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The daimyos don't exist in modern times, but they were around in feudal Japan. The daimyos were their word for "lords" or "nobles". Basically to say, daimyos today really don't have much power and therefore aren't important. (though they were in feudal times...)
The samurai were hired to protect the shoguns, who were the landlords of feudal Japan.
The merchants would buy items from artisans and farmers and sell them.
japan
The Japanese feudal system put peasants at the bottom, the daimyos or merchant middle class in the middle, and the warrior shoguns at the top.
They were the provincial rulers of feudal japan, similar to European Lords. They came in many different ranks and served under the shogun. They paid samurai underlings with rice or land, to fight for them (master-less samurai were looked down upon, and called 'ronin'.) They were themselves samurai the same way, barons, dukes, and other lords were knights, and Daimyos were supposed to follow the code of Bushido.
The manor was the estate of a feudal lord.
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The role of noble woman in the feudal system was to take the lords place when the lord was at war
1100-2064
Buddhism and Shinto
Shogun