Essa Tribo Japonesa Era Tão SELVAGEM Que Nem os Maiores Samurais Conseguiram Detê-los...

The Ainu lived in northern Japan long before any samurai set foot in Hokkaido. No iron armor, no forged swords—but with poisoned arrows, dense forests, and a spirituality that transformed every river into a line of defense. In 1669, when the Matsumae clan began draining the sacred rivers and monopolizing trade, a leader named Shakushain did the impossible: he united nineteen tribes that had never agreed on anything and declared war on feudal Japan. What happened next is one of the most forgotten—and most devastating—stories in Asian history. ▶ In this episode: — Who were the Ainu and why were they different from everything else in Japan? — Shakushain's War and the guerrilla warfare that humiliated the samurai — The betrayal of the banquet: how a cup of sake ended a nation — ​​The recognition that took 350 years to arrive