- For the French term, see Préfecture.
The term prefecture (from the Latin Praefectura) indicates the office, seat, territorial circonscription of a Prefect. In English the term prefecture is also used to refer to offices deemed equivalent in other languages' cultural traditions.
Literal prefectures
Antiquity
For subsequent types of
praefectura, see
Praefectus.
It has been used most prominently to denote a somewhat self-governing body or area since the
tetrarchy, when emperor
Diocletian divided the
Roman Empire into 4 districts (each divided into
dioceses, grouping under a
Vicarius a number of
Roman provinces, listed under that article), although he maintained two pretorian prefectures as an administrative level above the also surviving dioceses (a few of which got split).
Ecclesiastic
As
Canon law is strongly inspired by Roman law, it is not surprising that the Catholic Church has several offices under a prefect (while that term occurs also in otherwise styled offices, such as the head of a congregation or department of the Roman curia)
French préfecture
Main article: préfecture
In France, a préfecture is the capital city of a département. As there are 100 départements in France, there are 100 préfectures in France. A préfecture de région is the capital city of a région.
Analogous prefectures
Brazilian equivalent of prefecture
In
Brazil, the prefecture (
prefeitura in
Portuguese) is the
City Hall, home to the
Executive of a city and to the
mayor's office.
Greek equivalent of prefecture
Modern
Greece, under its 1975 Constitution, is divided into 51
nomoi (
Greek: νομοί) which form the units of local government.
These are most commonly translated into
English as
prefectures.
Each
nomos is headed by a
prefect (nomarch), who was until recently a ministerial appointee but is nowadays elected by direct popular vote. Municipal elections in Greece are held every four years and voting for the election of nomarchs and mayors is carried out concurrently but with separate ballots.
See: Prefectures of Greece
Chinese equivalents of prefecture
The ancient sense
= Xian (县/縣)
=
When used in the context of
Chinese history, especially China before the
Tang Dynasty, the word "prefecture" is used to translate
xian (县/縣). This unit of administration is translated as "county" when used in a contemporary context.
See County (China) for more information on the xian of China.
= Zhou
=
In the context of Chinese history during or after the
Tang Dynasty, the word "prefecture" is used to translate
zhou (州), another ancient unit of administration in China.
See Zhou (political division) for more information on the zhou of China.
The modern sense
In modern-day
People's Republic of China, the
prefecture (地区;
pinyin: dìqū) is an administrative division found in the
second level of the administrative hierarchy. In addition to prefectures, this level also includes autonomous prefectures,
leagues, and
prefecture-level cities. The prefecture level comes under the
province level, and in turn oversees the
county level.
See Prefecture of China for more information on modern prefectures in China.
Japanese sense of prefecture
In reference to the
Japanese system of administrative subdivisions,
prefecture is used as the translation for
todōfuken (都道府県). The system of local government in Japan consists of two classes: prefectures as the large-area local governing units and
municipalities as the basic local-level governing units. In Asian practice, the administrative segregation of a
country or unified
nation-state is usually trifold: the
state, large-area local governing units, and basic local-level governing units; Japan follows this pattern.
Japan is divided into 47 prefectures, and each is further divided into municipalities. These prefectures and municipalities neither overlap geographically nor leave any area uncovered; all residents of Japan are therefore residents of one municipality and one prefecture.
The prefectures and municipalities function as more than just the country's administrative units: they are incorporated bodies—independent from the national government—that possess their own basic spheres or responsibility and local residents as their constituents, holding administrative authority within their respective geographical boundaries. In Nagasaki and Hokkaido, subprefectures are used as special administrative units, due to peculiarities of governmental evolution and the difficulty in centrally governing certain geographically large or remote areas.
Japan's current prefectural system was established in the Meiji era after the new Meiji government abolished fiefs run by feudal clans known as han. This change is called the abolition of the han system; see "Meiji Restoration" in the History of Japan article and the "Meiji era" article for more historical details of this event.
Mongolian equivalent
Mongolian prefectures (
Aymags) were adopted under the
Manchu Empire. Today these are usually translated as "provinces".
See also
Subnational entities
Präfektur | Prefektejo | Prefectura | Préfecture | Prefektur | 県 | Prefectuur | Prefektura | Prefeitura | Frankrikes departementshuvudstäder | 地区