Want this question answered?
A lot of samurai originated from many counties in Japan, I believe their were just about 7 counties. Samurai are japanese warriors, basically, they fought for daimyo the head, leader, or ruler of a clan. A daimyo would eventually come to the rank of shogun.... The difference between daimyo and shogun, is that daimyo are rulers of clan, while shogun are basically the head samurai of japan.
they can sometimes be greedy for more land.
THEY WERE BROTHERS AND THE SHOGUN WAS OLDER:) :( people these days the real answer is that the shogun went to war against the emperor and gained more power by victory of the battle. that's why the emperor had less power on japan than the shogun.
shogun pro 125 is the most fastest
The emperor was by birth, descended from a long line of emperors going back to the Sun Goddess in Japanese mythology. The shogun was a military dictator who seized the power, and ruled - in theory - in the name of the emperor.
Answer 1: SAmurais served their Shogun. A shogun was the military leader and as the years went on shogans became more incharge then the emperors. Answer 2: Samurai didn't serve the shogun, they served the daimyo, the Japanese lords. Then the daimyo would give the shogun loyalty and the service of some of the daimyo's samurai, in return for land which they gave some to the samurai. The shogun has (for example) 3 lots of land - A, B, C. Two lots of samurai -A,B - serve the daimyo. The shogun gives land lot B and C to the daimyo in return for samurai lot B. The daimyo gives land lot C to the samurai in return for their service. So even though samurai lot B 'serves' the shogun, they actually do that only because they serve the daimyo.
A lot of samurai originated from many counties in Japan, I believe their were just about 7 counties. Samurai are japanese warriors, basically, they fought for daimyo the head, leader, or ruler of a clan. A daimyo would eventually come to the rank of shogun.... The difference between daimyo and shogun, is that daimyo are rulers of clan, while shogun are basically the head samurai of japan.
they can sometimes be greedy for more land.
They were the most powerful feudal lords in Feudal Japan right after the Shogun.
The Shogun never replaced the Emperor in Japanese history. However, there have been instances in Japanese history in which a Shogun exerted quite a bit more influence than an Emperor. Depending on the time period, this was for several different reasons. Overall, the underlying reason for any Shogun to enjoy more power than an Emperor would be due to the fact that a Shogun would have military backing.
THEY WERE BROTHERS AND THE SHOGUN WAS OLDER:) :( people these days the real answer is that the shogun went to war against the emperor and gained more power by victory of the battle. that's why the emperor had less power on japan than the shogun.
shogun pro 125 is the most fastest
The emperor was by birth, descended from a long line of emperors going back to the Sun Goddess in Japanese mythology. The shogun was a military dictator who seized the power, and ruled - in theory - in the name of the emperor.
It really depends what era you are referring to. The real power of the Shogun was from around the 8th century until 1867 when the then ruling Tokugawa Yoshinobu relinquished control back to the emperor after nearly 1000 years (this became known as the Meiji Resoration). The emperor was and still is head of state (technically called the "symbol of the state and the unity of the people" since 1947). The shogun on the other hand is the one that really has the power. The best analogy is the Queen of England and the Prime Minister or the even the current Emperor of Japan and the Prime Minister. One has the posh title but the other gets out of bed at 6am every day and puts in a 18 hour shift!
Shogun were more powerful and like the regional leaders of Japan hundreds of years ago.
The Samurai in the Peasants view:Where said to have been money, hungry, corrupt gangsters and killers who oppressed the peasants. They only used religion and spirituality to give themselves "purpose" during peace time. It is clear that the Samurai oppressed the peasant and merchant class; this was the case of where the lowest common class is oppressed by the more socially astute class.Basically they saw the Samurai, NOT in a good way, becuase they were the lowest of the Japanese Feudal system!!!!!
Yes. Technically speaking, the Emperor designated the Tokugawa family as shogun (general). Shogun (general) is originally supposed to fight against the northern peoples, but the position has the greatest power in the society, and it was more or less just a title for someone who controls the country. The Emperor and his family became political figureheads while the real military power lay with the Shogunate rulers.