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Topic: Who would win the battle? |
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| View Poll Results :Who would win the pitched battle? | |||
| The Samurai | | 8 | 22.22% |
| The contemporary European soldier | | 15 | 41.67% |
| Depends on the terrain, weather and other circumstances | | 13 | 36.11% |
| Voters: 36. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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| | Post 1 |
| Tribunus Laticlavius | Post; Who would win the battle?I've just finished reading this book on Bushido and the Samurai. In this book they theorised about the warrior's ethics, skill and commitment of the samurai warrior. Is raised the question that if you'd put 5000 samurai and 5000 contemporary European soldiers on the field; that the Japanese would probably win. Do you guys share this view?
__________________ A fanatic is one who can't change his mind and won't change the subject. Sir Winston Churchill |
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| | Post 2 |
| Tribuni Angusticlavii | i think that the contemporary eauropean soldier would. The PTO in WWII was pretty mcuh the contemporary soldier of the time, against a soldier with the Samuri spirit.
__________________ You can't scratch and salute at the same time! That's communist! - LTC Ivens |
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| | Post 3 |
| Can you hear me now? | I think that would be european soldiers. European soldiers have catapult, knights with chain of metals and metals. also their horses wear chain of metals, etc.
__________________ Why should I have to "Press 1 for English?" --Every American |
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| | Post 4 |
| Guest | The samurai were more equivalent to the medieval knight. Without a whole slew of footmen, archers and camp followers, they just weren't very effective. Look what happened in the Crusades. |
| | Post 5 |
| Milforum Moderator ![]() | Ted, you pose an interesting question. I must ask though, was this book written by a Japanese? In any event, I think you could clarify the question a bit. Would this battle take place in modern times with the Samurai using unfamiliar modern weapons or back in ancient times with the Euro fighter doing the same with the ancient weapons? Would the battle take place in Europe or in Japan? The book's conclusion seems to assume that the Japanese warriors would be better motivated (Bushido) on the battlefield all things considered equal. I am not sure I'd agree with that. Equally motivated, equipped, and skilled warriors pitted against each other on a neutral field of battle, while rarely ever happening, usually comes down to which side has the better leadership and the general fortunes of the day.
__________________ "I was a soldier, I am a soldier, I always will be a soldier." To Avoid Infractions - Click Here And Read the Forum Rules Before You Post. Last edited by DTop; April 26th, 2006 at 20:12. |
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| | Post 6 |
| Nuclear Duck Hunter ![]() | Since most Samurai were trained for close combat and wore thin armor of leather and bamboo, I don't think they could win over Roman legions of cavalry, archers, and foot soldiers. Also Europeans weren't very chivalrous when it came to battle. All ceremony went out the window.
__________________ “War is an ugly thing but not the ugliest of things; the decayed and degraded state of moral and patriotic feelings which thinks that nothing is worth war is much worse.” —John Stuart Mill |
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| | Post 7 | |
| Tribuni Angusticlavii | Quote:
One on one I would personally pick the average Samurai warrior over an average foot soldier of almost any other contempary culture. The way in which they dedicated themselves to the Bushido, the Way of the Warrior, was with a single-mindedness that fighters from a European culture would generally find hard to match. Not to mention the unarmed combat (Bujitsu) that all Samurai followed. Although the Samurai considered style to be very important, it was not at the expense of any substance. And I absolutely agree that the Japanese warrior is likely to be generally better motivated than the Christian equivalent. To die in battle was at the centre of every Samurai's entire way of life. Thus they generally fought with real zeal over and above the basic instinct to win and survive. Samurai battles generally tended to start with the best/bravest fighter from each side joining in one on one combat with more and more joining in until an all-out melee ensued. However, the question for me is the leadership and tactical ability of the field commander, and for me that would probably decide how any mass battle went. The other question for me is how Samurai would deal with the European heavy knight, who tended to be the elite warriors in most Christian nations. The Samurai would generally be better motivated, better skilled and better trained, but the difficulties of fighting a well protected warrior who was also well trained and well motivated would provide the Samurai warrior with some real issues.
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| | Post 8 | |
| Tribunus Laticlavius | Quote:
My question regards a battle in say around 1400. The knight were at their peak, with their armour for heavy cavalry. The samurai would have their katana's of superior steel and long bows with heavy arrows, and I really mean heavy arrows. The leadership should be equally capable, so it is entirely up to the individual warrior. | |
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| | Post 9 | ||
| Milforum Moderator ![]() | Quote:
This is from wikipedia. Quote:
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| | Post 10 | ||||
| Tribunus Laticlavius | Quote:
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http://ejmas.com/jcs/jcsart_denig_0301.htm http://eclay.netwiz.net/translat/kyudo.htm Enjoy | ||||
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