Thiet che bo may chinh quyen nha nuoc thoi Ly (1010-1225).

Autor: Tran, Thi Vinh
Zdroj: Modern China / Gendai Chūgoku; 2008, Vol. 6 Issue 386, p40-49, 10p, 2 Charts
Abstrakt: Ly Dai Viet was a centralized bureaucratic monarch, possessing an administrative system which was unified from the local to the central level and headed by the king. 1. The administrative structure under the Ly Dynasty was much more complete and sophisticated than that under the Dinh and Former Le Dynasties, consisting of three major sectors: departments of papers serving the king and the royal court, central offices located inside the royal citadel, and specialized departments. 2. The administrative structure of the local level under the Ly Dynasty was organized systematically as follow: prefecture (phu, lo) in the lowland and mountain district (chau, trai) in the upland. The sub-level administration included district (huyen), village (huong), hamlet (thon) in the countryside and wards in the capital. As for the mandarinate, prefecture (phu) was governed by tri phu or phan phu, mountain district (chau) was governed by tri chau, the remote district was governed by quan muc, district (huyen) was governed by either huyen lenh, quan giap or chu do. Such a complete administration enabled the Ly Dynasty to govern and develop a stable economy and army, which contributed greatly to Dai Viet's victories over the foreign invaders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Supplemental Index