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Question
essential questions:
- how did loyalty and duty shape life in feudal japan?
To answer this, we analyze feudal Japan's social structure. Loyalty (e.g., samurai to daimyo, vassals to lords) and duty (Confucian - inspired roles, samurai's bushido, peasants' labor, women's domestic duties) structured society. The feudal hierarchy (emperor, shogun, daimyo, samurai, peasants/merchants) relied on reciprocal loyalty - duty bonds. Samurai followed bushido (loyalty to lord, duty to fight/protect). Peasants owed labor/taxes to lords, who provided protection. Women had duties to family/husband. These norms maintained order, defined roles, and influenced culture (e.g., literature, art glorifying loyalty).
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Loyalty and duty shaped feudal Japan by structuring the social hierarchy (samurai loyalty to lords, peasants’ duty to provide labor), defining roles (e.g., samurai’s bushido - driven duty to fight, women’s domestic duties), and maintaining order through reciprocal bonds (lords protecting vassals, vassals showing loyalty via service), influencing culture and daily life.