilion on the top of the mountain. The pavilion is square in plan, four columns, one bucket and two liters of leaves and buckets, the spire is accumulated, covered with emerald green glazed tiles, the yellow glazed tiles are trimmed, the gilded treasure is crowned, and the partition door is set on all sides. It is surrounded by white marble railings. The ceiling caisson in the pavilion is set up with a throne facing south. The Imperial Pavilion is the place where the emperor and empress ascend on the Double Ninth Festival in the ninth month of the lunar calendar. From the pavilion, you can overlook the palace garden, overlooking the Forbidden City, Jingshan,
The hall is located on the east side of the pile of Xiu Mountain in the Imperial Garden, according to the south of the wall, 5 rooms are wide, the yellow glazed tile is the top of the mountain, and there is a small door on the west wall of the hall, which can lead to the west ear room. The corridor in front of the hall is opened, and the door is opened in the open room, and the sill window is between the second tip. Bookshelves are placed indoors, which are the places where books are stored in the palace. Forty-four years after Qianlong (1779), the "Siku Quanshu Hui Yao" was stored here.
The Yangxin Hall is located on the west side of the three palaces after the inner court and the south of the west six palaces. It was originally built in the Jiajing period of the Ming Dynasty (mid-16th century) and has been used as the emperor's palace. Since the beginning of the Yongzheng Dynasty of the Qing Dynasty, it has been used as the emperor's main residence and daily administration, and has become the de facto sleeping place of the Qing Dynasty emperor. "Nourishing the heart" means cultivating the mind. The location of the palace is more convenient, the space layout in the hall is rich and the functions are concentrated, the hall, the study, the bedroom and the small room used to approve the recital, the secret talk, the rest, the worship of the Buddha are all available, it is more suitable for the monarch who eats and wears clothes and food in the middle of the palace than the big hall, and it is the place that is more suitable for the emperor's living activities under the highly centralized political system of the Qing Dynasty. The most famous of the Yangxin Hall are the Yongzheng Emperor's "Diligent and Virtuous" room, the Qianlong Emperor's Sanxi Hall and the Late Qing Dynasty Curtain Listening Office of the Dongnuan Pavilion.
Changchun Palace, one of the six palaces in the west of the inner court, was built in the eighteenth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1420), rebuilt in the twenty-second year of Kangxi in the Qing Dynasty (1683), and repaired many times later. In the ninth year of Xianfeng (1859), the palace gate of Changchun Palace was demolished, and the apse of Qixiang Palace was changed to a hall hall, and Emperor Xianfeng inscribed "Tiyuan Palace". Changchun Palace and Qixiang Palace are connected by this. Changchun Palace is 5 rooms wide, and the yellow glazed tile rests on the top of the mountain. In front of the hall, there are 1 pair of copper turtles and copper cranes. The east side hall is called the Suishou Palace, the west side hall is called the Chengxi Palace, each 3 rooms, the front corridor, connected with the corner corridor, can pass through each hall.
Yikun PalaceYikun Palace, one of the six palaces in the west of the inner court, was the residence of concubines in the Ming and Qing dynasties. It was built in the eighteenth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1420). Originally two into the courtyard, in the late Qing Dynasty, the apse of the Yikun Palace was changed into the hall hall and the hall, and the east and west ear rooms were each changed into a passage, so that the Yikun Palace and the Chuxiu Palace were connected, forming the pattern of four courtyards. The main hall is 5 rooms wide, the top of the yellow glazed tile rest, and the front and back corridors. Under the eaves, the bucket arch is applied, and the beam fang is decorated with Soviet-style color paintings. In front of the hall, there is a "bright and prosperous" screen door, and a pair of copper phoenixes, copper cranes, and copper furnaces are furnished under the pedestal. There are side halls in the east and west, called Yanhong Palace, Yuanhe Palace, all of which are 3 yellow glazed tile hard hilltop buildings.
Chuxiu PalaceChuxiu Palace, one of the six palaces in the west of the inner court, was the residence of concubines in the Ming and Qing dynasties. It was built in the eighteenth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1420), and in the tenth year of Guangxu (1884) to celebrate the fiftieth birthday of Cixi, it cost 630,000 taels of silver to carry out large-scale renovation, and the existing building is the shape of Guangxu ten years after reconstruction. Chuxiu Palace was originally a second courtyard, the late Qing Dynasty demolished the Chuxiu Gate and the wall, and changed the apse of Yikun Palace to a hall hall, called the body and the hall, connected Chuxiu Palace and Yikun Palace, formed a communicative four-entry courtyard.
Taiji Hall Taiji Palace, one of the six palaces in the west of the inner court, was built in the eighteenth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1420). Originally known as Weiyang Palace, because Emperor Jiajing's biological father Xingxian Wang Zhu Youqi was born here, so in the fourteenth year of Jiajing (1535) renamed Qixiang Palace, the late Qing Dynasty changed its name to Taiji Palace. It was repaired many times in the Qing Dynasty. Taiji Hall was originally two courtyards, when the Changchun Palace was renovated in the late Qing Dynasty, the apse of the Taiji Hall was opened up as a hall through the hall, the back eaves were connected to the hugging building, and connected with the Changchun Palace and its east and west side halls with the corner verandah, forming a corridor, the east and west ear rooms each opened a passage, so that the Taiji Hall and the Changchun Palace were connected into the four courtyards that penetrated each other.
Yongshou PalaceYongshou Palace is one of the six palaces in the west of the inner court. It was built in the eighteenth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1420), and was originally named Changle Palace. Yongshou Palace is two courtyards, the main hall of the front yard Yongshou Palace is 5 rooms wide, and the yellow glazed tile is on the top of the mountain. In the hall, the imperial pen plaque of the Qianlong Emperor is hung "Ling De Shuyi", the east wall hangs Qianlong's "Holy Ban Ji Resignation Praise", and the west wall hangs "Ban Ji Resignation Diagram".
Chonghua PalaceChonghua Palace is located in the north of the West Sixth Palace on the West Road of the Inner Court, and was originally the second of the five Qianxi Institutes in the Ming Dynasty. Chonghua Palace follows the three-entry courtyard pattern of the second Qianxi Institute. The main hall in the front yard is the hall of reverence.
Xianfu PalaceXianfu Palace is one of the six palaces in the west of the inner court. It is two courtyards, the main gate Xianfu Gate is the glazed door, the face is wide 3 rooms, the yellow glazed tile is the top of the palace, the shape is higher than the other five palaces in the West Sixth Palace, and the shape of the Jingyang Palace in the relative symmetrical position of the East Sixth Palace is the same. The main hall of the backyard is called "Tongdao Hall", and the interior is equipped with a floor cover partition, and the ceiling is a ceiling. Xianfu Palace is the residence of the concubine, the front hall is the place where the salute is ascended, and the apse is the sleeping palace.
Shufangzhai was originally the head of the five institutes in Qianxi. Shufangzhai is an I-shaped hall, the front hall and the south room, the east and west side halls are surrounded by an independent small courtyard, and there are verandahs connected in between. During the Qianlong period, on important festivals such as Wanshou Festival, Shengshou Festival, Zhongyuan Festival, and Chinese New Year's Eve, he often served the Empress Dowager to eat and watch plays in the back hall.
Fengxian Palace, located on the east side of the inner court of the Forbidden City, is the family temple of the Ming and Qing dynasties to worship their ancestors, and was built in the early Ming Dynasty. The Qing Dynasty followed the Ming system, rebuilt in the 14th year of Shunzhi in the Qing Dynasty (1657), and then repaired many times. The building area of Fengxian Hall is 1225.00 square meters. Yellow glazed tiles heavy eaves on the top of the palace, under the eaves painted gold line large point gold spindle painting. In the front hall of the new year, the holy festival of longevity, the New Year's Day and the national celebration, etc., the great sacrifice is in the front hall; in the case of Christmas, death and Lantern Festival, Qingming, Zhongyuan, frost, New Year's Eve and other days, incense is offered in the apse; all emblems, canonization, canonization, imperial feasts, ploughing, tombs, hunting, Huiluan and other celebrations are only reported in the apse.
Chengqian Palace, one of the six palaces in the east of the inner court. It was built in the eighteenth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1420), and it was called Yongning Palace at the beginning. The palace is two courtyards, and the main hall of the backyard is 5 rooms, and the door is opened in the bright room. This palace was the residence of the noble concubine in the Ming Dynasty.
Jingren Palace, one of the six palaces in the east of the inner court. It was built in the eighteenth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1420), and it was called Chang'an Palace at the beginning. The palace is the second courtyard, the main gate is southward, there is a stone shadow wall in the door, it is said to be a relic of the Yuan Dynasty. There are 5 rooms in the main hall of the backyard, and the door is open in the bright room. Jingren Palace was the residence of concubines in the Ming Dynasty.
Yanxi Palace Yanxi Palace is one of the six palaces in the east of the inner court, built in the eighteenth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1420), and was originally named Changshou Palace. In front of the hall, there are 3 rooms with east and west halls. There are 5 main halls in the backyard, and there are also 3 rooms in the east and west side halls, all of which are yellow glazed tiles on the top of the hard mountain.
Jingyang Palace, one of the six palaces in the east of the inner court, is located in the east of Zhongcui Palace and the north of Yonghe Palace. It was built in the eighteenth year of Yongle in the Ming Dynasty (1420), and was originally named Changyang Palace, and was renamed Jingyang Palace in the fourteenth year of Jiajing (1535). In the Ming Dynasty, it was inhabited by concubines. The palace is the second courtyard, the main gate is southward, the name Jingyang Gate, the main hall of the front yard is the Jingyang Palace, the face is wide 3 rooms, the yellow glazed tile palace top, and the roof form of the other five palaces in the East Sixth Palace is different. The main hall of the backyard is the imperial study, with 5 wide rooms, the open door is opened, and the yellow glazed tile rests the mountain-style top. Second, between the pins for the sill wall, sill window, under the eaves to apply the bucket, decorated with dragon and seal color painting. The "Palace Training Map" hung on the six palaces of the east and west was originally collected here.
Yonghe Palace, one of the six palaces in the east of the inner court, is located in the east of Chengqian Palace and the south of Jingyang Palace. In the Ming Dynasty, it was inhabited by concubines, and in the Qing Dynasty, it was inhabited by concubines. Emperor Kangxi of the Qing Dynasty, Empress Xiaogongren lived in this palace for a long time. Subsequently, Daoguang Emperor Jing Guifei, Xianfeng Dili nobles and so on lived here successively. The palace is the second courtyard, the main gate is southward, the name is Yonghe Gate, the main hall of the front yard is the Yonghe Palace, and the face is 5 rooms. Open the door in the bright room, and the second and the tip are all sill walls, and the upper support windows are installed. In the main room, the Qianlong imperial inscription "Yi Zhao Shushen" plaque is hung, and the white grate is hung on the ceiling, and the square bricks are on the ground. There are 3 rooms with the hall in the east and west, the door is opened in the bright room, the yellow glazed tile is hard mountain top, and the eaves are decorated with spindle color paintings. The north side of the east and west side halls are all transepts, with 3 rooms each.
Yuqing PalaceYuqing Palace is located between Fengxian Hall and Zhai Palace on the East Road of the Inner Court, which was built on the foundation site of the Fengci Palace in the Ming Dynasty in the eighteenth year of Kangxi of the Qing Dynasty (1679). It is a building complex composed of rectangular courtyards, with four entrances in front and back. The star gate in front of the main gate, the door is the first courtyard to enter, there are 3 duty rooms, and the west wall opens the Yang Yao Gate and communicates with the Zhai Palace. The north Xiangxu gate of the courtyard is the second courtyard, the main hall is the main hall, and the east and west side halls are 3 rooms each. There are 20 rooms on the east and west sides of the third courtyard, go straight to the fourth courtyard, the main hall is Yuqing Palace, and the building is the I-shaped hall. Yuqing Palace was built by the crown prince Yunren during the Kangxi period, and later served as the residence of the prince.
Zhai Palace Zhai Palace is located in the south of the six palaces in the east of the Forbidden City, west of Yuqing Palace, for the emperor to perform the ceremony of sacrificing to heaven and earth before the fasting place, the sacrifice to heaven and earth before the fasting is carried out outside the palace. Saigong is a rectangular courtyard with two bedrooms in front and back. The front hall of the palace, the face is wide 5 rooms, the top of the yellow glazed tile rest, the front out of the hugging building 3 rooms, the bright room, the two times between the opening of the door, between the two ends of the sill window. Where the sacrifice to heaven and earth and pray for the valley, before the big ceremony, the emperor fasted here. When the emperor stays in the palace, he sets up a fasting card and a bronze man on the left side of His Majesty in the palace. On fasting days, the emperor and the ministers of worship wear fasting cards, and each palace hangs fasting wooden cards on the curtains. During fasting, do not have pleasures, do not drink alcohol, and do not be spicy.
Wuying Hall Wuying Hall was built in the early Ming Dynasty and is located in the west of the Outer Dynasty Xihe Gate. The main hall Wuying Hall is south-facing, 5 rooms are wide, 3 rooms are deep, and the yellow glazed tile rests on the top of the mountain. The east and west side halls are respectively the Ning Dao Palace, the Huanzhang Palace, and there are 63 corridor rooms on the left and right. There is Hengshou Zhai in the northeast of the courtyard, and Yude Hall in the northwest. At the beginning of the Ming Dynasty, the emperor lived in the palace and summoned the ministers in the Wuying Palace, and then moved to the Wenhua Palace.
Cining PalaceCining Palace is located on the west side of Longzong Gate, West Road, Outer Court. It was built in the fifteenth year of Jiajing in the Ming Dynasty (1536) to change the main hall of Cining Palace from a single eaves to a heavy eaves, and moved the back of the dormitory to the shape of the present. The main hall Cining Palace is in the middle, the front and back corridors, and the yellow glazed tiles rest on the top of the mountain. There are 7 rooms, of which 5 have 4 double-crossed four-fold rhombic doors. Between the two ends is a brick wall, and each has 4 double-crossed four-fold rhombic sash windows. The front of the hall out of the platform, the front out of three steps, the left and right out of one order, on the platform Chen gilt copper incense burner 4. The east and west mountains are set up with card walls, each with a hanging flower door, which can lead to the backyard.
Wenyuan Pavilion is the library building behind the Wenhua Palace, Qianlong 41 years (1776) imitated the famous building of Zhejiang book collection "Tianyi Pavilion" to build. The pavilion is divided into two layers, the black glazed tile covers the roof, the green glazed tile trims, the tone is deep and elegant, and it contains the black main water in the five elements, and the intention of overcoming fire with water. After the Qianlong Dynasty of the Qing Dynasty, in addition to the emperor coming here to study, the ministers and scholars were also allowed to come here to consult the books.
With a height of 20.71 meters, Changyin Pavilion is the largest theater building in the Forbidden City in the middle of the Ningshou Palace District. In the Jiaqing year (early 19th century), a costume theater was added. The pavilion is more than 20 meters high, and the green glazed tile roof of the pavilion can also be seen from outside the city wall. "Changyin" means to enjoy the music. The high pavilion is divided into upper, middle and lower three floors, respectively, Fu, Lu and Shoutai. The Shoutai mesa has five wells leading to the basement and three patios leading to the rokudai. This pavilion faces north, and the emperor and queen and other reading is the floor opposite. Every New Year's Festival, the palace will perform a big drama here, and the stage and the stage are very lively.
Shou'an PalaceShou'an Palace is located in the north of Shoukang Palace and south of Yinghua Hall on the West Road outside the inner court. It was built in the Ming Dynasty, the original name was Xianxi Palace, and it was renamed Xian'an Palace in the fourth year of Jiajing (1525).
The Ming Dynasty set up 12 yamen to manage the affairs of the imperial family, each with a palm seal eunuch. Liu Ruoyu of the Ming Dynasty "Discretion of the Zhongzhi and the Discipline of the Duties of the Inner Ministers": "As contained in the Emperor's ancestral teachings, the establishment of the Inner Government Yamen, the rank of the office, and the legislation is also perfect...... According to the twelve eunuchs of the inner government: Si Li, Yu Yong, Neiguan, Yu Ma, Si She, Shang Bao, Shen Gong, Shang Shan, Shang Yi, Yin Shou, Zhi Dian, and Du Zhi. ”
The twelve eunuchs are the eunuch yamen. In fact, only the eunuchs who worked in these yamen were eunuchs. The chief eunuch in the prison is in charge of all the eunuchs' ceremonial punishments in the palace. And the eunuch Bingbi actually approved the official document on behalf of the emperor when the eunuch was extremely autocratic. In addition, there are also four divisions (salary, bells and drums, treasure money, mixed hall), eight bureaus (soldiers, silver, clothes, scarves and hats, needlework, internal weaving and dyeing, wine and vinegar noodles, and the division garden), which are combined into the twenty-four yamen of internal officials. The palace maids also have six bureaus (Shanggong, Shangyi, Shangshi, Shangyu, Shanggong, etc.), and each bureau has four divisions.
The main functions and powers of the celebrant (there are three main functions, one is to approve the recital and proclaim the decree, which is the most important function of the celebrant supervisor; the second is to be in charge of the affairs related to the eunuchs, the celebrant is not only in the position of the "first agency" in the eunuch institutions, but also in fact occupies the position of the chief manager and the leader of other eunuch institutions; the third is to take into account other important official positions, some other important official positions in the eunuch system at that time, such as the commander of the Dongchang factory, the Nanjing garrison, etc., or the chief of ceremonies and ceremonies, or the celebrant is on a foreign mission, which is also an important aspect of the authority of the celebrant supervisor)
Internal officials and supervisors (mainly in charge of the procurement of utensils used by the emperor, such as screens, beds, tables and cabinets, etc.)
The division is set up as a supervisor (in charge of the book, honor guard, fence, curtain, rain gear, etc.), and the imperial horse supervisor (in charge of the inner government and horse administration)
Supervisor of the Shrine (in charge of the sprinkling and sweeping of the temple and incense lamps, etc.), Supervisor of Shang Shan (in charge of the imperial diet, food and feasts in the palace, etc.)
Shang Bao Jian (in charge of the treasure seal, the edict, and the general's seal)
Seal Supervisor (in charge of the ancient and modern collection of ancient and modern books, as well as iron coupons, edicts, yellows, seals, books, surveys, verifications, letters, etc.)
Supervisor of the Straight Hall (in charge of the sprinkling and sweeping of the halls and corridors)
Shang Yi Jian (in charge of the emperor's crown, robes, boots and socks, etc.)
Du Zhijian (at first, he was responsible for the transfer of the various supervisors, Guan Zhi, and surveying, etc., and later followed the emperor specifically and was responsible for guiding the Qing Dao
Zhengyipin: The history of the inner waiter is judged by the inner waiter
From a product: the inner waiter
Zheng Erpin: Shang Shi
From the second grade: the waiter
Zheng Sanpin: Aunt Zhang
From the three products: the palm of the waiter
Zheng Sipin: Aunt of the Imperial Attendant
From the four products: the imperial attendant
Zheng Wupin: Aunt in charge
From the five products: the eldest aunt
Zheng Liupin: Auntie
From the six products: the maid in charge of the palace
Zheng Qipin: in charge
From the seventh grade: the maid of the long palace
Zheng Bapin: The palace maid in the palace
From the eighth grade: the palace maid
Eunuch:
Zhengyipin: the father-in-law in charge
From a product: the father-in-law of the imperial front
Zheng Erpin: The father-in-law in front of the palace
From the second grade: the head of the father-in-law
Zheng Sanpin: Father-in-law
From the three products: with the class father-in-law
Zheng Sipin: Father-in-law
From the four products: the Grand Duke
Zheng Wupin: father-in-law
From the five products: the chief eunuch
Zheng Liupin: Imperial eunuch
From the six products: the eunuch in front of the palace
Zheng Qipin: The chief eunuch
From the seven grades: the eunuch in charge
Zheng Bapin: Eunuch with class
From the eight products: the eunuch of the inner chamberlain
Zheng Jiupin: The Great Eunuch
From the Nine Pins: Eunuchs