摘要
Broadly speaklng, in Qing dynasty Mongolia there were two administrative systems that differed in nature and function: the Mongolian banner system (Meng - qi) and the Chinese bureaucratic system (dao - fu - zhou - xian). The banner system, which was established among the nomadic Mongols during the early Qing, was compatible with the existing system of princes, and allowed for a degree of autonomy. The institution of the Chinese bureaucratic system accompanied a great increase in Han farming communities during the mid - Qing. These two administrative systems coexisted and reflected very complicated administrative relations.
Broadly speaklng, in Qing dynasty Mongolia there were two administrative systems that differed in nature and function: the Mongolian banner system (Meng - qi) and the Chinese bureaucratic system (dao - fu - zhou - xian). The banner system, which was established among the nomadic Mongols during the early Qing, was compatible with the existing system of princes, and allowed for a degree of autonomy. The institution of the Chinese bureaucratic system accompanied a great increase in Han farming communities during the mid - Qing. These two administrative systems coexisted and reflected very complicated administrative relations.
出处
《清史研究》
CSSCI
北大核心
1998年第2期29-40,共12页
The Qing History Journal