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*''Japanese'': 飛脚 ''(hikyaku)''

''Hikyaku'' were couriers or messengers active in the medieval and early modern periods, who transported currency, letters, packages, and the like. In the [[Edo period]], the network of ''hikyaku'' messengers expanded dramatically, and also became more organized and systematized.

''Sando hikyaku'' (三度飛脚) traveled the [[Tokaido|Tôkaidô]] three times a month, and were generally employed by shogunate officials in [[Osaka]] and [[Kyoto]] to communicate with the [[Tokugawa shogunate|shogunate]] in [[Edo]]. The messengers made use of horses made ready at [[post towns]] along the way - in theory, three horses ready and available at any given time - to ensure they would always have a fresh horse and thus the ability to travel more quickly.

The same term, ''sando hikyaku'', was also used to refer to an independent network of messengers (i.e. not working directly for the shogunate) who operated commercially in transporting messages and goods along the Tôkaidô, beginning around [[1664]]. These commercial messengers were also known as ''jô bikyaku'' in Edo, and ''junban hikyaku'' in Kyoto, and operated out of roughly 86 establishments in Kyoto and at least nine in Osaka, with branch operations in Edo, and roughly twenty post-stations along the route. A much smaller group of messenger operators, known as ''jôge hikyaku'' (上下飛脚) or ''rokkumi hikyaku'' (六組飛脚) were based in Edo, and specialized in transporting materials for provincial daimyô. The Kyoto/Osaka-based messengers soon expanded their business, establishing routes connecting those cities with [[Tanba province|Tanba]] and [[Harima province]]s, and with major provincial cities such as [[Sendai]], [[Nagasaki]], [[Kanazawa]], and [[Fukui]]. Each company ran on a different schedule, generally sending and receiving messengers three times every ten days; a manager called a ''sairyo'' oversaw operations and took responsibility for the safety of packages.

The shogunate also operated a network of messengers along all five major highways (the [[Highways|Gokaidô]]) called ''tsugi hikyaku'' (継飛脚), to convey official messages to shogunate and daimyô [[han|domains]]. Horses were kept ready at stations called ''tsugitate'', spaced roughly eight kilometers apart, for use by the messengers.

Some of the most powerful daimyô maintained their own messenger networks, called ''daimyô hikyaku'' or ''shichi-ri-hikyaku'', as these networks generally had horses ready every seven ''[[ri]]'' (''shichi-ri''). The two most prominent daimyô who maintained such networks were the ''[[Gosanke]]'' Tokugawa branch families based in [[Wakayama castle|Wakayama]] and [[Nagoya castle|Nagoya]]. Messengers in the service of [[Wakayama han]] left Edo on the 5th, 15th, and 25th of each month, and left Wakayama on the 10th, 20th, and 30th.

==References==
*Moriya, Katsuhisa. Ronald Toby (trans.) "Urban Networks and Information Networks." in Chie Nakane and Shinzaburô Ôishi (eds.) ''Tokugawa Japan: The Social and Economic Antecedents of Modern Japan''. University of Tokyo Press, 1990. pp107-109.

[[Category:Edo Period]]
[[Category:Economics]]
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