
When historians say a Daimyo is worth 100,000 Koku what does
Jul 30, 2022 · A daimyo was a feudal lord whose estate produced in excess of 10,000 koku and served as the highest order of classification, with 250-300 in Japan at a given time. An important note when talking about koku is that the unit itself is not a direct representation of actual rice yield, but rather the assessed economic value of a holdings production ...
Meaning of Koku : r/ShogunTVShow - Reddit
Koku was a "standardized" unit of measurement and currency in feudal Japan which was roughly equivalent to feed one one person for a year. 1 Koku is roughly equivalent to $650 dollars today. So doing a rough conversion Blackthorne is being "paid" 160k a year.
How were people paid in feudal Japan? Koku vs. coins
Jun 26, 2024 · Koku/石 is a unit of measurement for volume - with 1 koku coming to around 180 litres (converted to weight = 150 kg). When people are awarded let's say 100 koku, what that means is they were given a piece of land capable/expected to produce 100 koku of rice - or 18,000 litres/15,000 kg of rice (or other crops) every year.
Whats the difference between monme and koku? : …
Mar 26, 2024 · Koku is best explained in terms of rice. 1 koku = 150kg of rice and was considered the amount to sustain a person for 1 year. So getting 600 koku meant you could have your own village or 1 large samurai household equal to 600 people. 600 koku = …
Koku vs All Hashira : r/KimetsuNoYaiba - Reddit
Oct 7, 2022 · Koku literally took the brunt of three red blade yet in his head regrown form says all attacks against him are useless Also gyomei even states kokushibou's Regen was slow because he just regrew his head , I'm talking about a fresh head regrown kokushibou against the hashiras
Medieval Japan used rice a currency (Koku). What are the ... - Reddit
Dec 16, 2023 · In the Muromachi period, the agricultural tax was (in general) paid in coins. However by the late Sengoku, a trend emerged that lords began accepting that tax to be paid in kind (rice/wheat/barley etc). This culimated in the koku-daka system, where agricultural taxes were paid in rice (in general).
The actual use of Hakujoudai and Kokujoudai : r/hanakokun - Reddit
Mar 26, 2022 · A subreddit dedicated to the Toilet-bound Hanako-kun (Jibaku Shounen Hanako-kun, 地縛少年花子くん). The manga is created by Aidairo (あいだいろ) and published in Square Enix's GFantasy monthly maga
B: The Beginning- What are Koku and Yuna? I understand making …
Apr 14, 2021 · But since koku swapped his body parts with theres, those parts start to resonate which would speed up there recovery. But because he left after getting those parts it would take longer for them. As for the wings they took the DNA of the fossil and to recreate it and it just so happens the wings came, or they were dormant, or even we swapped ...
How did *koku* work? : r/JapaneseHistory - Reddit
Feb 4, 2019 · Koku were used as currency until the late edo period, and so I was wondering if any of you know how koku were distributed. According to wikipedia that much rice would weigh like 300 pounds, so how would daimyo collect their koku ?
How much was one ryo during the late Edo period? : …
Jul 17, 2014 · A koku was nominally the amount of rice needed to feed a man for a year (330 pounds of rice), but the actual value of that fluctuated from year to year. (If there's a famine, then a year's worth of rice can buy a lot more other stuff.) A ryo (which was a gold coin) was originally worth four koku, and then debased to one koku. So how much was it ...