Are ninjas or samurais stronger?

Neither ninja nor samurai is definitively "stronger"; they excelled at different roles, making the outcome of a fight dependent on the situation, but in a direct, fair fight, the samurai would likely win due to superior armor and training, while a ninja would dominate in stealth, espionage, or unconventional warfare using tricks and surprise. Samurai were elite warriors for open combat, focused on direct engagement with heavy armor and swords, while ninjas were covert operatives specializing in intelligence, sabotage, and assassination, prioritizing stealth and survival over honorable duels.
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Who is more powerful, a ninja or a samurai?

In a fair, open fight, the heavily armored, direct-combat-trained Samurai would likely win due to superior armor and weapons like the katana; however, a Ninja would win by using stealth, poison, and ambush in asymmetrical warfare, as their role was espionage and assassination, not honorable duels, with many Ninjas actually being lower-class Samurai working for their lord. The winner depends entirely on the rules and environment of the engagement, as their roles were fundamentally different: Samurai for open battle, Ninja for covert operations.
 
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Who had higher status, samurai or ninja?

Samurai were warriors that belonged to the noble classes of ancient Japanese society. On the other hand, ninjas were often mercenaries, spies, and assassins, and would often belong to the lower classes of ancient Japanese society.
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Why did samurai hate shinobi?

I think ninja were like lower class and samurai clans were upper class. They had a battle after which samurai saw potential in their fighting style and skills. Samurai clans after the battle hired or recruited ninjas for work deemed as dishonorable for them.
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Can a samurai be a ninja?

Yes, a samurai could absolutely be a ninja (shinobi), and often were, as the roles weren't mutually exclusive but rather overlapping specializations within the warrior class, with samurai often serving as commanders or high-level agents for covert missions, blurring the line between the public warrior and the secretive spy. Many samurai families had traditions of ninjutsu, and individuals served dual roles as both honorable warriors and covert operatives for their lords, with famous figures like Hattori Hanzō exemplifying this blend. 
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Sugino Sensei 10th Dan Master of Katori Shinto Ryu

Did ninjas actually fight samurai?

They did not fight against each other. However, on certain occasions, they fought against each other. Most of the time the samurai won. During the war of Tensho-Iga (1581), the ninja clans were devastated by the samurai (The forces of Oda Nobunaga).
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What are samurais afraid of?

Fear was a constant in a Samurai's life, but they approached it differently than most of us do now. They faced the threat of death regularly, yet they didn't let it cripple them. The Samurai understood that fear is a natural response, but rather than running from it, they trained themselves to accept it.
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What's higher than a samurai?

While a shogun may have been a samurai at one point, a shogun was at the top of Japan's military while the samurai were a caste of elite soldiers. In this way, shoguns have much more power than samurai.
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Do shinobi still exist today?

Yes, shinobi (ninja) still exist in a sense, but not as the black-clad spies and assassins from movies; modern practitioners are part of historical preservation, martial arts schools (like Bujinkan or Banke Shinobinoden), or work in cultural tourism, with figures like Jinichi Kawakami representing the last direct lineages, though they acknowledge their skills lack modern utility, focusing on tradition rather than active espionage.
 
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Would a samurai beat a Viking?

There's no definitive winner for a Viking vs. Samurai fight as they lived in different eras and locations, but generally, a Samurai would likely beat a Viking in a one-on-one duel due to superior, layered armor (plate/lamellar vs. chainmail/leather) and refined training, while Vikings' raw strength, ferocity (berserker rage), and larger axes/shields might give them an edge in group raids against less-armored foes or in close-quarters chaos where their brute force and intimidation worked best, but samurai's discipline and ranged weapons (bow) countered Viking tactics effectively. 
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Why did Japan get rid of samurai?

Japan got rid of the samurai class primarily due to the Meiji Restoration (starting 1868), which centralized power and modernized the nation by abolishing feudalism, creating a Western-style conscript army, and eliminating samurai privileges like carrying swords, all to strengthen Japan against foreign powers and end their elite status. A long peace under the Tokugawa Shogunate had already turned many into bureaucrats, making them an expensive and anachronistic class, but the final blow came with the forced opening to the West and the new government's push for rapid modernization. 
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Who is the strongest samurai ever?

The title of "strongest samurai" is subjective, but Miyamoto Musashi is widely considered the greatest due to his legendary undefeated record (over 60 duels), unique two-sword (Niten Ichi-ryū) style, and influential philosophical writings like The Book of Five Rings, while other contenders include battlefield commanders like Honda Tadakatsu and strategic icons like Tokugawa Ieyasu.
 
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Who is stronger, a knight or a samurai?

In the case of comparing a knight to a samurai, each warrior used armor, weapons, and methods oriented towards the particular opponents of their day and age. Therefore, neither can be looked upon as being universally more effective under all conditions against all manner of opponents.
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Were female ninjas common?

The only recorded female ninja in history, aside from her disciples, appears to be Mochizuki Chiyome, who has since been described as a spy or agent, who operated during the feudal era, a time where bloodshed was pretty much an everyday occurrence.
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Who defeated the samurais?

The samurai were ultimately defeated by the Imperial Japanese Army in the 1877 Satsuma Rebellion, specifically at the Battle of Shiroyama, marking the end of the samurai class as Japan modernized with modern weapons and conscripted forces against traditional warriors led by Saigo Takamori. This defeat by their own government solidified the shift from feudal warrior class to a modern national army.
 
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Are ninjas stronger than samurais?

In a fair, open fight, the heavily armored, direct-combat-trained Samurai would likely win due to superior armor and weapons like the katana; however, a Ninja would win by using stealth, poison, and ambush in asymmetrical warfare, as their role was espionage and assassination, not honorable duels, with many Ninjas actually being lower-class Samurai working for their lord. The winner depends entirely on the rules and environment of the engagement, as their roles were fundamentally different: Samurai for open battle, Ninja for covert operations.
 
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Who were the most feared samurai?

The "most feared" samurai often points to Miyamoto Musashi, legendary for his undefeated dueling record (over 60 duels), unique two-sword style, and psychological tactics, making him Japan's ultimate swordsman. However, figures like the formidable Honda Tadakatsu (unscathed in 55 battles) and ruthless warlords like Oda Nobunaga, alongside fierce warriors such as Hattori Hanzo, also instill immense fear for their battlefield prowess and brutality.
 
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What are the 7 rules of the samurai?

It is sometimes criticized for disrespecting human life. According to Inazo Nitobe's book Bushido, the lives of the samurai warriors were ruled by 7 principles called Bushido. These 7 rules were Righteousness, Loyalty, Honor, Respect, Honesty, Courage and Consistency.
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Why is 444 unlucky in Japan?

Traditionally, 4 is unlucky because it is sometimes pronounced shi, which is the word for death. Sometimes levels or rooms with 4 do not exist in hospitals or hotels. Particularly in the maternity section of a hospital, the room number 43 is avoided because it can literally mean "stillbirth".
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Who was the true last samurai?

The "real last samurai" is widely considered to be Saigō Takamori (1828–1877), a pivotal figure in Japan's modernization who led the traditionalist Satsuma Rebellion against the new Meiji government, embodying the warrior code but ultimately falling in battle, marking the symbolic end of the samurai era. While the movie The Last Samurai drew inspiration from him and the period, it's a fictionalized account; Saigō was a key leader in overthrowing the shogunate, then grew disillusioned with rapid Westernization, fighting for traditional values until his ritual suicide at the Battle of Shiroyama. 
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Were Vikings or Spartans stronger?

Vikings absolutely wipe. Their armor and weapons are 1500+ years more advanced.
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What is Sparta called today?

Today, the city of Sparta is called Sparti (Σπάρτη) and is located in the same place as the ancient city in the Peloponnese, Greece, serving as the capital of the Laconia region. While the ancient city declined, the modern town was rebuilt in 1834 and is a small, active center trading in local products like olive oil, with historical ruins nearby.
 
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Which martial art is closest to samurai?

Jujitsu. Also known as jujutsu, this martial art uses little to no weapons. Instead, the focus is on subduing your opponent through holds, paralysing blows and throws. As mentioned above, it originated in the 17th century and was used within the warrior class of the samurai.
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