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Did the officials of the Ming Dynasty go to the same court as they do now? Do you need to check in, and can you take a leave of absence?

The rules and regulations of feudal society may be very strict in our impression, because we can have a certain understanding of it from some costume TV series or some historical documents about the system. Speaking of ancient dynastic meetings, that is, every day, civil and military officials visit the emperor, which is essentially similar to the meetings in our real life, but it is the same rules and regulations that we began to say are more cumbersome. During the Ming Dynasty, the Ming Dynasty was already a political system of the time, which showed that it was necessary to follow it— the historical system. Is there a need for check-in and drink verification for this system? I think it should be taken for granted, because whenever there is a meeting, there will be sign-in and verification, and it can only be in a different form.

Did the officials of the Ming Dynasty go to the same court as they do now? Do you need to check in, and can you take a leave of absence?

In the current era, computers and mobile phones can be seen everywhere, which is certainly something that ancient people can't have, but the problems faced by people throughout the ages are similar, and people are particularly slow to change because of human nature. How do you know if you have a meeting or not if you do not sign in? Now you can work from your own home without meeting, which was also possible in ancient times.

As early as the Zhou Dynasty, there was a system of dynastic meetings, but there were also undocumented rules and regulations, perhaps earlier than the Zhou Dynasty. However, the more far-reaching influence is the system of "three dynasties and five doors" recorded in the Zhou Li, so the three dynasties of the Ming Dynasty were in the Fengtian Hall, the Huagai Hall, and the Zhensheng Hall. The place of the pilgrimage meeting is mainly called "sitting dynasty and sitting hall" in the three dynasties, but it can also be "royal gate", that is, the pilgrimage meeting is held at the Hongwu Gate, Chengtian Gate, Duanmen Gate, Noon Gate, and Fengtian Gate.

Did the officials of the Ming Dynasty go to the same court as they do now? Do you need to check in, and can you take a leave of absence?

The great pilgrimage meetings are generally carried out on some big days, and the ordinary time is called "Chang Dynasty". The Ming Dynasty period was divided into the Early Dynasty and the Late (Noon) Dynasty, but the actual implementation of the Noon Dynasty was not much, and the Early Dynasty was still the standard. In the past, it was said that the three dynasties were now generally believed to be the late dynasty.

At that time, the check-in system also had a punishment system for it, and during the imperial meeting, the Ming Dynasty implemented the tooth card system and the door registration system. One is the need to carry the relevant tooth tags, the other is to organize all the officials' information, and those who cannot participate in official affairs, illness, etc. need to write a good official document to explain the reasons, which is what we now call a leave slip. Then there were corresponding penalties for officials who wrote for a long time to make up for the early dynasty, mainly "grabbing Lu", that is, not paying salaries in layman's terms. Later, "the first time he was not paid for one month, twice for two months, and three times he was arrested and imprisoned and beaten."

Did the officials of the Ming Dynasty go to the same court as they do now? Do you need to check in, and can you take a leave of absence?

Therefore, it can be said that the DPRK only played its due role during the period of Zhu Yuanzhang. Mainly in the "vote system" that appeared at that time, the role of the Ming Emperor in the court only played a "ceremonial value", and it was not of much value to the actual handling of affairs.

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