Changes

From SamuraiWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
no edit summary
Line 7: Line 7:  
*up until c. 1590 or so, many samurai families pride themselves on genealogies tracing themselves back to Korea or China, connecting them to the continent. After Hideyoshi's invasions, and maybe having to do with some other aspect of Tokugawa rule, samurai families no longer claim foreign descent, but craft Fujiwara, Taira, or Minamoto descent.
 
*up until c. 1590 or so, many samurai families pride themselves on genealogies tracing themselves back to Korea or China, connecting them to the continent. After Hideyoshi's invasions, and maybe having to do with some other aspect of Tokugawa rule, samurai families no longer claim foreign descent, but craft Fujiwara, Taira, or Minamoto descent.
 
**What origins do the Sô of Tsushima claim? Their identity as vassals of the Korean king is fascinatingly unique.
 
**What origins do the Sô of Tsushima claim? Their identity as vassals of the Korean king is fascinatingly unique.
 +
 +
*The [[wish-fulfilling jewel]] is known as cintāmani in Sanskrit.
    
*When Mishima Yukio made his speech before SDF soldiers at the Ministry of Defense, they responded not with enthusiastic cheers of support, but with laughter, jeering, and mockery. Mishima then shouted Banzai! several times and withdrew to a room where he performed seppuku. - David Kertzer, ''Ritual, Politics, and Power'' (1988), 88.
 
*When Mishima Yukio made his speech before SDF soldiers at the Ministry of Defense, they responded not with enthusiastic cheers of support, but with laughter, jeering, and mockery. Mishima then shouted Banzai! several times and withdrew to a room where he performed seppuku. - David Kertzer, ''Ritual, Politics, and Power'' (1988), 88.
contributor
27,126

edits

Navigation menu