College of History, Nakai University, Tianjin 300071, China
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History+
Published
05 Sep 2006
Issue Date
05 Sep 2006
Abstract
The vicious cycle of official corruption got worse unprecedentedly in the Yuan dynasty (ca.1279 1368). Corrupt officials at all levels from the local to the central governments were extremely shameless and greedy. Even many court ministers got involved in the vicious cycle of corruption. The top officialdom was polluted and degenerated badly because the Mongolian nobles made their Sauqat (taking gifts) tradition and the Semu, both official and merchant groups, took bribes as a way to amass wealth. Although the Mongol Yuan rulers did make a set of anti-corruption policies such as detailed rules of censorship and inspection relating to corruption crimes, these didn t work well. Of all the reasons of the Yuan official corruption, the old Mongolian steppe traditions play the most important role, which formed the context for the low salary, improper selection and poor quality of the officials and of bending the law wrongly to pardon official misconduct.
Li Zhi′ an.
On official corruption in the Yuan dynasty. Front. Hist. China, 2006, 1(3): 375‒403 https://doi.org/10.1007/s11462-006-0011-3
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