- A
xunfu was an
important imperial Chinese provincial office under both the Ming (14th–17th centuries) and Qing (17th–20th centuries) dynasties. However...
- the
xunfu of An**** Province,
committed suicide after Lu
Prefecture fell to the rebels. Li then
became a
subordinate of Fu Ji [zh] (福濟), the new
xunfu, who...
-
Emperor sent his heir
apparent to
Shaanxi in 1391 to "tour and soothe" (
xunfu) the region; in 1421 the
Yongle Emperor commissioned 26
officials to travel...
- of
Jilin and Heilongjiang. The
province itself also had a
governor (巡抚;
xúnfǔ).
Liaoning is
divided into
fourteen prefecture-level divisions, all prefecture-level...
-
General Zongdu (Viceroy) Jun (corps) Fu
dutong Major/Lieutenant General*
Xunfu (governor) Zhen (division) Xie
dutong Brigadier General Bu
Zhengshi (Lieutenant-governor)...
-
three governors the Qing
provinces were
governed by a
single Governor or "
Xunfu (巡抚)" who held
substantial power.
Although all
provincial agencies communicated...
- Province. The
three garrisons were
called "
Xunfu of Yansui" (延綏巡撫), "
Xunfu of Ningxia" (寧夏巡撫) and "
Xunfu of Gansu" (甘肅巡撫), respectively. In 1497, when...
-
provinces of
Jilin and Heilongjiang. The
province itself also had a
governor (
xunfu).
Huang Oudong (黄欧东): 1980–1983
Zhang Zhengde (张正德): 1983–1988 Wang Guangzhong...
-
significant impact on politics. So far, the
system of
grand coordinators (
xunfu), who
manage the "three
provincial offices" (civil, military, and surveillance)...
- the
regional administration saw a
regular posting of
grand coordinators (
xunfu).
These officials were
responsible for
coordinating the work of the three...