(Redirected from Eight Banner system):''This article is about the former administrative divisions of China. For other meanings of the term "banner", see
banner (disambiguation).''
The 'Eight Banners' (In
Manchu:
'jakūn gūsa', In
Chinese: å…«æ—— baqÃ) were administrative divisions into which all
Manchu families were placed. They provided the basic framework for the Manchu military organization. The fundamental building block of the banners was the company (Manchu:
'niru', Chinese: ä½é ˜ zuoling), some of which reflected pre-existing lineage or tribal connections in their membership, while others deliberately overrode such connections in an effort to create a more centralized military force. Each company was, in principle, required to furnish 300 troops to the larger banner army.
Establishment
The banners were established by
Nurhaci in the early seventeenth century (1615, according to noted historian, Peter C. Perdue) and grew to become the core elite of the
Qing empire. Though initially military in nature, the Eight Banners came to assume other administrative duties, including disbursement of salaries, distribution of land, management of property, oversight of popular welfare, and administration of justice. A hierarchy obtained among the Eight Banners, with the so-called three upper banners (Plain Yellow, Bordered Yellow, Plain White) directly responsible to the emperor himself and five lower banners responsible to imperial
princes; later, all the banners were placed under the direct control of the emperor.
Ethnic components
The Eight Banners consisted of three
ethnic components: the
Manchu, the
Han Chinese, and the
Mongols. Beginning in the late 1620s, Nurhaci's successors incorporated allied and conquered Mongol tribes into the Eight Banner system. The first Chinese additions were merely sprinkled into existing banners as replacements. Eventually, the sheer numbers of Chinese soldiers caused Manchu leaders to form them into the "Old Han Army" (舊漢è»), mainly for infantry support. In 1631, a separate Chinese artillery corps was formed. Four Chinese banners were created in 1639 and finally the full eight were established in 1642.
Banner soldiers
From the time of the conquest of China (1644 – 1683), the banner soldiers became more professional and bureaucratised. Once the Manchus took over governing, they could no longer satisfy the material needs of soldiers by garnishing and distributing booty; instead, a salary system was instituted, ranks standardised, and the Eight Banners became a sort of hereditary military caste, though with a strong ethnic inflection. Banner soldiers took up permanent positions, either as defenders of the capital, Beijing, where roughly half of them lived with their families, or in the provinces, where some eighteen garrisons were established. The largest banner garrisons throughout most of the Qing dynasty were at
Beijing, followed by
Xi'an and
Hangzhou. Sizable banner populations were also placed in
Manchuria and at strategic points along the
Great Wall, the
Yangtze River and
Grand Canal.
Green Standard Army
Over time, many Chinese banner companies in the
provincial garrisons were reclassified as civilian or placed in the
Green Standard Army. At the end of the Qing dynasty, all members of the Eight Banners, regardless of their original ethnicity, were considered by the
Republic of China to be Manchu.
Hierarchical structure
The banners had a hierarchical structure. The smallest unit was '''niru''' (or ä½é ˜ zuoling in Chinese; 300 men). The next was '''jalan''' (or åƒé ˜ canling); 5 ''niru'' and 5 ''jalan'' consisted a '''gÅ«sa''' (banner). Of course, these were ideal numbers and their actual sizes varied substantially.
| niru | jalan | gūsa |
|---|
 niru |  jalan |  gūsa |
==Eight Banners==
English |
Manchu |
Chinese |
L/R |
U/L |
Image |
|---|
Plain Yellow Banner |
gulu suwayan i gūsa |
æ£é»ƒæ—— zhenghuangqi |
Right |
Upper |
|
|---|
Bordered Yellow Banner |
kubuhe suwayan i gūsa |
鑲黃旗 xianghuangqi |
Left |
Upper |
|
|---|
Plain White Banner |
gulu šanggiyan i gūsa |
æ£ç™½æ—— zhengbaiqi |
Left |
Upper |
|
|---|
Bordered White Banner |
kubuhe šanggiyan i gūsa |
鑲白旗 xiangbaiqi |
Left |
Lower |
|
|---|
Plain Red Banner |
gulu fulgiyan i gūsa |
æ£ç´…æ—— zhenghongqi |
Right |
Lower |
|
|---|
Bordered Red Banner |
kubuhe fulgiyan i gūsa |
鑲紅旗 xianghongqi |
Right |
Lower |
|
|---|
Plain Blue Banner |
gulu lamun i gūsa |
æ£è—æ—— zhenglanqi |
Left |
Lower |
|
|---|
Bordered Blue Banner |
kubuhe lamun i gūsa |
é‘²è—æ—— xianglanqi |
Right |
Lower |
|
|---|
Effectiveness
Although the banners were instrumental in the
Qing Empire takeover of
China proper in the 17th century from the
Ming Empire, they began to
atrophy in the 18th century, and were shown to be ineffective for modern warfare by the second half of the 19th century. The later banners proved unable to defeat Western powers, such as
Britain, in the
Opium Wars and were also seriously challenged by the
Taiping Rebellion.
Existence
By the late 19th century, the Qing Dynasty began training and creating
New Army units based on Western training, equipment and organization. Nevertheless, the banner system remained in existence until the fall of the Qing in 1911, and even beyond, with a
rump organization continuing to function until the
expulsion of
Puyi (the former Xuantong emperor) from the Forbidden City in 1924.
See also
★
Banner (Inner Mongolia), as an organizational structure, were also used in
Mongolia.