As states modernized, administrative divisions became more rigid and systematic to increase state power.
The "story" of administrative divisions is the evolution of how humans have organized vast territories into manageable pieces to provide services, enforce laws, and maintain control. It is a narrative of moving from loose, personal rule to systematic, bureaucratic governance. The Ancient Foundations administrative division
Early empires discovered that ruling a massive land from a single capital was a "logistical nightmare". The Ancient Foundations Early empires discovered that ruling
: Peter the Great reformed Russia's unmanageable "governorates" in the early 1700s, subdividing them into provinces and districts specifically for fiscal purposes, ensuring every homestead could be accounted for. While this disrupted traditional domain-based arts
: After the Meiji Restoration, Japan ended its feudal domain system in favor of prefectures . While this disrupted traditional domain-based arts, it spurred the growth of modern transportation networks and centralized archives. Modern Hierarchies
: Initially, the Roman Empire was surprisingly lean, outsourcing tax collection to private corporations and leaving the actual mechanics of governance to self-governing municipalities. However, as the empire grew too vast for one man, Emperor Diocletian established the tetrarchy in 284 AD, dividing the empire into Eastern and Western halves to improve efficiency and defense.
: In places like the Ayutthaya Kingdom (ancient Thailand), the king ruled through a system of tributes from local ruling families in autonomous "muangs," which often led to instability when these local leaders switched sides during wars. The Shift to Modern Bureaucracy