Dibao (ti-pao),[n 1] sometimes called headmen[1] or constables,[2] were local officials in Qing and early RepublicanChina, typically selected from among the prominent landowners.[3] Working in communities of around 100 households, they were charged with overseeing boundaries and land disputes.[3] He notarized all real estate deeds on a commission basis and collected the land tax,[3] as well as overseeing minor punishment such as the cangue.[2]
As foreign missionaries and businessmen gained the right to hold property in China from the unequal treaties, the local headmen could be caught between them and their superiors in the Chinese hierarchy, for instance during the construction of the Woosung Road.[1]
The dibao administered villages under the ordinary Chinese administrative system. A similar office called the shoubao (shou-pao) was established under the Qing in 1725 to manage the Banner system.[4]
The dibao were the successors of the Qin and Hantingzhang,[n 2] the Sui and Tanglizheng,[n 3] and Songbaozheng.[n 4] They were occasionally also known as baozheng or as dijia[n 5][5]
After 1900, they began to be replaced by less autonomous cunzheng,[n 6][6] although this transition was not completed until the Republican era.
^ abcHenriot, Christian. "Invisible Deaths, Silent Deaths: 'Bodies without Masters' in Republican Shanghai". Journal of Social History, Winter 2009, p. 433.