- The Buke
shohatto (武家諸法度, lit.
Various Points of Laws for
Warrior Houses),
commonly known in
English as the Laws for the
Military Houses, was a collection...
-
allegiance to each
shogun and
acknowledged the Laws for
Warrior Houses or buke
shohatto. The sankin-kōtai (参勤交代 "alternate attendance") system,
required daimyos...
-
Kinchu narabini kuge
shohatto (禁中並公家諸法度),
sometimes known in
English as the Laws for the
Imperial and
Court Officials, was a law
issued by the Tokugawa...
-
shogunate at Edo (modern Tokyo). The
shogunate enacted measures including buke
shohatto, as a code of
conduct to
control the
autonomous daimyō, and in 1639 the...
- shogunate. In 1615, the
Tokugawa shogunate enacted the
Kinchu narabini kuge
shohatto (禁中並公家諸法度, Laws for the
Imperial and
Court Officials) to
control the imperial...
- his opponents. In 1635,
Iemitsu issued the
second version of the buke
shohatto, a
collection of
edicts dictating the
powers and
responsibilities of the...
-
other influential daimyo lords obey him. In 1613, he
composed the Kuge
shohatto (公家諸法度), a do****ent
which put the
court daimyo under strict supervision...
- with an
increased fief of 162,000 koku. In 1635, he
revised the Buke
shohatto law code by
adding alternate attendance to the
shogunate and increasing...
- the
right behavior of a
warrior (such as the Hagakure), the
first Buke
shohatto (Laws for the
Military Houses, 武家諸法度) was
issued by the
government in 1615...
- Yamatsuta. In some schools, the
order of the last two kata are reversed. 01.
Shohattō (初発刀) 02. Satō (左刀) 03. Utō (右刀) 04. Ataritō (当刀) 05. In'yō
Shintai (陰陽進退)...