The Daimyo were the fuedal landlords for the shogun.
Shogun
Shogun
The most powerful of the daimyo in feudal Japan was called the "shogun." The shogun held significant military and political authority, effectively ruling the country while the emperor remained a symbolic figurehead. This position was crucial during the shogunate periods, particularly the Kamakura and Edo periods, where the shogun controlled the samurai and governed the various domains across Japan.
shogun pro 125 is the most fastest
The portion of the crop the landowner owed to the sharecropper
This was called a manor.
serf, poor people, needed the strength and protection from a landowner. So, serfs worked for the landowner in exchange for protection.
There is no particular name in Hebrew for a rich landowner.
He had people who worked for him called serfs. He was a landowner, and the serfs would have been his tenants, working his land and paying him rent. The would also have provided infantry when he was called to provide men-at-arms.
sharecropper
shogun
Shogun
Samurai
Aristocrat.
A supreme military commander in Japan was called a "Shogun." The title of Shogun was established in the late 12th century and held significant power over the military and political affairs of Japan. The Shogun was appointed by the Emperor but often held the real governing power in the country.
A shogun is a leader or simply called a general. Now a days the term has evolved to "prime minister".
Shogun