Three Departments and Six Ministries


The Three Departments and Six Ministries system was the main central government structure in imperial China from the Sui dynasty to the Yuan dynasty. It was also used by Balhae and Goryeo in Manchuria and Korea, and very likely the Lý dynasty and the Trần dynasty in Vietnam as well.
The Three Departments were the top-level offices of the administration. They were the Secretariat, responsible for drafting policy, the Chancellery, responsible for reviewing policy, and the Department of State Affairs, responsible for implementing policy. The former two were loosely joined as the Secretariat-Chancellery during the late Tang dynasty, Song dynasty and Goryeo.
The Six Ministries were direct administrative organs of the state. They were the Ministries of Personnel, Rites, War, Justice, Works, and Revenue. They were under the Department of State Affairs until the Yuan dynasty.
The Three Departments were abolished by the Ming dynasty, but the Six Ministries continued under the Ming and Qing, as well as in Vietnam and Korea.

Three Departments and Six Ministries during the [Tang dynasty]

Early history

Before the institution of the Three Departments and Six Ministries, the central administrative structure of the Qin and Han dynasties was the Three Lords and Nine Ministers system. Nonetheless, even then, offices which fulfilled the same functions as the later three departments were already in existence.
The Department of State Affairs was first devised during the Qin dynasty, originally in an archival role. During the reign of Emperor Wu in the Western Han dynasty, the Secretariat's office was also instituted, as a channel of communications between the Emperor's advisors and the government as a whole. By the Eastern Han dynasty, an office of advisors and reviewers had also been set up.
By the time of the Cao Wei state, the emperor Cao Pi made use of this base of advisers to officially institute the Secretariat to balance against the powerful Department of State Affairs. This was the first office known as the 'Secretariat' to fulfil functions similar to its later form, drafting imperial edicts.
The office of the Chancellery, as a review mechanism, was first instituted during the Jin dynasty and carried on throughout the Northern and Southern Dynasties period, where it often became the most powerful office in the central government.

Three Departments

Traditionally, these departments were also translated as "Boards". Each was headed by a Minister or Secretary who was assisted by two Vice-Ministers or Secretaries.
Beneath each Ministry were many Bureaus, bodies responsible for grassroots administration.

Other Departments

Aside from the "Three Departments", there were three others equal in status to them, but they are rarely involved in the administration of the state.