Feudal Japan vs Feudal Europe: Which Was More Powerful? — Fexingo History
When Oda Nobunaga invaded the domain of a warlord, he faced not a general but a tea master — Sen no Rikyu's rival, the warrior-chajin who defended his castle with a whisk instead of a sword. This episode explores the little-known story of Sōkyū, the master of the tea ceremony who commanded a garrison during the 1577 siege of Matsuyama Castle in Bitchū Province. Sōkyū's tactical use of a tea gathering to buy time for reinforcements, and his subsequent death by seppuku, reveals a different side of samurai warfare: the intersection of aesthetics, ritual, and military strategy. We compare this to European examples of non-combatant commanders, like the bishops and scholars who led armies during the Crusades. Along the way, we discuss the Higashiyama period's influence on warrior culture, the concept of ichi-go ichi-e (one encounter, one chance) as a battlefield mindset, and how chanoyu (the way of tea) became a tool of political negotiation and even espionage under Nobunaga and Hideyoshi. This is a story about how a bowl of tea could be as powerful as a battalion. #Samurai #TeaCeremony #Sōkyū #OdaNobunaga #MatsuyamaCastle #Bitchū #SenNoRikyu #Chajin #Chanoyu #IchiGoIchiE #Higashiyama #SiegeTactics #Seppuku #JapaneseHistory #Warlords #TeaAsWeapon #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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