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That is a rather general question. This question will probably get a number of different responses depending on the answerer. An overly simple answer might be that the samurai played the same role as the knight in medieval Europe. Samurai served a daimyo, or lord. Knights served a king or prince. Medieval Europe consisted of serfdoms So did pre-unified Japan. In short, Japan and Europe have many similarities in its evolution to modern society and yet, neither significantly influenced the other. In fact, many of these similarities occurred concurrently... at the same time, but eerily independent of each other. Another answer could be the establishment of Bushido, or the way of the warrior. Western perception of samurai is perhaps one of extreme discipline and self-denial. In a way, this is correct. In unified Japan, the samurai developed Bushido, which promoted the idea that the greatest honor that a samurai could experience is their own death in service of their lord. It almost sounds religious... and a concept that many Westerners would not embrace. Perhaps some scholar might be able to better expound upon the samurai's significance to history.

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17y ago

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