Ministry of Works (imperial China)


The Ministry of Works or was one of the Six Ministries under the Department of State Affairs in imperial China.

Name

The Ministry of Works is also commonly translated into English as the or

History

The ministry was established during the Sui dynasty as one of the six functional divisions of the Department of State Affairs. It was also part of the same department during the Five Dynasties period and the Song dynasty. After the merger of the "three departments", it was reassigned to the Zhongshu Sheng in the Yuan Empire and later the Ming Empire. In 1380, the office of Secretariat was abolished and the ministries, including the Ministry of Works, became independent and continued to report directly to the emperor.
Under the Ming and Qing, it lost some influence in favor of agencies run by palace eunuchs, provincial coordinators, and governors. It was usually considered the weakest of the six ministries. During some periods it was merged with the Ministry of Justice.
The ministry was headed by the Minister of Shangshu, who had the Standard class, Rank 3 under the Changs ; Secondary class, Rank 2 under the Song; Standard class, Rank 1 under the Jin, Yuan and Ming up to 1380; Standard class, Rank 2 under the Ming after 1380 and Qing; and Secondary class, Rank 1 under the Qing after 1730. During the Qing dynasty, there was one minister for the Manchu and another for the Chinese. He was assisted by two deputy ministers, called Shilang.

Functions

Under the Ming, the Ministry of Works had charge of weights and measures, the construction and maintenance of transportation infrastructure, other government construction works, the manufacturing and provision of government equipment, the public exploitation of natural resources, and the hiring of artisans or laborers for temporary service.

Citations