A Japanese feudal lord is called a daimyo. Daimyo were powerful landholding nobles who ruled over territories in feudal Japan. They maintained their own samurai warriors and owed allegiance to the shogun, the supreme military leader of Japan.
Ninjas originated in Japan during the feudal era. They were covert agents skilled in espionage, sabotage, and guerrilla warfare. So, ninjas are Japanese, not Chinese.
A non-Japanese person is often referred to as a "foreigner" or "outsider" in Japan. They may also be called a "gaijin," which translates to "foreigner" or "foreign person" in Japanese.
Japanese leaders were historically called emperors, but in modern times, the leader of Japan holds the title of Prime Minister and the country is a constitutional monarchy with the Emperor serving as a ceremonial figurehead.
In Japanese, if you write foreign names out, you write them with a writing system called Katakana. So, in Katakana, your name would be Jessica: ジェッシカ.
In Japanese, "ma'am" is translated as "γε¬’γγ (ojΕsan)" or "ε₯₯γγ (okusan)" depending on the context.
Feudal lords.
Yoritomo Minamoto in the 1100s
tonosama
Hakama
Vassalage is the relationship between the feudal lord and his vassal. Kings had higher lords as vassals, and higher lords had lower lords as vassals. The practice was called subinfeudation.
The feudal system is described by the Feudal Pyramid, which has four basic elements, the king, the lords, the common vassals, and the serfs. It is called a pyramid because each layer was supported by a much larger group that supported it, down to the serfs. The term vassal is sometimes applied only to those below the lords, but the lords were vassals.
Local lords were called daimyo. They retained soldiers called samurai. The top ruling lord in Japan was called the Shogun. The feudal leaders received tribute from the territories they were responsible for.
In a feudal society, serfs had to pay lords with crops
how is feudal japanese society structured
feudal system
vassals
Serfs gave crops to Lords and Lords controlled serfs' lives.