Respuesta :
Inside feudal Japan:
Military power was more important that theorietical power.
Those at the top of the hierarchy wielded absolute control.
Explanation:
- There is a clear division into a caste or class system. Jacques Le Goff clearly stated the rule of the hierarchical system in feudal times: “To rise above one's kin meant arrogance. To go down under your own gender was a shameful sin. Social organization was created by the will of God.”
- A completely identical opinion was valid in Japan, except that it was not as established by the Church as on the European continent. The child of the farmer will become the farmer. The child of the feudal lord will also become a feudal lord.
- Unlike the European feudal lords, the Japanese samurai were landless because of military merit instead of money. European knights were mostly illiterate, and in peacetime, they practiced hunting and practicing war skills, while Japanese samurai were literate and, in addition, engaged in writing poetry, culture and learning calligraphy skills.
- In Europe, women were seen as sensitive and fragile beings who could lead a man on a bad path. The woman was marginalized during the feudal epoch. However, in Japan there were female samurai who were believed to have all the necessary qualities of a man during battles.
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