宰
- prime minister;
- to govern;
- to manage;
Etymology
A compound ideogram composed of:
宀 (roof, house) — indicating an institutional or domestic setting
辛 — originally related to punishment or legal responsibility
According to Shuowen Jiezi, 辛 is connected with 辠 (crime), referring to a person who, after committing an offense, was confined to labor inside a household.
In early society, skilled prisoners often became specialized administrators, which led to the extension of meaning from household overseer to state official.
Usage in Korean
재상 (宰相) — prime minister
도재 (都宰) — chief administrator
주재 (主宰) — to preside over; to control
관재 (官宰) — official administration
Words that derived from 宰
Additional notes
宰 is not limited to political leadership; it broadly means to manage or preside over affairs. It represents authority rooted in service and management, not sovereignty. Reflects early Chinese governance, where expertise and responsibility justified power.
Related characters:
相 — minister; mutual
治 — to govern
政 — politics; administration
司 — to manage; office
官 — official
宰 focuses on centralized oversight, while others emphasize policy (政) or bureaucracy (官).
Classical citations:
《史記》 (Records of the Grand Historian)
「宰相者,百官之長也」
“The prime minister is the head of all officials.”
《左傳》 (Zuo Zhuan)
「宰制國政」
“To preside over the governance of the state.”
- 十卜廿十 (JYTJ)
- ⿱ 宀 辛