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The Samurai were ready for battle/war whenever the shoguns told them to. Hope this helps!
The Samurai were ready for battle/war whenever the shoguns told them to. Hope this helps!
{| |- | Samurai were soldiers. There were key individuals in the fighting of battles and wars. In addition to being skilled swordsmen, they could lead troops into the fight. |}
I presume you mean Samurai? Or Ashigaru, commoners trained to be soldiers, after the separation law, they were made into samurai. Samurai were to serve their lord, be it Shogun or Daimyo, Samurai means "to serve".
"Samurai" (侍) comes from "侍う" (Saburau) to serve.
to protect his Daimyo
The word samurai means; to serve.
The Samurai did protect the master or the person at which he has been told to protect. They were for example bodygaurds.
The Roman Curia are those cardinals (and others) assigned to work in the Vatican as heads of departments and as advisers to the pope.
Samurai were expected to serve their master as a form of loyalty and duty known as "bushido." This code of honor and ethics was deeply ingrained in samurai culture and emphasized the importance of serving one's lord with unwavering loyalty and obedience. Failing to do so would bring dishonor and shame to both the samurai and their family.
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.