Fortune Telling Collection - Fortune-telling birth date - Is there a difference between prime minister, prime minister and Buddhist?

Is there a difference between prime minister, prime minister and Buddhist?

The prime minister is the general name of the highest officials in ancient times, and the prime minister is not a specific official position or position. The prime minister is a specific official position in some dynasties, and he is the highest official position in that dynasty; However, in some dynasties, the functions and powers of officials in certain positions were equivalent to those of prime ministers. For example, in the three-province system, the highest officials in the three provinces of Shangshu are equivalent to prime ministers, but their official titles are not prime ministers. During the period, after the Hu case, Zhu Yuanzhang abolished the prime minister and set up a cabinet to assist the emperor in handling daily affairs. Later, the power of the cabinet became heavier and heavier, and the cabinet university became the de facto prime minister, called assistant minister. The first thing was to record. By the time of Yongzheng in the Qing Dynasty, the Ministry of War was set up, the cabinet became idle Cao, and the military affairs minister became the de facto prime minister. In the Ming and Qing Dynasties, it was customary to confer a bachelor's degree as a sacrificial ceremony, but there was no such official title as prime minister.

To sum up, the prime minister is a specific official title, and the prime minister is a general term for the highest administrative officials in the bureaucratic system.

Buddhist teachers belong to another title. This position has no real power, but it has a noble status and is easily respected by the emperor and revered by ordinary people. Because people who are named as Buddhist masters are generally proficient in Taoism and Buddhism, some will make alchemy, some will visit fortune-teller, some will pray for rain, and some will tell fortune. Basically, these people were regarded as immortals at that time. When these people came to see the emperor, the emperor would give them the title of Buddhist master to show their extraordinary status.