No Usually the Damiyo provides it.
daimyo are estate owners that pay no taxes to the government
The damiyo requested to see Manjiro.
Daimyo is a pet which is only available in his birthday shop. His birthday is on June 1st.
Damiyo times! Poor ladies!
Samurai is a class like caste and it's hereditary. Therefore, the sons of farmers were destined to be farmers and samurai's son were samurai. However, there were rare cases for some to be in samurai class. One is to show great talents in swordsmanship and others include becoming great scholars. It's very rare, though. Inside the samurai class, there was also hierarchy, and it does not always mean upgrading the status if one becomes samurai from the other classes as many samurais were poor. It was more like hereditary occupations. It was hereditary, but sometimes someone who was in favour with the higher authority could become a Samurai such as the English sailor Williams Adams who sailed to Japan but later became a Samurai actually being a samurai took many talents including heredity but that doesn't mean your destined to become a farmer. you see Japanese society was broken down in classes. durning the time off the samurai the shogun was like the "lord" or king. after him was the damiyo or someone who does the kings work(sometimes!) and the samurai. if you worked up in ranks you could have a chance to be a samurai. to be a samurai took many years of dedication and training. if caught in a dirty deed a samurai would commit ritual suicide to peserve his personal honor. At mid 1500 the separation law came. Before it anyone who could afford training could become a samurai, after that you had to be the son of a samurai.
In 1853 Perry forced Japanese shogunate its ports for Western markets and thus ending the long lasting isolation (since Tokugawa Ieyatsu became the Shogun ending the Sengoku Jidai period - 1600). This lead to a huge dissatisfaction between both Japanese population and damiyo's (nobles) opposing Tokugawa rule. Those forces rallied behind the figure of Emperor (later known as Meiji) who had until this point no real power. The Emperor's forces won the war and restored the Emperor's power (Meiji restoration - 1867) thus ending the rule of Shogunate. Emperor enacted large reforms which made from feudal Japan a powerful empire in matter of decades.
The daimyos don't exist in modern times, but they were around in feudal Japan. The daimyos were their word for "lords" or "nobles". Basically to say, daimyos today really don't have much power and therefore aren't important. (though they were in feudal times...)