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Samurai Warrior
Samurai
Armour The samurai (or bushi) were the members of the military class,
the Japanese warriors.
Samurai employed a range of weapons such as bows and arrows,
spears and guns; but their most famous weapon and their symbol was the sword.
Samurai were supposed to lead their lives according to the ethic code of bushido
("the way of the warrior"). Strongly Confucian in nature, Bushido stressed concepts
such as loyalty to one's master, self discipline and respectful, ethical behavior.
After a defeat, some samurai chose to commit ritual suicide (seppuku) by cutting
their abdomen rather than being captured or dying a dishonorable death.
Below
follows a short history of the Japanese warrior:
Heian Period (794-1185) The
samurai's importance and influence grew during the Heian Period, when powerful
landowners hired private warriors for the protection of their properties. Towards
the end of the Heian Period, two military clans, the Minamoto and Taira, had
grown so powerful that they sized control over the country and fought wars for
supremacy against each other.
Kamakura Period (1192-1333) In 1185, the Minamoto
defeated the Taira, and Minamoto Yoritomo established a new military government
in Kamakura in 1192. As shogun, the highest military officer, he became the ruler
of Japan.
Muromachi Period (1333 - 1573) During the chaotic Era of Warring
States (sengoku jidai, 1467-1573), Japan consisted of dozens of independent states
which
were constantly fighting each other. Consequently, the demand for samurai was
very high. Between the wars, many samurai were working on farms. Many of the
famous samurai movies by Kurosawa take place during this era.
Azuchi-Momoyama
Period (1573 - 1603) When Toyotomi Hideyoshi reunited Japan, he started to introduce
a rigid social caste system which was later completed by Tokugawa Ieyasu and
his successors. Hideyoshi forced all samurai to decide between a life on the
farm and a warrior life in castle towns. Furthermore, he forbade anyone but the
samurai to arm themselves with a sword.
Edo Period (1603 - 1868) According to
the Edo Period's official hierarchy of social castes, the samurai stood at the
top, followed by the farmers, artisans and merchants. Furthermore, there were
hierarchies within each caste. All samurai were forced to live in castle towns
and received income from their lords in form of rice. Masterless samurai were
called ronin and caused minor troubles during the early Edo Period. With the
fall of Osaka Castle in 1615, the Tokugawa's last potential rival was eliminated,
and relative peace prevailed in Japan for about 250 years. As a result, the importance
of martial skills declined, and most samurai became bureaucrats, teachers or
artists. In 1868, Japan's feudal era came to an end, and the samurai class was
abolished.
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