Even Oda Nobunaga — often remembered for his brutality — had retainers who resisted orders to kill peasants. Sengoku‑era “mercy” toward peasants was driven by economics, politics, and survival — not chivalry.
The highest form of martial character has never been the capacity for violence. It has always been the discipline to contain it. Across cultures and centuries, the difference between the soldier and the fighter emerges not in the heat of battle but in the moments where violence becomes easy, where the target is weak, where the sword can fall without resistance. The soldier is shaped by the state, drilled into obedience, and deployed as an instrument of policy. The fighter is shaped by an internal law, a private architecture of conscience that no institution can fully command. This distinction is not theoretical. It is carved into the historical record, visible wherever war strips away the illusions of civilization and reveals the raw mechanics of power. The Sengoku Jidai — Japan’s Warring States period — is one of the clearest laboratories for this truth. It was a century where political authority collapsed, where armies lived off the land, where villages burned, and where the pe...