The Samurai Era: Japan's Warrior Civilization Explained — Fexingo History
In 1588, Toyotomi Hideyoshi issued an extraordinary decree across Japan. Farmers were ordered to surrender all swords, spears, bows, and guns to the authorities. The metal would be melted down and used to construct a giant statue of the Buddha. But the so-called Sword Hunt — Katanagari — was about far more than religious piety. It was a radical social engineering project designed to freeze the class system, disarm potential rebels, and concentrate military power in the hands of the samurai class. Over the following decades, the policy was extended and refined under Tokugawa Ieyasu, creating a strict division between the warrior elite and the peasantry. Lucas and Luna explore how the Katanagari reshaped Japan: the confiscation of weapons, the symbolic meaning of the Buddha statue, regional resistance from daimyo and monasteries, the later policing of swords in Edo through the "three-foot rule" and its role in solidifying the samurai's monopoly on violence. They also consider the long-term consequences — how disarming a nation contributed to two and a half centuries of peace under the Tokugawa shogunate, and what it meant for the status of the sword itself in Japanese culture. #Katanagari #SwordHunt #ToyotomiHideyoshi #TokugawaIeyasu #Samurai #Bushi #JapanHistory #AzuchiMomoyama #EdoPeriod #Daimyo #Seppuku #Wakizashi #Katana #SocialEngineering #Disarmament #History #EastAsia #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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