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submitted 8 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

The civil service examinations of Imperial China allowed the state to find the best candidates to staff the vast bureaucracy that governed China from the Han Dynasty onwards (206 BCE - 220 CE). The exams were a means for a young male of any class to enter that bureaucracy and so become a part of the gentry class of scholar-officials. The exams had multiple levels and were extremely difficult to pass, requiring extensive knowledge of Confucian classics, law, government, and oratory amongst other subjects. For the state, the system supplied not only able candidates who were selected on merit but also ensured an entire class developed which had sympathy with the ruling status quo. The exams were in place for over a thousand years and are the principal reason why education is still particularly revered in Chinese culture today.

Historical Development

The idea of recruiting officials to staff the imperial bureaucracy developed from the Han Dynasty. An Imperial Academy had been established in 124 BCE for scholars to study in depth the Confucian and Taoist classics, and by the end of the Han period, this institution was training an impressive 30,000 students each year. In general, the state held the view that education was a mark of a civilised society and in order to get the best administrators to run China's vast territories efficiently, an entire class of scholar civil servants was required. This view would prevail under varying dynasties right up to the mid-20th century CE. From the early 8th century CE the military had its own separate set of examinations.

The rulers of the Sui Dynasty (581-618 CE), who had once again unified China, were keen to further improve and centralise the traditional administration system set up by the Han. There was now a much greater emphasis not on an officials' family connections and their letters of recommendations from powerful friends but on the abilities demonstrated in their performance in civil service examinations held in the capital. These examinations combined elements from tests used in previous regimes such as questions on government and knowledge of the classics of Chinese literature, especially those on Confucianism.

Emperor Gaozu (r. 618-626 CE), founder of the Tang dynasty (618-906 CE) continued with the same policy and added further refinements such as testing a candidate's speaking skills. The examinations themselves were now more sophisticated with both regularly held ones and special event exams to weed out the very best recruits. Now fully established, the civil service examinations tested a young man's knowledge of the following:

  • writing and calligraphy
  • formal essay writing techniques
  • classic literature
  • mathematics
  • legal matters
  • government matters
  • poetry
  • clear and coherent speaking

Examinations were initially organised by the Board of Civil Office and thereafter by the Board of Rites, they were held annually, and they attracted up to 2,000 candidates. Extremely testing, only about 1% of examinees actually passed, although it was possible to retake the examinations an unlimited number of times. Those who passed then faced another examination at the Board of Civil Office.

During the Song dynasty (960-1279 CE) the examinations were restructured to meet greater demand - five times that seen during the Tang. Now a qualifying examination was imposed to select those candidates more likely to do well in the examinations proper.

There also began in this period certain measures to limit (but certainly not eliminate) corruption such as the introduction of anonymous marking, the use of a number instead of a candidate's name to avoid bias, and, in the case of the second and third level exams, even the copying of handwriting by a clerk to disguise who had answered the papers.

As if the prize ticket of a place in the state apparatus were not enough of an inducement to candidates, there were other benefits, too. Successful candidates were allowed to wear certain robes which became status symbols in wider society, they were given certain tax benefits, and their new status meant they avoided corporal punishment for some criminal offences.

When the Mongols ruled China during the Yuan Dynasty (1276-1368 CE) the exams were first cancelled altogether and then reinstated but with quotas based on a candidate's ethnicity - Han Chinese were only allowed 25% of the exam places. The civil service examination system was fully revived, though, in 1370 CE under the Ming dynasty (1368-1644 CE). Adding their own refinements to the traditional setup of previous Chinese dynasties, the Ming introduced a geographical quota system so that the richer regions did not, as was previously the case, dominate all the positions in the civil service. Meanwhile, the increase in the number of schools meant children with parents who could not afford private tuition could now, at least in some areas, receive the essential education necessary to prepare for the exams.

Under the Qing dynasty (1644-1911 CE) yet another layer of complication was added to the exam system. An examination for younger boys, which they had to pass in order to be eligible to take the level one regional civil service exam, was introduced. The Qing also added another level at the other end of this academic obstacle course. Now candidates who passed the level three palace exam had to do yet another written test, this time set by the emperor himself. The good news was that success in this final paper meant an immediate senior appointment.

Qing abolished the civil service exams system in 1905 CE. Its legacy remains, though, in the particularly high regard, indeed, almost reverence with which education is held in Chinese culture today.

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[-] [email protected] 8 points 8 months ago

I went to a nearby shopping mall to spend some time with some family members. And at the KFC restaurant inside the mall there was a very confused Chinese man, the poor guy was very confused because the machine was broken and, for some reason, the name of the food wasn't translated into English. It's really surprising to see Chinese people in that area, usually I only find Korean people, there's a huge Korean community there (I remember they used to hold some events with the DPRK and ROK governments).

[-] [email protected] 8 points 8 months ago

Answer to post from previous locked megathread @[email protected]

I've been trying to get out more, but it's a struggle, its not hard to feel like a loser going to the boardgame club at my university and having to go "no no ive been studying here for like three years I've just been unable to build any kind of social circle". Like this should be the time of my life where making connections should be easiest, studying at a small institute where everyone should have similiar interests and with everyone having comparably lots of free time but it just hasn't happened. I suppose lots of other people at our institute feel the same but it's just too shameful to admit to be lonely. I've tried to get some events started at our institute too (since a lot of stuff just died off during lockdowns), but it's hard to get any amount of people to be interested. It's also not like these institutionalized and eventized forms of social activities are really all that great either, sometimes you just want to hang out with people without having to do anything in particular.

And I too live in a large city with good public transport and lots of culture and everything, but how much longer I can afford to live there I don't know either. It's difficult.

[-] [email protected] 7 points 8 months ago

Just say all your friends go to another school in Canada

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[-] [email protected] 8 points 8 months ago

Been tired and feeling down for most of the day. Went out and there was a street fair. Lots of cool stuff. While I was walking seeing all these people hanging out together kind of bummed me out. My friends and crush live far from where I am so its not exactly easy to invite people for an impulsive day out. Did have some family over for the evening, which was nice, but they weren't here for long.

[-] [email protected] 8 points 8 months ago

I guess I'm never going to have a house with a gas stove and i'll just have to settle for getting an outdoor gas grill kitty-cri

[-] [email protected] 8 points 8 months ago

i finally took matters into my own hands and backported some skyrim special edition armor to legendary (the version i have) very ferret that it actually worked. but I also found cool remeshes of vanilla helmets i want to transfer, and unlike a custom armor that has all its dependencies its crashing, what I think is happening is the SE & LE file structure/naming conventions are different, so this mod's meshes are trying to reference 'vanilla' textures in a different location than where they exist in my game oooaaaaaaauhhh i don't care enough to go mesh-by-mesh reassigning, or recreating SE directories just for a couple of (admittedly dope) helmets, fuck

[-] [email protected] 8 points 8 months ago
[-] [email protected] 7 points 8 months ago

My hair is getting a bit too long. My social anxiety makes me not wanna visit a barbershop (Also, I kinda hate the vibes(?) there.) Should I try to cut my own hair? I'm scared I might fuck it up. I'll search some videos on how to cut one's hair tomorrow, but maybe some of you already have resources on how to do it. If you do, put them under the replies of this, thanks :)

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[-] [email protected] 7 points 8 months ago

Cole Phelps you horrible, stupid motherfucker... Wish there were more sections with Kelso.

[-] [email protected] 7 points 8 months ago

Sure company towns have their downsides but imagine how short the commute was.

[-] [email protected] 7 points 8 months ago

Don Draper mixing in a splash of vodka with the orange juice for Betty's Mother's Day breakfast. He's such a thoughtful husband.

[-] [email protected] 7 points 8 months ago

"I'll have a vodka tonic"

"Mom, it's breakfast"

"...and a piece of toast"

how-much-could-it-cost

[-] [email protected] 7 points 8 months ago

Tom Brady is a replicant

[-] [email protected] 7 points 8 months ago

Is anyone aware of leftist spaces for sports discussion? I used to be a big NBA fan and I've felt the urge to really get back into it this season but the spaces around it seem more misogynistic than I had ever noticed before.

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[-] [email protected] 7 points 8 months ago

the intro to adam friedland show norm finkelstein interview (monologue about prison SV) is almost exactly what I was trying to relate in an essay the other day, lmao. i don't think i've seen/read anything that so succinctly links yankee carceral brainworms to sexual violence, but we all know it.

[-] [email protected] 7 points 8 months ago

Crosscode tickles all the good gaming areas, playing it on Steam Deck on a lazy sunday while clothes and dishes are washing is peak. lea-finger-guns

[-] [email protected] 7 points 8 months ago

New Best of the Worst is a stone Cold classic and I'm downloading Devil Story right now

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[-] [email protected] 7 points 8 months ago

MokΓΌs:

  1. I had a lesson with a drummer whose playing I'm not passionate about but I recognize that he knows stuff that I don't and he is better than me. He's basically has me digging into feathering the bass drum more. My technique is way above his but he can play cooler shit in time basically because he can ground it in simpler things that I haven't touched on, like feathering. My goal is to be able to swing a band with just a bass drum.

  2. I really dont like drummers with bad technique, you can hear when technique is bad the ideas are there but not articulate and then you see their hands and like how are you supposed to get anything done with that?

My latest kinda conclusion is that keeping time is like how classical string players need to stay in tune. There's really no negotiation, everything must be perfect or it's not good. I think having clarity in your technique is an essential part of having good time. Like if you cant control your limbs, how can you be expected to keep the demands of having good time.

  1. My new bass player friend is a Canadian right winger, I'm pretty sure. He keeps saying all the right wing cliches. If I can't get him to stop being stupid I'm just going to use him to get better at locking with a basd player and infiltrate his connections.
[-] [email protected] 7 points 8 months ago

going back for more olive

[-] [email protected] 7 points 8 months ago

I'm the anti-human satanic mutant Alex Jones warned you about

[-] [email protected] 7 points 8 months ago

Who framed Rogers nutsack?

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this post was submitted on 25 Oct 2024
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