Mandarin Guanfu
Ming-Qing Chinese imperial official's robe
The Mandarin guanfu is the formal official's robe of the Ming and Qing dynasties (14thโearly 20th century), distinguished by the rank badge (buzi) โ a square embroidered patch on chest and back indicating the wearer's exact position. Civil officials wore bird badges (crane for first rank, pheasant, goose, etc.), while military officials wore beasts (qilin, lion, leopard, tiger). Nine ranks were strictly codified. The base garment is an ankle-length robe (changpao) with round collar and wide sleeves, worn with jeweled belt, rank cap, and โ in the Qing โ a chaozhu bead necklace. The Qing added Manchu horseshoe cuffs and side slits. Atop the entire system stood the Emperor's Dragon Robe, embroidered with nine dragons, forbidden to all others. In East Asian fantasy, the guanfu is the iconic dress of court intrigue and political drama, its badges making rank instantly legible.