The Samurai Era: Japan's Warrior Civilization Explained — Fexingo History
In this episode of The Samurai Era, Lucas and Luna explore the controversial legacy of Yamamoto Tsunetomo, the retired samurai monk who wrote Hagakure: The Book of the Samurai. Published in 1716 during the peaceful Edo period, Hagakure distilled bushido into an extreme, romanticized code that glorified death, loyalty, and passionate action over calculation. But did samurai actually live by this code? Lucas unpacks how Tsunetomo's nostalgia for the violent Sengoku era clashed with the reality of Tokugawa bureaucracy. They discuss the infamous line 'the way of the samurai is found in death,' the Nabeshima clan's internal politics, Tsunetomo's master Nabeshima Mitsushige, and how later nationalists weaponized Hagakure during the Meiji Restoration and World War II. The episode also touches on Yukio Mishima's dramatic death and its connection to Tsunetomo's philosophy. A nuanced look at how one man's eccentric manual became a symbol of Japan's warrior spirit — for better and worse. #Hagakure #YamamotoTsunetomo #Bushido #SamuraiCode #NabeshimaClan #SagaDomain #EdoPeriod #YukioMishima #Seppuku #SamuraiBuddhism #Zen #Sengoku #Tokugawa #MeijiRestoration #JapaneseHistory #EastAsia #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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