Mitarai

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  • Japanese: 御手洗 (Mitarai)

Mitarai was a port town in Hiroshima han, located on an island in the Inland Sea, located roughly halfway between the cities of Kure (in Hiroshima domain) and Imabari (in Iyo province, on Shikoku). Today, Mitarai has been absorbed into Kure City.

A major regional port town, Mitarai got its start around the mid-18th century, and grew in the early 19th century as the archipelago-wide "travel boom" burgeoned. Like many other prominent Inland Sea ports, Mitarai was chiefly home to warehousers, affiliated with wealthy, powerful warehousing guilds in Osaka; essentially they served as middlemen, buying, storing, and selling a variety of goods which sea captains transported across the Inland Sea and beyond. By the Bakumatsu period, however, many sea captains bypassed the warehousers and simply bought and sold directly with producers in cities like Onomichi and consumers in places like Osaka. By that time, too, fears of foreign ships led to Mitarai being equipped with shore batteries.

During the Edo period, Mitarai was among the more typical stops for daimyô and their entourages to stop during their sankin kôtai journeys to and from Edo; Korean and Ryukyuan embassies to Edo also stopped here, and a hengaku plaque featuring calligraphy by Ryukyuan envoy Ryô Kôchi can be found in the temple of Manshû-ji in the town.[1]

Like many such port towns, Mitarai was home to a number of brothels, catering to sailors and travelers. Hiroshima domain authorities paid little attention to regulating or forbidding prostitution; Mitarai competed with other neighboring ports which offered other entertainments, including plays, lotteries, and teahouses. There were four main brothels in Mitarai: the Sakaiya, Wakaebisuya, Tomitaya, and Ebiya. In the mid-18th century, the town had a population of just over 500, of whom roughly 100 were indentured women. However, by the 19th century, this proportion dropped considerably. In the 1860s, the Wakaebisuya, which employed around a hundred women by itself at its peak time, now had only around a dozen; meanwhile, the other brothels were on the brink of closing.

References

  • Amy Stanley, Selling Women: Prostitution, Markets, and the Household in Early Modern Japan, UC Press (2012), 163-187.
  1. Shirarezaru Ryûkyû shisetsu 知られざる琉球使節, Fukuyama-shi Tomonoura rekishi minzoku shiryôkan (2006), 37.

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