All Daimyo are Samurai but not all samurai are Daimyo- the classical relationship would be Master and servant- yet that does not tell it all, as both parties had very specific rights and responsibilities towards each other.
The daimyo was the main leader of the samurai
The samurai warriors are paid from the daimyo. The daimyo pays the samurai warriors with either land, money, or food (typically rice).
to protect his Daimyo
Daimyo was the name for the class of people underneath the lords or emperors in Japanese feudalism. They owned land that they made farmers take care of and paid them with protection served by samurai. Samurai were paid for their services by either money or land.
A samurai was exactly like a soldier. They were trained in many different weapons, and obeyed their daimyo (lord/commander), regardless of what the order was, so pretty much exactly like a modern-day soldier. I'm speaking of course about the samurai class in general, not individuals, as samurai were obviously very different people when compared to modern day soldiers.
The daimyo was the main leader of the samurai
The Samurai's job was to protect the Daimyo and in return they got food and other things
The Samurai's job was to protect the Daimyo and in return they got food and other things
The samurai warriors are paid from the daimyo. The daimyo pays the samurai warriors with either land, money, or food (typically rice).
nothing
The Samurai's job was to protect the Daimyo and in return they got food and other things
You need to be a hig rank sensei/ samurai to be a daimyo...
What_was_the_relationshipbetween_Samurai_and_Daimyo
By the money
A samurai served a daimyo as a vassal in feudal Japan. The samurai pledged loyalty and military service in exchange for protection, land, and financial support from the daimyo. The samurai's code of honor, bushido, guided their behavior and allegiance to their lord.
to protect his Daimyo
Answer 1: SAmurais served their Shogun. A shogun was the military leader and as the years went on shogans became more incharge then the emperors. Answer 2: Samurai didn't serve the shogun, they served the daimyo, the Japanese lords. Then the daimyo would give the shogun loyalty and the service of some of the daimyo's samurai, in return for land which they gave some to the samurai. The shogun has (for example) 3 lots of land - A, B, C. Two lots of samurai -A,B - serve the daimyo. The shogun gives land lot B and C to the daimyo in return for samurai lot B. The daimyo gives land lot C to the samurai in return for their service. So even though samurai lot B 'serves' the shogun, they actually do that only because they serve the daimyo.