no, they were in it for honor.
The samurai were tools of feudal japan to dominate other territories and keep control of situations they considered inconvinient, such as citizens complaining over taxes. Their codes of honors or bushido, were simply an invention to keep them loyal and capable of doing their cruel acts. Many samurai were abusive of their power and authority as they were considered divine to the eyes of law and could kill anyone they pleased for simply staring at them. Samurai are fairly romanticized in the big screen; however the truth is that the ninja were actually the good guys. Part of the samurai's job was to take down opposing neighbors, handle war situations and rice farmers who would riot over taxes and unfair situations; which later gave birth to the ninjutsu combat style to take down evil feudal lords controlling the corrupted samurai and therefor save thousands of lives at the cost of one solely perversed mind. Conclusion: Samurai were scrap! they could kill, rape and do as they pleased with their authority, especially after forbidding anyone but the samurai wielding weapons.
Loyalists were, assuming that you are talking about the American Revolution, loyal to the British throne, but lived in the colonies.
britian
Enemys
Maryland was a slave-state that came close to voting Confederate. As the state surrounded Washington DC, this would have been a serious setback for the Union. Lincoln took certain liberties in jailing the pro-Confederate leaders without trial, but the state did remain loyal.
No
bushido is the samurai code of honor that they must follow. they must be loyal to their lord
A Daimyo had the ability to reward his loyal retainers with land.
The Samurai's job was to protect the Daimyo and in return they got food and other things
Loyalists. They were loyal to the king.
Loyalists. They were loyal to the king.
He allowed nobles to advance in the government only if they were loyal to him.
he allowed nobles to advance in the government only if they were loyal to him
He allowed nobles to advance in the government only if they were loyal to him.
He allowed nobles to advance in the government only if they were loyal to him.
Loyalist
The verb for loyalty is "to be loyal" or "to remain loyal." Example sentences include: "She was loyal to her friends," or "He remained loyal to his team."