he commanded the Japanese military and took place when the emperor was gone
kill people
total war shogun 2
he was the leader and he was important to medieval japan b/c he conquered many lands.
Medieval emperors had no power, because it was taken away by the shogun. However, they were still considered the highest in the feudal structure because he was considered a God. Without the Emperor there, people would not follow the shogun!
Shogun reigned Japanese medieval society. Even though there was an Emperor, the Shogun held the real power. There were several Shogunates but the most recent is the Tokugawa Shogunate which reigned over 200 years and kept a tightly controlled isolationist society and helped flourish Japanese culture.
Samurai was a status. All daimyo and shogun were of samurai status. Bushi was a warrior. If you would "rank" them, it would be: Bushi-Daimyo-Shogun.
Yes. It went Emperor, Shogun, Daimyo, Farmers, Artisans, Merchants.
Emperor at the top, followed by the Shogun, Daimyo, Samurai and finally peasants (farmers, merchants, crafts people). That was what it was supposed to be like. Instead, the Shogun was at the top, then the emperor, daimyo, samurai, and peasants. The shogun seized control after the emperor was so caught up with his own life at court. They were also known as a heirarchy.
A king or queen of japan who was in the medieval times.He or her wore clothes that no one else could afford.He or her was very rich and high in power
In medieval Japan, the shogun held more practical power than the emperor, who was primarily a symbolic figure. The shogun was the military leader and had control over the samurai and governance, effectively ruling the country. The emperor, while considered the divine sovereign and a central figure in religious and cultural life, had limited political authority, especially during the feudal era. This dynamic established a system where the shogunate wielded actual control, while the emperor's role was largely ceremonial.
Both systems had members of the warrior class who followed a rigid code of discipline and honor.
I don't think there is a Filipino word for shogun because we don't actually have something like a shogun in the Philippines. ...So shogun in Filipino is just shogun...