Starfox
Hero
If you call a class "paladin", the connection to western culture is hard to avoid. You could pick up similar themes in other cultures, holy warriors exist in different forms in Islam, Persian myth, Russian orthodoxy, Greek orthodoxy, germanic crusaders and in the Spanish reconquista. I am pretty sure India has similar themes, China has the Chinese knight martial arts concept, Japan has its yamabushi. The closer to our own time we get, the more controversial this gets - if I added jihadists and southern baptists to the list, most (including me) would object, even tough they think of themselves as holy warriors. But each of these archetypes has a cultural context. Saying that yamabushi is the Japanese equivalent of paladins is not exactly wrong, but the relationship is not exact nor simple.
So, when we're discussing the similarities and not between cavaliers and paladins, I think we must primarily look at the Occident. Sure, we can discuss what separates a yamabushi and a samuai in the same thread, but drawing conclusions on the relationship between cavaliers and paladins from the relationship between yamabushi and samurai is irrelevant.
What can be interesting to discuss is how the similarities who in fact do exist came to be, between two cultures so completely separate from each other.
PS: The paladins, sometimes known as the Twelve Peers, were the foremost warriors of Charlemagne's court, according to the literary cycle known as the Matter of France. /Wikipedia
So, when we're discussing the similarities and not between cavaliers and paladins, I think we must primarily look at the Occident. Sure, we can discuss what separates a yamabushi and a samuai in the same thread, but drawing conclusions on the relationship between cavaliers and paladins from the relationship between yamabushi and samurai is irrelevant.
What can be interesting to discuss is how the similarities who in fact do exist came to be, between two cultures so completely separate from each other.
PS: The paladins, sometimes known as the Twelve Peers, were the foremost warriors of Charlemagne's court, according to the literary cycle known as the Matter of France. /Wikipedia