Page:Tseng Kuo Fan and the Taiping Rebellion.djvu/30

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12
TSENG KUO-FAN
Province Divisions or
Commands
Stations Total cost,
taels
Cavalry Infantry Garrison Totals
Kwangtung, 11 95 1,463,860 2,183 22,108 42,616 66,907
Kwangsi,4 47 522,400 1,505 8,222 12,805 22,532
Ssuch'uan, 7 79 888,240 4,036 11,511 18,289 33,836
Hupeh, 5 42 533,450 2,572 5,218 14,262 22,052
Hunan, 4 53 608,720 2,262 7,065 16,477 25,804
Shensi, 7 92 1,023,407 12,390 17,589 12,085 42,065
Kansu (E & W), 9 16 1,395,110 22,493 23,358 10,829 56,680
Yunnan, 9 53 875,870 2,538 17,229 15,477 35,244
Kweichow, 6 67 728,330 2,571 12,807 29,765 45,143
Extra 168,000
Totals, 114 1,178 14,662,650 87,100 194,815 336,404 618,319

In order of precedence the cavalry stood highest, soldiers being promoted from one branch to the other.[1]

The military officers were recruited in the same way as civil officials, no distinction being made between army and navy. In addition to admission through the examinations, whereby military masters and doctors were eligible to appointments, claim to office might rest on four grounds: hereditary rank in the national nobility from the grade of duke down, including fifth official rank; sons of officers brevetted because of their father's rank; sons of officers brevetted because of the violent death of the father in the service of the country; and promotion from the lower ranks for efficiency.[2]

Claim to office and actual appointment were, however, two distinct matters. Three methods of making appointments were followed. In certain of the grades, especially from lieutenant up to lieutenant colonel, men who had been chosen in the regular way were sent out into the

  1. The tables are taken from the Chinese Repository, XX, the summary being on page 365. We must remember, of course, that this represents the number paid for. The rolls were heavily padded, without doubt.
  2. Ibid., pp. 294 ff.