Ranged Marquis
Ranged Marquis was a rank of the Chinese nobility that existed from the Warring States period to the Chen dynasty.
Warring States period and Qin dynasty
During the Warring States period, most states had moved away from the primarily kin-based conception of political dynamics dating back to the Western Zhou, and began to abolish the fengjian system. This was replaced by the junxian system, with commanderies and districts. Under this new administrative regime, sovereigns created new titles such as Ranged Marquises and Lords who taxed on their feeding fief. The Qin dynasty established the Twenty Ranks of Peerage Hierarchy after Shang Yang's reforms, and the Ranged Marquis was the highest rank in all twenty ranks. A Ranged Marquis is granted a feeding fief, which only he could tax on, and not an inheritable fief. Different awards were assigned to vassals according to their military exploits: large fiefs of districts, small fiefs of townships, or tiny fiefs of neighbourhoods.Secondary Marquis was the second rank under Ranged Marquis in the Twenty Ranks of Peerage Hierarchy.
Han dynasty
The Han dynasty inherited all twenty ranks of peerage hierarchy as established by the Qin dynasty. Ranged Marquis was the highest title of nobility for subjects who were not from the imperial family of the Han dynasty. Its original name was 徹侯, and was changed to 通侯 or 列侯 because of a naming taboo on Emperor Wu of Han's name, Liú Chè. The three distinct titles were administratively identical.Western Han dynasty
Ranged Marquis was the highest title a non-royal person could achieve. They would receive a golden seal with a purple ribbon. The number of taxable households varied greatly among marquisates. The smaller marquisates had only hundreds of households, but the larger marquisates may have more than ten thousand households such as those of Marquis of Guanjun and Marquis of Changping. Marquisates were administered by a counselor-delegate as a magistrate in his district. The land owners could appoint their courtier-officers: household aide, drafter, Grand Master of Gates, Frontrider, messenger, etc. Those marquises who did not hold office in the central government and were not married to an imperial princess were required to leave the capital, Chang'an, and move to their peerage. The Commandant of the Nobles supervised peers in the imperial capital, and commandery governors supervised marquises in their fiefs.At first, Emperor Gaozu of Han, had said in the covenant of Baima "If one gets a marquisate without military exploits, all people must attack him." This guidance was ignored, and instead powerful men like the prime minister and consort kin – family heads whose daughters married into the imperial house – were enfeoffed while lacking military accomplishment.