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- The most notable quality of Ashigaru is his patience. He can wait hours for his opponent to make one false move and then take advantage of that one mistake to defeat him in a split second. An old friend of Lost Hog, he left the Fang Pi Clang because he was disappointed by the lack of work the members put into their training.
- Ashigaru (nora. "lekkonodzy") — lekko opancerzeni i uzbrojeni piesi żołnierze w Noramaki, stanowią trzon armii Daimyo. [[Plik:Ashigaru.jpg|thumb|304px|Ashigaru klanu Takeda]]
- The Japanese ashigaru (lightfeet) were foot-soldiers of medieval Japan. The first known reference to ashigaru was in the 1300s, but it was during the Ashikaga Shogunate-Muromachi period that the use of ashigaru became prevalent by various warring factions.
- Literally, light-foot or Quick legs, as Toturi the Black called them. The ashigaru were common foot-soldiers of the Rokuganese armies and lowest ranked in the Buke caste. These men were peasants conscripted into service in times of war and sent to the battle front to die. Armed with little more than padding that served as an excuse for armour and a yari (spear), these men merely charged at each other in large numbers and served as an interesting backdrop for dueling samurai.
- Attempts were made in Japan by the Emperor Tenmu(673-86) to have a conscripted national army, but this did not come about and by the 10th century Japan instead relied on individual land owners to provide men for conflicts and wars. These horse owning land owners were the beginnings of the samurai class and the men who worked the land for the land owners became the common foot soldiers during times of war. These foot soldiers could have long ties and loyalty to the land owners which went back many generations.
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| - Ashigaru
- Ashigaru Commander
- Ashigaru Commander II
- Ashigaru II
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Title
| - Weaver of the writings of love~
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| - Tall, lean and slender. Facial features are very soft, and pretty-boyish often having him mistaken for a young woman.
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abstract
| - __NOEDITSECTION__
- The most notable quality of Ashigaru is his patience. He can wait hours for his opponent to make one false move and then take advantage of that one mistake to defeat him in a split second. An old friend of Lost Hog, he left the Fang Pi Clang because he was disappointed by the lack of work the members put into their training.
- Attempts were made in Japan by the Emperor Tenmu(673-86) to have a conscripted national army, but this did not come about and by the 10th century Japan instead relied on individual land owners to provide men for conflicts and wars. These horse owning land owners were the beginnings of the samurai class and the men who worked the land for the land owners became the common foot soldiers during times of war. These foot soldiers could have long ties and loyalty to the land owners which went back many generations. Land-owning samurai, together with peasant foot soldiers, fought in many wars and conflicts including the Mongol invasions of Japan in 1274 and 1281. Constant warfare between the 1300s and 1500s made the hiring of foot soldiers with no particular loyalty necessary at times. Paid only in loot, these mercenaries were not well-trained and thus could not always be depended upon in battle. Nonetheless, these wandering foot soldiers would eventually become the ashigaru.
- Ashigaru (nora. "lekkonodzy") — lekko opancerzeni i uzbrojeni piesi żołnierze w Noramaki, stanowią trzon armii Daimyo. [[Plik:Ashigaru.jpg|thumb|304px|Ashigaru klanu Takeda]]
- The Japanese ashigaru (lightfeet) were foot-soldiers of medieval Japan. The first known reference to ashigaru was in the 1300s, but it was during the Ashikaga Shogunate-Muromachi period that the use of ashigaru became prevalent by various warring factions.
- Literally, light-foot or Quick legs, as Toturi the Black called them. The ashigaru were common foot-soldiers of the Rokuganese armies and lowest ranked in the Buke caste. These men were peasants conscripted into service in times of war and sent to the battle front to die. Armed with little more than padding that served as an excuse for armour and a yari (spear), these men merely charged at each other in large numbers and served as an interesting backdrop for dueling samurai. Ashigaru archers and spearmen, however, occasionally prove to be deadly when given sufficient direction and purpose by a competent leader. After all, arrows in sufficient numbers may maim or even kill the most highly trained, armed, and armoured bushi before it gets close enough to even wound anybody. Even then, however, most samurai look upon the ashigaru as mere tools: as Tsuruchi Nobumoto says, "What we do is art. What peasants do is merely adequate."
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