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What did the "Ji" in "Jiangshan Sheji" mean in ancient times?

Ji was called a food crop in ancient times. Some books said it was a crop like millet, and some books said it was millet (millet).

江山社稷

Pronunciation: ?jiāng shān shè jì?

Meaning: The king rules thousands of miles of rivers and mountains, and the common people grow crops on the land of thousands of miles of rivers and mountains. The blessings of the country are the blessings of the people. If the king's country is the country's country and the people's country is the country, the people will have no worries about food and clothing, and the king's country will be stable.

Quotation: "Mencius · Try Your Heart": "The people are the most valuable, the country is the second, and the king is the least." Extended information

Other meanings of Ji:

1. It means related to crops.

Example: Millet and millet are useless. ——"Guoyu Jinyu". Note: "Liangye." According to this, the three types of millet and millet are millet, which is the name of Ji Daoliang. Liang Zejin's millet seeds are large and not sticky, so they are different from Ji.

2. Extended to the general name of crops and grain.

For example: The millet is separated from the ground, the seedlings of the rice are grown. ——"Poetry·Wang Feng·Mill Li"

3. Officials in charge of agricultural affairs in ancient times.

For example: The country depends on the Ming Lord, and the safety is entrusted to the woman. ——Rong Yu's "Ode to History"

4. Ancient place names.