when feudal Japan began it is told that they were isolated and they got that from the European feudalism. Both of there feudalisms were made for scurity and stability.
Also both countries had a war, like Europe had to fight invadors and japan had to fight warlords. This was all power and welth they say. For these battles they protected themselves. After the win, pesants were looking up to there lord (land owner).
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Although many people consider feudalism a European invention, the Japanese invented a form of feudalism independent of the Europeans at about the time that feudalism was at its height in Europe. Although these two feudalistic societies differed in several important ways, they also exhibited some key commonalities. This article will compare and contrast feudal Japan with feudal Europe while offering some explanations for the differences.
Since the ownership of land is what defines feudalism, both Japan and Europe had landowning and non-landowing castes during the Middle Ages. Unlike European feudalism, however, Japanese feudalism did not have a true pyramid form with the monarch presiding over a hierarchy of less important nobles. There are two main reasons for this. First, authority in Japan was much less centralized than it was in the nation-states of Europe. Although most of the local aristocrats paid lip-service to the emperor, the rugged terrain of Japan made it difficult for the emperor to fully control the local aristocracy. Thus, the local aristocrats had much more power in Japan than they ever had in France, Britain, or any other European country.
Secondly, although the lower nobility in Japan (the samurai) swore fealty to their local lords, the local lords did not give the samurai any land of their own. While the European nobility received land in exchange for their military service, the samurai did not join a landowning hierarchy. Instead, they were given an independent income from their local lord based upon what that lord's lands produced. In contrast, European knights usually had their own serfs to work the land the knights received from their lord. While a Japanese samurai might have had servants, these servants did not work the land they way they would have done in Europe.
Obviously, the Japanese and European feudalistic systems were based on radically different legal and cultural structures. While the basis for feudalism was Roman and Germanic law and the Catholic Church in Europe, Chinese Confucian law and Buddhism were the basis of feudalism in Japan. Because of these differences in the basis for feudalism in Japan and Europe, feudalism developed in those two areas at different times. Although feudalism was largely established throughout Europe by the 9th century, it was not until the 12th century that feudalism began to appear in Japan. Thus, the Japanese Samurai system is not quite as old as that of the European knight.
Perhaps the most important similarity between Japanese and European feudalism for most people was the fact that they were both hereditary caste systems. In both areas, those who were born peasants had not chance of becoming anything other than peasants. Furthermore, they had no hope that their children would be anything other than peasants. Similarly, those who were born into the families of local lords or samurai would belong to the same caste as their parents, no matter how unqualified for leadership they might be. Over time, these caste systems began breaking down, but they severely limited the opportunities of the masses for hundreds of years.
1. In feudal England they hired knights where as in feudal Japan, they hired samurai.
2. Peasants in feudal England were paid a tiny amount to work in farms and were given an uncomfortable living space by the job giver where as peasants in feudal Japan were allowed to own land but still needed to pay taxes to the Daimyo
Hope it helped! :)
i dont know can someone tell me
In medieval times, you could have been dragged out and hung, had your head chopped off, or become the king.
The post of village idiot in medieval times was usually allocated to the most stupid or ignorant person in the township. It is not appropriate to refer to someone as this in modern times however.
A scribe or clerk; someone who recorded things and wrote things down
Someone who takes care of horses. you people are really... what ever
Compare and contrast is kind of a redundant statement. It just means to compare similarities and differences of one relationship to another. For example,"in this relationship, I can be myself. With my ex, I had to pretend to be someone I wasn't"
It is a some of special thing to say about someone :)
The difference is that someone whispering has a lower intensity and someone shouting has a higher intensity.
The difference is that someone whispering has a lower intensity and someone shouting has a higher intensity.
Japan is a country, Europe's a continent. Japan's asian, Europes not. ++++++++++=
Dont be lazy. Instead of having someone else do something for you. Work.
compare and contrast personnel management and human resource managrment
A "compare and contrast" essay asks you to look at two or more things and describe the ways that they are similar (compare) and then the ways that they are different (contrast). These may be actual, physical elements or ideas. These could be two elements in a story. Usually at the end you have to give your opinion as to which you think is better. Compare and contrast is one of the easiest forms of essay and can easily be begun with a list.
A milliner medieval is someone who is a hat maker and also a merchant.
A chandler in medieval times was someone who made and sold candles.
someone who made clothes
I'm going to presume that it doesn't mean much and could be asking to compare and contrast so he or she could think of ideas of what to put down.