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

Samurai vs Knight: The Siege of Odawara and the Fall of a Dynasty

6 min · 6. juli 2026
episode Samurai vs Knight: The Siege of Odawara and the Fall of a Dynasty cover

Beskrivelse

In this episode, Lucas and Luna dive into the massive 1590 Siege of Odawara, where Toyotomi Hideyoshi mobilized over 200,000 troops to crush the Hōjō clan — a campaign that symbolizes the end of Japan's Sengoku period. They contrast this with the sieges of the Hundred Years' War, like the English siege of Orléans in 1429, where Joan of Arc broke the stalemate. Lucas explains how Hideyoshi's logistics and psychological warfare (including building a whole city around the besieged castle) differed from European siege techniques, and how the fall of Odawara paved the way for the Tokugawa shogunate. Along the way, they touch on the role of ninja in siege warfare, the use of tanegashima matchlock guns, and why Japanese siege tactics focused on starvation rather than direct assault. This episode offers a fresh angle on a classic comparison, using one specific siege as a lens to explore broader differences in feudal military culture. #Samurai #Knight #Odawara #ToyotomiHideyoshi #Hōjō #SengokuPeriod #HundredYearsWar #Orléans #JoanOfArc #SiegeWarfare #Tanegashima #Ninja #FeudalJapan #FeudalEurope #History #FexingoHistory #MilitaryHistory #SiegeOfOdawara Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Alle episoder

151 Episoder

episode Samurai vs Knight: The Shogun Who Forged a Nation cover

Samurai vs Knight: The Shogun Who Forged a Nation

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the life and legacy of Tokugawa Ieyasu, the shogun who unified Japan and established a dynasty that ruled for over 250 years. They delve into Ieyasu's rise from a minor daimyō to the master of Sekigahara, his strategic patience that earned him the nickname 'the old badger,' and how he transformed the chaos of the Sengoku period into the stability of the Edo period. Along the way, they discuss his relationship with Oda Nobunaga and Toyotomi Hideyoshi, his innovative use of hostage-taking as a tool of control, and how he outmaneuvered rivals through both battle and diplomacy. The conversation also touches on how Ieyasu's policies—like sankin-kōtai (alternate attendance) and the Buke Shohatto (laws for warrior households)—centralized power and prevented future rebellion. They compare his approach to contemporary European rulers like Henry IV of France, who also used conversion and compromise to end religious wars. The episode ends with a reflection on whether Ieyasu's legacy is one of peace or tyranny. #TokugawaIeyasu #Sekigahara #SengokuPeriod #EdoPeriod #SankinKotai #BukeShohatto #OdaNobunaga #ToyotomiHideyoshi #Shogun #Samurai #FeudalJapan #BattleOfSekigahara #OsakaCastle #Daimyo #Bushido #History #FexingoHistory #WorldHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

12. juli 20269 min
episode The Samurai Who Fought with Fans: The Battle of Ujigawa cover

The Samurai Who Fought with Fans: The Battle of Ujigawa

In 1184, on the banks of the Uji River near Kyoto, the Genpei War gave rise to one of the most theatrical moments in samurai history: the lone rearguard stand of Minamoto no Yoshitsune's faithful retainer Satō Tsugunobu, and the legendary 'bow-shooting from horseback' across the rapids. But this episode goes deeper—beyond the famous tales of The Tale of the Heike—to examine how a small bridge, a wooden palisade, and a single family's honor determined the fate of the Minamoto clan. We unpack the tactical decisions that made Ujigawa a turning point, contrasting it with the knightly sieges of the same era, like the 1204 fall of Château Gaillard. Why did the samurai use fans—gunbai—to signal across the river? How did the Minamoto's use of mounted archery compare to the English longbow at Falkirk? And what does this battle tell us about the Japanese view of death in battle versus the European chivalric protocol of capture and ransom? Lucas and Luna explore the steely pragmatism behind the poetry. #GenpeiWar #BattleOfUjigawa #MinamotoNoYoshitsune #Samurai #Knight #FeudalJapan #FeudalEurope #ChateauGaillard #TaleOfTheHeike #Gunbai #MountedArchery #SatōTsugunobu #UjiRiver #SiegeTactics #MedievalWarfare #FexingoHistory #History #WorldHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

12. juli 20269 min
episode The Samurai Who Refused to Fight: Tea Master as Tactician cover

The Samurai Who Refused to Fight: Tea Master as Tactician

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]

I går5 min
episode Samurai vs Knight: Who Had Better Military Medicine cover

Samurai vs Knight: Who Had Better Military Medicine

In this episode, Lucas and Luna dive into the medical practices of samurai and knights, comparing battlefield surgery, herbal remedies, and the role of religion in healing. They explore the Japanese doshi and kampo traditions against European barber-surgeons and monastic medicine, examining specific treatments like moxibustion and cauterization. The conversation covers the training of medics, the use of acupuncture in Japan versus bloodletting in Europe, and how each culture dealt with infections and amputations. They also touch on the influence of Zen Buddhism and Christianity on medical ethics, and whether the samurai's emphasis on preventive care gave them an edge. This is a fresh angle not covered in previous episodes, focusing on the practical and philosophical differences in healthcare between these two warrior classes. #Samurai #Knight #MilitaryMedicine #Kampo #BarberSurgeon #Moxibustion #Acupuncture #Bloodletting #Doshi #BattlefieldSurgery #MedievalJapan #MedievalEurope #ZenBuddhism #Christianity #HerbalRemedies #Amputation #Infection #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går8 min
episode Samurai vs Knight: How Geography Shaped Their Warfare cover

Samurai vs Knight: How Geography Shaped Their Warfare

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the physical geography of Japan and Europe fundamentally shaped the warfare, strategy, and military evolution of samurai and knights. Japan's mountainous terrain, dense forests, and narrow river valleys favored small-scale ambushes, archery, and fortress sieges, while Europe's open plains and fragmented political landscape encouraged large cavalry charges, set-piece battles, and the construction of massive stone castles. The hosts examine specific case studies: the Battle of Kurikara Pass (1183), where Minamoto no Yoshinaka used terrain to annihilate a larger Taira force with a devastating cattle stampede, and the Battle of Bouvines (1214), where Philip Augustus exploited open ground to crush the coalition of Otto IV and King John. They discuss how Japan's insular geography limited foreign invasion (the Mongol attempts of 1274 and 1281 were the only major threats from abroad) while Europe's interconnected landmass invited constant cross-border conflict, from the Hundred Years' War to the Crusades. The episode also touches on how geography influenced castle design: the yamajiro (mountain fortresses) of the Sengoku period versus the concentric stone fortifications like Krak des Chevaliers. A fascinating look at how landscape dictated military culture. #Samurai #Knight #FeudalJapan #FeudalEurope #MilitaryHistory #Geography #KurikaraPass #Bouvines #MinamotoNoYoshinaka #PhilipAugustus #MongolInvasions #Kamikaze #CastleDesign #Yamajiro #KrakDesChevaliers #Sengoku #HundredYearsWar #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

10. juli 20266 min