Samurais began to emerge as a prominent warrior class in Japanese society during the Heian period, which lasted from the late 8th century to the late 12th century.
Everyone can be a Samurai if they have Bushido. Samurais are not only for Japanese, it's for somebody who is aiming to be a Samurai and a brave warrior.
The initial purpose of the samurai warrior in Japanese society was to protect and serve their feudal lords, maintain order, and uphold the code of honor known as Bushido.
Possibly, there are a lot of dragon legends in Japanese scripture and a lot of books that I've read about dragons state 'so the brave Japanese warrior climbed the mountain to slay the dragon', a samurai is a Japanese warrior. that's all I've to say ______ A Samurai is a feudal Japanese warrior of formidable martial capabilities. A dragon is a mythical beast. Any link between the two would probably arise from fairy tales.
The samurai is a Japanese warrior, not Chinese.
The warrior class of Japan were known as the Bushi. They are more commonly referred to as Samurai.
Everyone can be a Samurai if they have Bushido. Samurais are not only for Japanese, it's for somebody who is aiming to be a Samurai and a brave warrior.
The initial purpose of the samurai warrior in Japanese society was to protect and serve their feudal lords, maintain order, and uphold the code of honor known as Bushido.
Possibly, there are a lot of dragon legends in Japanese scripture and a lot of books that I've read about dragons state 'so the brave Japanese warrior climbed the mountain to slay the dragon', a samurai is a Japanese warrior. that's all I've to say ______ A Samurai is a feudal Japanese warrior of formidable martial capabilities. A dragon is a mythical beast. Any link between the two would probably arise from fairy tales.
The samurai is a Japanese warrior, not Chinese.
The warrior class of Japan were known as the Bushi. They are more commonly referred to as Samurai.
Samurai's social role is to protect and serve his master, in other words they are considered as a warrior caste or a fighter for his master, similar to Knight. Samurai who does not serve or have a master named as Ronin.
In Japanese 影武者 (kagemusha) is "shadow warrior."
There are several words for 'warrior' in Japanese, but a possible translation would be musha ookami.
"Warrior prince" in Japanese can be translated as "戦士王子" (senshi ouji).
They followed the code of Bushido, "The Way of the Warrior". They are usually considered a privileged class. They were much like knights were to lords in Dark Age Europe; they owned land that was derived from their daimyo, or warlord, whom they would fight for in battle. Samurai were the backbone of Japanese feudal society. Samurai were loyal to their daimyo, since the daimyo was the leader of given clan, which was one of the social basis of Japanese society. They wore highly effective multi-layered armor and fought with probably the best made swords in the world, using one of the best techniques in the world.
warrior is "musha" I don't know what magic is in Japanese though, sorry
The Japanese name for warrior is Isamu.AnswerSamurai. Senshi.Although Samurai does mean "warrior", it is probably a bit too specific in some cases. Senshi (戦士) (not to be misunderstood with "slain in battle") can mean "warrior, soldier, combatant".武士(ぶし) (bushi) is Japanese for warrior.