He's the most loyal to Emperor, he died along with the last of the rebelled samurai in hopeless battles to ensure no one challenge Emperor's authority again.
The difference of ideology between him and emperor create this, he actually wanted to keep western technology with japanese style government, unfortunately thats what not emperor wanted
Perhaps he did know, but it was likely a ploy. He could have chosen to sacrifice his honor to gather all of the Emperor’s potential enemies in one spot to be crushed.
@@user-and-id You're right it's 60 not 50. Thanks for the correction I'll change it. I think I accidentally confused 60:1 with 15:1 from winged hussars because I do confuse the lyrics sometimes whilst singing. Again thanks for the correction, sorry for the ramble.
Duy Nguyen Technically yes. That film is a tribute to Sigo Takamori. It’s a rough translation. Plurals are different in Japanese. So when it says the last samurai, it actually means Last of the Samurai.
Yes, indeed. That's just sad. Whoever was responsible for Rome 2 should've been just fired. This game had so many scandals surrounding it, this isn't even funny.
The US general that opened up Japan again I forgot his name but he was like “Okay guys we know you had you’re little antisocial time away from the world but you have to come back in or you know we might not get things like Mario or The Legend of Zelda in the future” Remember this was a rough interpretation
@@Real_British the emperor probably didn’t do it himself but his oligarchs were the one who did it (Though since Takamori was marching with a force to Edo it might explain why the emperor did it)
Oh yes, these soundtracks drives crazy, I just love it, wonderful japanese soutracks, inside all scenes, just Brilliant, from A Brazilian fan always....,,...
if anyone's looking for the historical battle cutscenes from the base game, they're here: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-4WIGTF-uYJE.html
Interesting so basically the Tokugawa closed Japan out of fear the tozama would outperform them militarily and financially through trade. It was just a matter of delaying the inevitable.
I doubt it. By the time of Iemitsu, European Knights would have died out (despite the existence of a handful of knightly orders). The Age of the European Knight ended due to the beginnings of firearms, the use of mercenaries, and the development of more professional armies.
More civil wars maybe? The video said the outsiders being rich through foreign trade is dangerous for stability, and I think I've heard similar things going on with Date clan
@@freakrx2349 it depends how you look at it. Not in all countries Knights ended - for example, they remained in place in Polish Kingdom, and by new and new priviliges gained power over a King. Poland, full of vast polacies and plaines, still needed a heavy calvary to defend itself - and in 1502 formed its more-or-less known calvary formation called ,,Winged Hussars" (although majority of its forces was Light calvary). Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was a Medieval country in times, when people forgot what it was. It still used Popular Movement, it was still mostly using guerilla warfare and had pretty much feudal economy. Still, it was the only one that managed to turn it into its superpower until XVIIIth Century, when Heavy Calvary went out of fashion on battlefield.