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The medieval Japanese warriors known as the samurai have been a fascination source for people throughout the world for several centuries. For a good reason – they were among the most elite warriors in human history. The samurai are renowned for several reasons, which include their efficiency in battle, their well-crafted <i>katana</i> swords, and most importantly, their honor code is known as <i>bushido</i>. It was the code of bushido that set the samurai apart from other contemporary warrior groups and gave them their reasons to fight. Without the bushido code, the samurai would have just another one of the many warrior classes in history.
Bushido was an extremely complex worldview, but for the sake of comparison, it shared many attributes with the honor code of medieval European knightsfor the sake of comparison. The code of bushido was followed faithfully by the samurai. Every detail of how they conducted themselves in battle was dictated by the code, including some of the following matters: the types of weapons that were allowed, the treatment of enemies, and how death was preferred over cowardice, considered the worst form of dishonor. Bushido also required that samurai spare women and children from violence and never engaged of in wanton cruelty of animals. Besides these important ideas, the samurai were also expected to respect their culture and national traditions and to show the utmost respect for their lord and shoguns, even to the point of following them after death. An examination of the bushido code reveals that it is actually the result of three different but complementary Eastern religious and philosophical traditions – Shintoism, Confucianism, and Zen Buddhism.
====Historical Background of the Samurai====
The samurai rose to prominence in Japan gradually during the twelfth century AD, making themselves known when they helped repulse the Mongols in the thirteenth century. Before the Mongols attempted their amphibious invasion of Japan, a highly militarized government took power in the Japanese city of Kamakura that established a <i>bakufu</i> or shogunate. The Kamakura shogunate defeated all but one other power in Japan by giving special concessions to the <i>buke</i> or warrior class during the Gempei War (1180-1185). The result was Japan’s first military government based in Kamakura, although the shogunate never ruled over a unified Japan. <ref> Mass, Jeffrey P. “Kamakura Bakufu.” <i>[https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0521484049/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0521484049&linkCode=as2&tag=dailyh0c-20&linkId=d03742615977e1c8e7d5b647be9981f9 Warrior Rule in Japan].</i> Edited by Marius B. Jansen. (Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press, 1995), pgs. 1-4</ref>
Once the buke class had attained prominence during the Gempei War, they did not relinquish that power and gradually became the most important class in Japan. By the time of Japan’s civil war in the sixteenth century, which was known as the <i>Senogku</i>, the buke were was primarily referred to as samurai. The samurai led the armies of the <i>daimyos</i>, who were feudal lords in the brutal war that determined the Japan's leadership of Japan. The samurai were a privileged class set apart from all others in Japanese society, but they were also held to a higher standard. <ref> Friday, Karl F. “Bushido or Bull? A Medieval Historian’s Perspective on the Imperial Army and the Japanese Warrior Tradition.” <i>The History Teacher.</i> 27 (1994) p.343</ref> Finally, in 1603 , the Sengoku came to an end when Tokugawa Ieyasu (1542-1616) unified Japan under his rule and established the Tokugawa shogunate, which lasted until 1867.
====The Samurai Belief System====
[[File: KandaMyojinGate.jpg|370px|thumbnail|left|A Shinto Shrine in Japan]]
Of the three major religious and philosophical traditions that comprised the samurai belief system and influenced the code of bushido, Shinto was the oldest. Shintoism is essentially the ancient, native religious traditions of Japan practiced in a highly ritualistic setting. The Shinto pantheon was full of many gods and goddesses who lived in the forests, mountains, water bodies, and even the air, but interestingly. Interestingly, none of these deities were considered omnipotent. The powers of the Shinto pantheon's deities ' powers could only be harnessed by priests who knew the proper incantations and rituals. The rituals were so sometimes so esoteric that the meanings of the words in many of the incantations have long since been forgotten, but the perceived power of the act remains. Shinto priests perform their arcane rituals before important life events, which in medieval Japan would include battles. <ref> Aoki, Michiko Y. <i>[https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B007EQHLDC/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=B007EQHLDC&linkCode=as2&tag=dailyh0c-20&linkId=c3cb4e2a0493ac9477eb72be4bc9f7ff Ancient Myths and Early History of Japan: A Cultural Foundation].</i> (New York: Exposition Press, 1974), p. 125-27</ref> Ultimately, it was Shintoism that gave the samurai their strong belief in tradition and the will to fight for their homeland.
Although the samurai were spiritual warriors, they were also quite practical, which was no doubt at least partially the result of their belief in the philosophy of Confucianism. The Confucianism's philosophy of Confucianism is named for the Chinese philosopher Kong (555-479 BC) – referred to in the Western world as Confucius – who was a civil servant and perhaps the Far East’s best -known philosopher. Confucianism stresses the importance of leading an ethical life, which includes an unwavering respect for authority. The philosophy became quite popular at the court of many Chinese dynasties and eventually spread to Korea and Japan. The samurai enthusiastically embraced Confucian ideals due to the advocacy of what they believed was the natural hierarchy of man. Their Shinto gods established the order when they created the world, but it was Confucius who articulated how the Japanese should view their shoguns, daimyos, and samurai. To the samurai, loyalty to superiors was never questioned.<ref>Friday, p. 341</ref>
Shinto gave the samurai something to fight for , and Confucianism established many of the rules in which they lived their lives. Still, it was Zen Buddhism that gave them their moral compass and truly made them spiritual warriors instead of blood thirsty bloodthirsty marauders. Buddhism originated in India in the fifth century BC and then quickly spread throughout the Far East. During the eighth century AD, a form of Buddhism known as <i>Chan</i> made its way across the Sea of Japan and was embraced by the Japanese , who called the sect <i>Zen</i>. <ref> Eisai. “Zen for National Defense.” In <i>[https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/014044758X/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=014044758X&linkCode=as2&tag=dailyh0c-20&linkId=2545b9667c42e731fc1c83e0fbd00c1b Buddhist Scriptures].</i> Edited by Donald S. Lopez Junior. (London: Penguin Books, 2004), p. 323</ref> Zen was different than many of the older Buddhist sects because it placed more emphasis on reaching enlightenment through meditation than on the study of the Buddha’s <i>sutras</i> or sayings, but it did not disregard the place of scholarship in the religion.
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Foremost among Zen ideology were the Buddhist ideas of <i>samsara</i>, which is the idea of continual rebirths and <i>karma</i>. Karma is essentially a spiritual scorecard whereby an individual’s deeds, both good and bad, follow them from life to life and determine certain obstacles and rewards that one will face. To reduce one’s karma, the samurai were taught to follow the Noble Eightfold Path of Buddhism, which teaches one to practice the right actions, thoughts, etc. It was these These ideas that gave the samurai their respect for life and was . They were more than likely a big factor in the fact that because the samurai initiated few atrocities against civilians during their long history. Although Zen helped spiritually ground the samurai, it did not make them weak and , in many ways , actually made them better warriors.
The samurai were able to use the Zen's meditation practices of Zen to focus all of their mental faculties on becoming better warriors. Numerous texts describe how the samurai used the Zen mindset to eliminate all distractions and use their minds over matter. The late sixteenth/early seventeenth century samurai and philosopher, Miyamoto Musashi, incorporated many Zen ideas into his classic treatise of proper samurai warfare, <i>The Book of Five Rings</i>. The book is full of many Zen -inspired platitudes for erudite samurai, including the following:
“In order not to have your mind off to one side, it is necessary to place it in the center and move it calmly so that it does not cease to move even in moments of change.” <ref> Mushashi, Miyamoto. <i> [https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1590307976/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=1590307976&linkCode=as2&tag=dailyh0c-20&linkId=448a135f5d2e1574ce97de429d66fe03 The Complete Book of the Five Rings].</i> Translated by Kenji Tokitsu. (Boston: Shambala, 2010), p. 46</ref>
“Every one of them became king by means of past <i>karma</i> generated by having served five hundred Buddhas. . . From this passage , know that all kings upon hearing the true <i>dharma</i> will accept it and have faith in it.” <ref> Eisai, p. 323</ref>
====Shinto, Confucianism, Zen, and Bushido====
[[File: Samurai_Armor_Guimet_Museum.jpg|300px|thumbnail|left|A Suit of Samurai Armor]]
====Conclusion====
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