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The Japanese shogun can be said to be the highest level of Japanese military generals, and in terms of rank, it is a bit similar to the position of a general during the Han Dynasty.
The chairman, and even more power. And later, it can be said that the emperor was elevated, which is equivalent to Cao Cao in the late Eastern Han Dynasty.
The same, it was the real power of ancient Japan.
The development of the shogun can be said to have gone through three stages:
Initial stage. From the Nara period, when this position was not permanent, and whenever there was an expedition, the imperial court ordered the general to go on the expedition, and the general had the right to open the government on his own. This is actually derived from the "Kaifu" and "Shogunate" in our country, and even "shogunate" is the corresponding word in our country.
Since Sakaue Tamura Maro, this official position has basically been fixed as "Seiyi General", so Tamura is regarded as the first Seiyi General. The shoguns of this stage were the generals of the public court, and did not have the significance of the "shogunate" of the later samurai regime.
Booming stage. History of Japan.
After the elimination of the Taira clan, Genji decided to use the position of "Seiyi Shogun" to establish a political structure independent of the public court, and from the beginning of Minamoto Yorito's reign, the "Seiyi Shogun" became a fixed official position of the head of the samurai regime, and the "shogunate" became a stable organizational structure of the samurai regime. During this period, the shogun continued to grow stronger and stronger and overthrew the emperor.
Decay stage. This stage was dominated by the Tokugawa shogunate.
Telophase. 1853, U.S. Navy.
Admiral Perry led a fleet to break into Edo Bay twice, forcing Japan to open its ports to trade, which is known as the Black Ship Incident.
The Tokugawa shogunate succumbed to the military pressure of the foreign powers, and successively signed many unequal treaties and agreements with the Western powers, betraying a large amount of national sovereignty and national interests. The shogunate became the target of social crusades, and the feudal camp in Japan was divided, with some middle- and lower-ranking samurai raising slogans of respecting the king, assassinating those in power who advocated the founding of the country, attacking foreigners, and so on. Due to various limitations and repression by the shogunate and Western powers, it was declared a failure.
People began to realize that in order to become truly prosperous, it was necessary to overthrow the shogunate, and the Shogunate Movement began. On January 3, 1868, the southwestern princes led troops to besiege the Imperial Palace and disarm the Tokugawa shogunate's guards stationed in the harem. They were surrounded by the young Emperor Meiji.
The Imperial Council was convened to declare the "Imperial Government Retro", and all power was in the hands of the Emperor.
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Army: General - Lieutenant General - Major General - Dazuo - Zhongzuo - Shao Zuo - Captain - Lieutenant - Second Lieutenant Sanrangsui - Warrant Officer - Cao Chang - Jun Cao - Wu Chang - Soldier Commander - Private - Private of the First Class - Private of the Second Class.
Navy: Admiral - Lieutenant General - Major General - Dazuo - Zhongzuo - Shao Zuo - Captain - Lieutenant - Ensign - Soldier Cao Chang - Senior Slippery Soldier Cao - Private Cao of the First Class - Private Cao - Sailor Chief - Sailor of the First Class - Sailor of the First Class - Second Sailor Chongbu.
In addition, during World War II, Japan's air force was not an independent service, so there was no special air force rank.
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Japan is indeed respectful of the left and devalues the right, and as for the reason, it seems that this has been done since the beginning of the Taika Revolution.
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Ashibashi, a general, (the lord of the city, the lord of the country), the old man.
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1L is talking about the official position, and that is the official name, not the military rank that LZ asked. 2l is correct but not quite complete, I will add.
The position of the daimyo generals (from low to high): Ashigaru Ashigaru Group Leader Ashigaru Shogun Shogun Shogun General Shogun Old Castle Lord Country Lord.
Ashigaru is the lowest position in the samurai class, that is, a small soldier who charges into battle, and the lord of the country is the highest position under the daimyo, because he has the jurisdiction of one or more countries, so it is also considered a daimyo level in terms of power.
The lord of the castle was generally held by a position or daimyo above the rank of a subordinate or a daimyo (with a few exceptions, such as when Hideyoshi built the castle for one night, Nobunaga appointed him as the lord of the castle in Sumamata, and Hideyoshi was only a shogun at the time), and the lord of the country (a country in the Warring States period was equivalent to several villages or prefectures in China) was generally held by the daimyo (a daimyo with a relatively large range of power and possession of many territories, such as Oda Nobunaga in the Azuchi-Momoyama period).
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They're talking about Japanese games, not history. The head of the Ashigaru group, the general of the ashigaru, the general of the squire, and the general of the ministry are positions in the army, and the family is always an administrative position. The elder of the family can be the head of the ashigaru group, the ashigaru general, the general of the servant, and the general, mainly depending on how big the family is.
Ashigaru Kumitou Manishi Castle, such as Kinoshita Toyoshiro's Mowu Castle. Ashigaru Daisho 50,000 stone, Oshiro. The general is at the level of the national lord, such as Tao Qingxian of the Zhou Defense Dynasty.
The ministry will be similar to Oda Nobunaga's heyday Hashiba Hideyoshi, who is in charge of the armies of several countries.
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Ashigaru head - Ashigaru general - servant general - subordinate general - family elder.
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