Report

Report
Author: United States. Congress. House
Publisher:
Total Pages: 2402
Release:
Genre: United States
ISBN:

Population Health

Population Health
Author: Robert Malcolm Kaplan
Publisher: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
Total Pages: 431
Release: 2015
Genre: Health behavior
ISBN: 9781587634444

Aircraft Ownership

Aircraft Ownership
Author: Raymond C. Speciale
Publisher: McGraw Hill Professional
Total Pages: 355
Release: 2003-07-21
Genre: Technology & Engineering
ISBN: 0071434003

Offers “how to” information and solutions to the most common legal and tax issues facing general aviation aircraft owners—in layman’s terms Flow charts, diagrams, and legal case briefs provide real world scenarios of each discussion Downloadable forms, agreements, and checklists

Hired Swords

Hired Swords
Author: Karl F. Friday
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 282
Release: 1996-03-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 0804726965

Tracing the evolution of state military institutions from the seventh through the twelfth centuries, this book challenges much of the received wisdom of Western scholarship on the origins and early development of warriors in Japan. This prelude to the rise of the samurai, who were to become the masters of Japan's medieval and early modern eras, was initiated when the imperial court turned for its police and military protection to hired swords--professional mercenaries largely drawn from the elites of provincial society. By the middle of the tenth century, this provincial military order had been handed a virtual monopoly of Japan's martial resources. Yet it was not until near the end of the twelfth century that these warriors took the first significant steps toward asserting their independence from imperial court control. Why did they not do so earlier? Why did they remain obedient to a court without any other military sources for nearly 300 years? Why did the court put itself in the potentially (and indeed, ultimately) precarious situation of contracting for its military needs with private warriors? These and related questions are the focus of the author's study. Most of the few Western treatments see the origins of the samurai in the incompetence and inactivity of the imperial court that forced residents in the provinces to take up arms themselves. According to this view, a warrior class was spontaneously generated just as one had been in Europe a few centuries earlier, and the Japanese court was doomed to eventually perish by the sword because of its failure to live by it. Instead, the author argues that it was largely court activism that put swords in the hands of rural elites, thatcourt military policy, from the very beginning of the imperial state era, followed a long-term pattern of increasing reliance on the martial skills of the gentry. This policy reflected the court's desire for maximum efficiency in its military institutions, and the policy's succes