A Knight
knight
a soldier who guarded the walls of a castle or fort.
tight knight
The answer is "Knight".
To take orders from whoever is in command of them and to do those orders.
They are the colours and design of the lord that soldier or knight fights for.
A medieval knight was a heavily armored and mounted warrior who belonged to the nobility and fought on horseback, often participating in tournaments and duels. In contrast, a medieval foot soldier was a common soldier who fought on foot, typically wearing lighter armor and using weapons like swords, spears, and bows. Knights were generally of higher social status and received more training in combat than foot soldiers.
There is no one term for that, a brave solider would be a knight, or a squire.
No, not necessarily. A soldier, otherwise known as a legionnaire, could have any social class unless they were servants. For example, a plebeian could become a soldier who is an average citizen, while a patrician could become a soldier who is a wealthy citizen. It all depends.
A sapper is a soldier who does engineering jobs like building bridges and field defences, clearing minefields and repairing roads for the army.
A samurai is comparable to a medieval knight not just anyone can be one they have to be a descendant from another samurai and they have to train for years. A regular soldier is just anyone who was inlisted or joined the military.
The spelling "knight" is a medieval mounted or armored soldier, or the related honorary title. The homophone "night" is the period of daily darkness, as opposed to daytime.