they lived in castles
You need to be a hig rank sensei/ samurai to be a daimyo...
He established an alternate attendance system known as sankin kotai. This required daimyo to live alternately between their domain and Edo. The Tokugawa Bakufu also required that the daimyo maintained a permanent residence in Edo and required that their families live there. Tokugawa Ieyasu also enforced a strict castle building and destruction system. He required daimyo to destroy certain castles in their domains if there were found to be too many. Conversely, when a new castle was being built, he would require daimyo provide materials for it's construction. Needless to say, this was a huge economic strain on them.
The Samurai's job was to protect the Daimyo and in return they got food and other things
No, the shogun is not under the daimyo; rather, the shogun is the highest military leader in feudal Japan and holds power over the entire country, including the daimyo. The daimyo are regional lords who govern specific territories and owe allegiance to the shogun. In this hierarchy, the shogun has authority over the daimyo, who manage their lands and vassals under the shogun's overarching rule.
The medieval Japanese emperor's wore expensive robes.
You need to be a hig rank sensei/ samurai to be a daimyo...
Pistol Daimyo no Bōken happened in 1990.
Pistol Daimyo no Bōken was created in 1990.
An example of a daimyo is a person who owned a large piece of land in Japan.
He established an alternate attendance system known as sankin kotai. This required daimyo to live alternately between their domain and Edo. The Tokugawa Bakufu also required that the daimyo maintained a permanent residence in Edo and required that their families live there. Tokugawa Ieyasu also enforced a strict castle building and destruction system. He required daimyo to destroy certain castles in their domains if there were found to be too many. Conversely, when a new castle was being built, he would require daimyo provide materials for it's construction. Needless to say, this was a huge economic strain on them.
The Samurai's job was to protect the Daimyo and in return they got food and other things
It is Daimyo
The Samurai's job was to protect the Daimyo and in return they got food and other things
The Japanese daimyo was similar to the European Lord.
The samurai warriors are paid from the daimyo. The daimyo pays the samurai warriors with either land, money, or food (typically rice).
No, the shogun is not under the daimyo; rather, the shogun is the highest military leader in feudal Japan and holds power over the entire country, including the daimyo. The daimyo are regional lords who govern specific territories and owe allegiance to the shogun. In this hierarchy, the shogun has authority over the daimyo, who manage their lands and vassals under the shogun's overarching rule.
The medieval Japanese emperor's wore expensive robes.