Premodern Japan | |
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Daijō-daijin | |
Minister of the Left | Sadaijin |
Minister of the Right | Udaijin |
Minister of the Center | Naidaijin |
Major Counselor | Dainagon |
Middle Counselor | Chūnagon |
Minor Counselor | Shōnagon |
Eight Ministries | |
Center | Nakatsukasa-shō |
Ceremonial | Shikibu-shō |
Civil Administration | Jibu-shō |
Popular Affairs | Minbu-shō |
War | Hyōbu-shō |
Justice | Gyōbu-shō |
Treasury | Ōkura-shō |
Imperial Household | Kunai-shō |
Shōnagon (少納言) was a counselor of the third rank in the Imperial court of Japan.[1] The role dates to the 7th century. This advisory position remained a part of the Imperial court of Japan from the 8th century until theMeiji period in the 19th century.[2] This became aTaihō Code office in the early feudal Japanese government ordaijō-kan.
In the ranks of the Imperial bureaucracy, theShōnagon came between theChūnagon (middle counselors) and theSangi (associate counselors).[3]
Typically, the office was held by three fifth-rank members of thekuge. These officials were responsible for reading ordinary reports and for making of Imperial travel arrangements.[2] TheShōnagon are said to help the memories of the principal officers, to put seals to deeds, and carry communications to others within thedaijō-kan. They are both military and civil.[4]
Any exercise of meaningful powers of court officials in the pre-Meiji period reached its nadir during the years of theTokugawa shogunate, and yet the core structures ofritsuryō government did manage to endure for centuries.[5]
In order to appreciate the office ofShōnagon, it is necessary to evaluate its role in the traditional Japanese context of a durable yet flexible framework. This was a bureaucratic network and a hierarchy of functionaries. The role ofShōnagon was an important element in theDaijō-kan (Council of State). The Daijō-kanschema proved to be adaptable in the creation of constitutional government in the modern period.[6]
The highest positions in the court hierarchy can be cataloged.[7] A dry list provides a superficial glimpse inside the complexity and inter-connected relationships of the Imperial court structure.
The next highest tier of officials were:
Other high-ranking bureaucrats who function somewhat flexibly within theDaijō-kan were;
The government ministries were eight semi-independent bureaucracies. A list alone cannot reveal much about the actual functioning of theDaijō-kan, but the broad hierarchical categories do suggest the way in which governmental functions were parsed:
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The specific ministries above are not grouped arbitrarily. The two court officials below had responsibility for them as follows: