Feudal Japan vs Feudal Europe: Which Was More Powerful? — Fexingo History

Why the Samurai Never Built Cathedrals

7 min · 6. juli 2026
episode Why the Samurai Never Built Cathedrals cover

Description

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore a surprising difference between feudal Japan and Europe: architecture. Why did samurai build wooden castles while knights raised stone cathedrals? The answer involves geology, warfare, religion, and politics. Lucas explains how Japan's earthquake-prone landscape and lack of limestone shaped its building materials, while Europe's abundant stone and Roman engineering legacy led to soaring Gothic cathedrals. He contrasts the practical, modular Japanese castles with the symbolic, permanent European fortresses. They also discuss the role of religion: European cathedrals were community projects that took centuries, while Japanese temples were often rebuilt, reflecting Shinto and Buddhist views on impermanence. Luna asks about the famous Japanese castles like Himeji and Matsumoto, and Lucas reveals why they look so different from European counterparts. The episode touches on how the Mongol invasions pushed Japan toward simpler, faster construction, while the Hundred Years' War drove European innovation in stone fortifications. By the end, listeners understand that architecture reveals deeper values: Europe built for eternity, Japan for adaptability. #Samurai #Knight #FeudalJapan #FeudalEurope #CastleArchitecture #Cathedrals #HimejiCastle #NotreDame #GothicArchitecture #JapaneseCastles #MedievalHistory #ComparativeHistory #WoodVsStone #EarthquakeArchitecture #MongolInvasions #HundredYearsWar #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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159 episodes

episode Samurai vs Knight: Who Had Better Naval Warfare artwork

Samurai vs Knight: Who Had Better Naval Warfare

Lucas and Luna dive into a fresh comparison: naval warfare in feudal Japan and Europe. Lucas explains how Japan's geography as an island nation shaped a unique naval tradition, from the Mongol invasions of 1274 and 1281 to the Imjin War of the 1590s. He describes the design of Japanese ships like the atakebune and sekibune, and how samurai adapted their fighting style to the sea with boarding tactics and early firearms. In contrast, European naval warfare revolved around the galley in the Mediterranean and the cog in the Atlantic, with battles like Sluys (1340) marking the rise of the English fleet. Lucas highlights key differences: Japan never developed true ocean-going warships, while European powers like Venice and Genoa built galleons for global exploration. He also discusses the failed Mongol invasions and how the Japanese response—building coastal defenses and using smaller, agile ships—proved effective. Luna asks about the role of the ninja in naval operations, and Lucas touches on the use of kunoichi in intelligence gathering. The episode ends with a reflection on how each civilization's naval technology reflected its broader strategic needs. #Samurai #Knight #NavalWarfare #FeudalJapan #FeudalEurope #MongolInvasions #ImjinWar #BattleOfSluys #Atakebune #Sekibune #Galley #Cog #SamuraiNaval #KnightNaval #Kamikaze #HundredYearsWar #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

16. juli 20265 min
episode Why Samurai Never Built Fortresses Like European Castles artwork

Why Samurai Never Built Fortresses Like European Castles

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore why Japanese samurai and European knights approached fortress construction so differently. Lucas breaks down the strategic, material, and cultural reasons behind Japan's preference for wooden yamajiro (mountain castles) and hirajiro (flatland castles) over European stone fortresses. He contrasts the Japanese use of ishigaki (dry stone walls), kuruwa (baileys), sumi-yagura (corner towers), and kanō (arrow slits) with European innovations like machicolations and trace italienne. Lucas discusses how Japan's tectonic instability, timber abundance, and siege warfare tactics shaped castle design, and how the sankin-kōtai system under the Tokugawa shogunate eventually rendered many castles obsolete. The episode also touches on the symbolic role of castles, the lack of a crusader fortress tradition in Japan, and the surprising fact that some Japanese castles survived earthquakes better than their European counterparts. Specific examples include Himeji-jo, Matsumoto-jo, Odawara, and the castles of Edward I in Wales. #Himeji-jo #yamajiro #hirajiro #ishigaki #kuruwa #sumi-yagura #kanō #Tokugawa #sankin-kōtai #Odawara #Matsumoto-jo #EdwardI #traceItalienne #machicolation #samuraiCastles #JapaneseHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

16. juli 20265 min
episode The Samurai Who Became Christian: Konishi Yukinaga's Forgotten Crusade artwork

The Samurai Who Became Christian: Konishi Yukinaga's Forgotten Crusade

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the fascinating story of Konishi Yukinaga, a Christian daimyo who led Japan's invasion of Korea under Toyotomi Hideyoshi. How did a samurai convert to Catholicism, and what role did Jesuit missionaries like Alessandro Valignano play in the unification era? Yukinaga's life reveals the tangled intersection of faith, trade, and warfare in Azuchi-Momoyama Japan. Lucas traces his rise from a merchant's son to a military commander, his baptism as Agosto, his brutal campaigns in Korea, and his ultimate downfall at Sekigahara. Along the way, the hosts discuss the Japanese embassy to Europe, the Nanban trade, and why Western chronicles called him "Augustinus" while Japanese records remember him as a traitor. A story of a samurai who served two lords—Hideyoshi and God—and was crushed by both. #KonishiYukinaga #ChristianSamurai #JesuitMissions #ToyotomiHideyoshi #ImjinWar #NanbanTrade #AlessandroValignano #Sekigahara #AzuchiMomoyama #Kirishitan #Nagasaki #JapaneseEmbassyToEurope #Samurai #FeudalJapan #CatholicismInJapan #History #FexingoHistory #WorldHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday9 min
episode Samurai vs Knight: The Forgotten Swordsmiths Who Made the Katana artwork

Samurai vs Knight: The Forgotten Swordsmiths Who Made the Katana

In this episode of Feudal Japan vs Feudal Europe, Lucas and Luna explore the artisans behind the iconic samurai sword — the katana. They uncover the world of the swordsmith, a figure as revered as the warrior who wielded the blade. From the legendary Masamune, whose swords were said to cut through fate itself, to the practical techniques of forging with tamahagane steel, the conversation reveals how Japanese smiths elevated blade-making to a spiritual discipline. They contrast this with the European longsword, crafted by anonymous armorers for knights who saw swords as tools rather than souls. Learn about the signature style of Bizen, Mino, and Yamato schools, the ritual of tempering, and the famous story of Masamune and Muramasa — two masters whose blades embodied different philosophies. Luna asks whether a katana really could cut through a knight's plate armor, and Lucas weighs the historical evidence. This episode dives deep into the craft, the myths, and the men who made the samurai's most iconic weapon. #Katana #Samurai #Knight #Swordsmith #Masamune #Muramasa #Tamahagane #Bizen #Mino #Yamato #Longsword #FeudalJapan #FeudalEurope #SwordForging #MedievalWeapons #Bushido #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday11 min
episode Samurai vs Knight: The Economics of War — Who Funded Better Armies? artwork

Samurai vs Knight: The Economics of War — Who Funded Better Armies?

In medieval Japan and Europe, warfare was as much about money as it was about martial skill. This episode contrasts the economic engines behind samurai and knight armies: the Japanese kokudaka system and tax rice versus European scutage, tallage, and the rise of mercenary companies. We explore how Toyotomi Hideyoshi's nationwide land survey transformed samurai finance, how Edward III's wool taxes funded the Hundred Years' War, and why daimyo could field massive ashigaru armies while European kings struggled to pay professional soldiers. Lucas and Luna also examine the surprising role of temple economies, the financial decline of the samurai class under the Tokugawa peace, and the bankruptcy of the French crown after Crécy. No clashing swords here — just account ledgers, tax records, and the silver trade that shaped two warrior cultures. #Samurai #Knight #MedievalWarfare #FeudalEconomics #Kokudaka #Scutage #ToyotomiHideyoshi #EdwardIII #HundredYearsWar #Sengoku #TokugawaShogunate #Ashikaga #Kamakura #Daimyo #Mercenary #WarFinance #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14. juli 20269 min