Respuesta :

Tenno - emperor

shogun - the most powerful feudal lord

Daimyo - provincial lord or baron

Shoya, lower order nobility, local nobility

gokenin- vassal

Burakumin or hyakusho  - farmers

Explanation:

  • Under the influence of Confucianism, the emperor was believed to be the tenno - celestial ruler, or descendant of the gods, which justifies his absolute authority.
  • The real situation was such that the earth was ruled by a warrior layer headed by a shogun, and his place in the social pyramid was at the very top, just below the emperor.
  • The bureaucratic bureaucracy, which functioned on a feudal system of devotion to vassals and masters, could have demanded or forced decrees from the emperor that went into the hands of the shogunate and at the expense of imperial power.
  • A warrior class called the samurai had a similar role in Japan as the nobility, that is, the knights in Europe. They were the bearers of the economic process and lived by a special code.
  • During the Kamakura period, the top of the warrior caste was occupied by gokenin, direct vassals of shoguns of about 200
  • In the terminology of the Japanese Middle Ages, farmers and peasants fell under the hyakusho category and were free to cultivate land, whether public or private, if they paid a fee. On the social pyramid, they occupied a place between the warriors and the aristocracy above themselves and the serfs below. Like European peasants, Japanese peasants also paid a fee to their master.

Class: History

Level:College

Keywords: tenno, shogun, daimyo, shoya, gokenin

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