True
Yes you do. You must swear an oath of loyalty.
They had to swear an oath of loyalty.
The Clergy swore loyalty to the Pope (apart from the king)
swear a loyalty oath
Whatever you do don't read what's the brackets.(In 1066 (or around then) when William duke of Normandy was announced king of England, he invented a thing called the feudal system - this was when he would give land to the lords and they would return him knights and loyalty and the lords would give the knights land and the knights would give the lords loyalty and a promise to serve in the army and the knights would give land to the peasants who would give them loyalty and clothes and money and other stuff - this bunch of junk was the feudal system.)In Normandy (and in medieval times) when Barons and Bishops were given land they had to swear an oath of loyalty to the lord who was giving it - this was called ' doing homage'to be respect someone.a.k.a honor somethingrespect or reverence paid or renderedSource: www.dictionary.com
Andrew Johnson granted amnesty and the restoration of property to all southerners willing to swear a loyalty oath
Persons opposed to anything about Great Britain.
They had to work on the lords land and swear their loyalty to him.
They both began training at around age 7, both would have fought and died for honor, both extremely fit and well trained. both served a fuedal lord, daimyo for the samurai and a Earl or Baron for the knight. both would be given land for their service. Samurai however were hurt by their forced isolation from the rest of the world and knights armor and weapons advanced further, with knights having Plate armor that was far more protective and weighed the same as samurai armor, and better anti-armor weapons like the pole-ax and mace. contrary to popular belief, samurai used the spear and bow more than the katana as the katana was useless against armor. watch ThegnThrands youtube videos for more on weapon performance etc. Chivalry were not included in the Bushido.
A soldier who has to swear loyalty to another powerful person
Knights in medieval Europe often practiced Christianity, while samurai in feudal Japan adhered to Buddhism and Shintoism. Some samurai also followed Zen Buddhism for its focus on discipline and self-control. Both groups viewed their religious beliefs as integral to their code of honor and moral behavior in battle.
They had to swear an oath of loyalty.