reduced corvee and taxes
Light corvee and light tax, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q ī ngy á ob á of ù, which means to reduce corvee and tax. It comes from the book of Han Dynasty, Emperor Zhao Ji.
The origin of Idioms
Ban Gu of the Eastern Han Dynasty wrote in the book of the Han Dynasty, Emperor Zhao Ji: "waste in the sea, half of the registered permanent residence, only knowing the importance of current affairs, light corvee and light taxes, and rest with the people."
Idiom usage
As predicate, attribute, object; used in policy, etc. He was a monarch of the Ming Dynasty and made great contributions to the emperor of the Tang Dynasty and the ancestors of the Song Dynasty.
reduced corvee and taxes
follow the tracks of an overthrown chariot -- follow the same old disastrous road - dǎo xí fù zhé
Three commandments for gentlemen - jūn zǐ sān jiè