Question
Which of the following statements best summarizes feudal Japan’s social hierarchy?(1 point)
Responses
Members of the warrior classes tended to hold more political power in feudal Japan.
Members of the warrior classes tended to hold more political power in feudal Japan.
Farmers/peasants were lowest in the social hierarchy because there were not many of them.
Farmers/peasants were lowest in the social hierarchy because there were not many of them.
The emperor was at the head of the social hierarchy because that role had existed for so long.
The emperor was at the head of the social hierarchy because that role had existed for so long.
Merchants ranked highest in the social hierarchy because they became wealthy.
Responses
Members of the warrior classes tended to hold more political power in feudal Japan.
Members of the warrior classes tended to hold more political power in feudal Japan.
Farmers/peasants were lowest in the social hierarchy because there were not many of them.
Farmers/peasants were lowest in the social hierarchy because there were not many of them.
The emperor was at the head of the social hierarchy because that role had existed for so long.
The emperor was at the head of the social hierarchy because that role had existed for so long.
Merchants ranked highest in the social hierarchy because they became wealthy.
Answers
There are no human answers yet.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The statement that best summarizes feudal Japan’s social hierarchy is:
**Members of the warrior classes tended to hold more political power in feudal Japan.**
In feudal Japan, the samurai and other warrior classes held significant political and military power, while the emperor, although considered the highest ranking in terms of status, had limited political authority. Farmers and peasants were generally considered lower in rank despite their crucial role in society, and merchants, while they could be wealthy, were typically ranked lower than the samurai.
**Members of the warrior classes tended to hold more political power in feudal Japan.**
In feudal Japan, the samurai and other warrior classes held significant political and military power, while the emperor, although considered the highest ranking in terms of status, had limited political authority. Farmers and peasants were generally considered lower in rank despite their crucial role in society, and merchants, while they could be wealthy, were typically ranked lower than the samurai.
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