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The phrase "Chinese government" may refer to:

Current Governments

Historical Governments

See also

The following list of Chinese monarchs is in no way inclusive The Republic of China was formally established in 1912 in Nanjing under the Provisional Constitution of the Republic of China but this government was moved Power within the Government of the People's Republic of China is divided among three bodies the Communist Party of China, the state and the People's The Chinese Soviet Republic ( it is also translated as the Soviet Republic of China or the China Soviet Republic, though it is generally referred to in The was a Japanese Puppet state that existed from 1937 to 1940 during the Second Sino-Japanese War. The was a Japanese Puppet state that existed from 1938 to 1940 during the Second Sino-Japanese War. The Wang Jingwei Government was a Government under the leadership of Wang Jingwei in the Republic of China, set up by the Empire of Japan The first major political party in China was the Kuomintang which has been restricted to Taiwan since 1949 The politics of the People's Republic of China take place in a framework of a single-party socialist republic. The Chancellor ( variously translated as Prime Minister, Premier or Chief Councillor, was a generic name given to the highest-ranking official in the The Emperor of China ( refers to any sovereign of Imperial China reigning since the founding of the Qin Dynasty in 221 BC until the fall of The Imperial examinations ( in Imperial China determined who among the population would be permitted to enter the state's Bureaucracy. The Nine Ministers ( was the collective name for nine important officials in the imperial government in Han Dynasty (206 BC–220 AD The Grand Secretariat ( Pinyin: Nèigé was nominally a coordinating agency but de facto the highest institution in the Ming imperial government The Three Departments and Six Ministries system ( was the main central administrative system adopted in ancient China. The Three Excellencies ( or the Three Lords was the collective name for the three highest officials in the Han Dynasty. The term Two Chinas (traditional Chinese 兩個中國 simplified Chinese 两个中国 pinyin liǎng gè Zhōngguó currently refers to the two states with " China "
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