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  1. The Migration Period (circa 300-700 AD) witnessed the emergence of various mounted warrior groups, most notably the Huns and Avars. One crucial invention during this period was the stirrup, which provided riders with better stability and control, revolutionizing mounted combat.

    • Rectitude or Justice. Bushido refers not only to martial rectitude, but to personal rectitude: Rectitude or Justice, is the strongest virtue of Bushido.
    • Courage. Bushido distinguishes between bravery and courage: Courage is worthy of being counted among virtues only if it’s exercised in the cause of Righteousness and Rectitude.
    • Benevolence or Mercy. A man invested with the power to command and the power to kill was expected to demonstrate equally extraordinary powers of benevolence and mercy: Love, magnanimity, affection for others, sympathy and pity, are traits of Benevolence, the highest attribute of the human soul.
    • Politeness. Discerning the difference between obsequiousness and politeness can be difficult for casual visitors to Japan, but for a true man, courtesy is rooted in benevolence: Courtesy and good manners have been noticed by every foreign tourist as distinctive Japanese traits.
  2. mounted warrior: in the early medieval period, mounted warriors were not knights, as they came to be known to us through the so-called “code of chivalry.”

  3. Oct 24, 2019 · Originally it meant no more than soldier. It also carried service connotations and could be used to denote vassal. However, in the eleventh century it came to be used in preference to designate a mounted warrior and to replace equites (used in contradistinction to pedites, that is, footsoldiers).

  4. Nov 11, 2021 · This is apparent in the word itself, the roots of which refers to a horseman, a mounted warrior: chivalry —> chevalier —> caballarius —> caballus. In past usage, the word meant not just the code of the mounted warrior, but has also referred to a collection of knights, and even to the mighty deeds of such knights.

  5. Fearsome mounted warriors of feudal Japan rode from the 1100s till they were exterminated in 1870. During that time, they inspired awe from civilians-- and terror on the battlefield. Here is the incredible--and surprising--tale of the Samurai and the horses they rode.

  6. May 25, 2024 · In this context, the mounted warrior, or the knight, emerged as a key figure in medieval society. Knights were not only skilled warriors but also members of the nobility, bound by oaths of loyalty to their lords and to the Church.

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