with gifts of land
A Daimyo was a powerful feudal lord in Japan who ruled over a specific territory and commanded samurai warriors. The samurai served the Daimyo, providing military service and loyalty in exchange for land, protection, and a stipend. This relationship was central to the feudal system in Japan, where the loyalty of samurai was crucial for the stability and power of the Daimyo. In essence, the Daimyo and samurai were bound by mutual obligations of service and protection.
No, the feudal system was a medieval system.
feudal is the answer
Chivalry was an outgrowth of the feudal system
Answer 1: emperor, shogun, daimyo, samurai, ronin Answer 2 : Ronin weren't really part of the feudal system; they were just samurai without a master (who were still samurai). You forgot peasants, which is rather stupid. I mean, where would everyone who wasn't nobility or a warrior go? Emperor, shogun, daimyo, samurai, peasant There's some controversy about merchants. The Japanese generally disrespected them because they lived and worked only for their own wealth. Some sources say that they are under the peasant and there are actually 6 tiers in the Japanese feudal system; others classified them as part of the peasants. I think it should be a separate tier, because the Japanese greatly respected peasants for giving them food, so it would clash, wouldn't it? But you asked for five, so if you can only have five I'd stop at peasants.
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.
Emperor.
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They both used the feudal system. The feudal system is a kind of culture in which the knights (in Japan, Samurai) owned most of the land and were responsible to the King (in Japan, Emperor), and basically ruled over the peasants.
They have a system of government that is almost exactly the same. JPN EURO Emperor - God Shogun - King Daimyo - Nobles Samurai - Knights Peasants - Serfs
No, the feudal system was a medieval system.
feudal is the answer
Chivalry was an outgrowth of the feudal system
In the feudal system, soldiers were often bound by duty and loyalty to their lords, which could be seen as a form of obligation to fight rather than being explicitly forced. However, the consequences of not fulfilling this duty could be severe, including loss of land, possessions, or social status.
Answer 1: emperor, shogun, daimyo, samurai, ronin Answer 2 : Ronin weren't really part of the feudal system; they were just samurai without a master (who were still samurai). You forgot peasants, which is rather stupid. I mean, where would everyone who wasn't nobility or a warrior go? Emperor, shogun, daimyo, samurai, peasant There's some controversy about merchants. The Japanese generally disrespected them because they lived and worked only for their own wealth. Some sources say that they are under the peasant and there are actually 6 tiers in the Japanese feudal system; others classified them as part of the peasants. I think it should be a separate tier, because the Japanese greatly respected peasants for giving them food, so it would clash, wouldn't it? But you asked for five, so if you can only have five I'd stop at peasants.
They supported the entire feudal system by working the land.
a labourer who labours under a feudal system