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The farmer, or specifically the small landowner-cultivator, was ranked just below scholars and officials in the social hierarchy.
Other agricultural cultivators were of a lower status, such as tenants, wage laborers, and in rare cases slaves.
Artisans and craftsmen had a legal and socioeconomic status between that of owner-cultivator farmers and common merchants.
State-registered merchants, who were forced by law to wear white-colored clothes and pay high commercial taxes, were considered by the gentry as social parasites with a contemptible status.
These were often petty shopkeepers of urban marketplaces ; merchants such as industrialists and itinerant traders working between a network of cities could avoid registering as merchants and were often wealthier and more powerful than the vast majority of government officials.
Wealthy landowners, such as nobles and officials, often provided lodging for retainers who provided valuable work or duties, sometimes including fighting bandits or riding into battle.
Unlike slaves, retainers could come and go from their master's home as they pleased.
Medical physicians, pig breeders, and butchers had a fairly high social status, while occultist diviners, runners, and messengers had low status.

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