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| ==History== | | ==History== |
− | As early as the 7th century, Okitsu was the site of the Kiyomi-ga-seki checkpoint, a significant barrier or checkpoint along the ancient Tôkaidô. The temple Seiken-ji was founded in [[679]] on a hill overlooking the checkpoint; | + | As early as the 7th century, Okitsu was the site of the Kiyomi-ga-seki checkpoint, a significant barrier or checkpoint along the ancient Tôkaidô. The temple Seiken-ji was founded in [[679]] on a hill overlooking the checkpoint; the temple was reestablished as a [[Rinzai]] [[Zen]] temple in the 1260s. Its main hall today dates to [[1702]]. |
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| + | [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]] stayed in Okitsu for a time prior to the [[siege of Odawara]]; Tokugawa Ieyasu also stayed at Seiken-ji for a time during his youth. |
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| + | During the [[Edo period]], as the early modern Tôkaidô highway system came into place, Okitsu became an even more active inn town, with a ''[[honjin]]'' and ''waki honjin'' serving numerous samurai, court noble, and other elites, as well as religious pilgrims and commoner travels, on a regular basis. |
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| + | In the [[Meiji period]], Okitsu came to be home to villas (''bessô'') of prominent figures such as Saionji Kinmochi and [[Inoue Kaoru]]. |
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| + | Okitsu Station first opened on 1 Feb [[1889]] as part of an extension of the Tokaido Line train line connecting Shizuoka and [[Tsu]] (both to the west of Okitsu). This line was extended to [[Kanbara]] (to the east) in [[1898]]. |
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| + | Inoue Kaoru established a villa in Okitsu in January [[1896]], calling it Chôjasô. Saionji Kinmochi established his in 1919, calling it Zagyosô. Today, the Zagyosô has been relocated to the open-air architecture museum [[Meiji Mura]] near [[Nagoya]], but a reconstruction of it has been erected and is maintained as a historic house open to visitors. |
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| + | ===Minaguchiya=== |
| + | The Minaguchiya was first established as a ''waki honjin'''in [[1785]]. It operated in that fashion until [[1872]], owned and operated by successive heads of the Mochizuki family. In [[1876]], the inn joined an alliance of institutions associated with pilgrims traveling to [[Ise Shrine]]. |
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| + | The inn burned down in a fire which destroyed some 30 buildings on the western side of the town on 2 Feb [[1879]]. Many valuable inn records were lost in this fire. The reconstruction of the inn was completed on 16 August that same year. |
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| + | Notable figures who stayed at the Minaguchiya on at least one occasion during the Meiji period include the statesmen [[Sanjo Sanetomi|Sanjô Sanetomi]], [[Yamagata Aritomo]], Inoue Kaoru, and Saionji Kinmochi; the Shôwa Emperor (Hirohito); poets [[Ochiai Naobumi]] and [[Ito Sachio|Itô Sachio]]; authors [[Natsume Soseki]], [[Masamune Hakucho|Masamune Hakuchô]], [[Shiga Naoya]], [[Arishima Ikuma]], and [[Takayama Chogyu|Takayama Chogyû]]; painter [[Kuroda Seiki]]; educator and ''[[oyatoi gaikokujin]]'' [[Alice Bacon]]; and Director-General of the Cabinet Legislation Bureau [[Inoue Kowashi]]. Many of these individuals used Okitsu as a location for recuperation from illness. |
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| + | In later decades, Prime Minister [[Kiyoura Keigo]], Speaker of the House [[Kasuya Gizo|Kasuya Gizô]], poets [[Onoe Saishu|Onoe Saishû]] and [[Yosano Akiko]], novelist [[Abe Tomoji]], |
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| ==References== | | ==References== |
| *Gallery labels, Minaguchiya Gallery, Okitsu.[https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/50111128167/sizes/k/] | | *Gallery labels, Minaguchiya Gallery, Okitsu.[https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/50111128167/sizes/k/] |
| + | *Plaques on-site in Okitsu. |
| + | *Plaques on display at Seiken-ji. |
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| [[Category:Edo Period]] | | [[Category:Edo Period]] |
| [[Category:Cities and Towns]] | | [[Category:Cities and Towns]] |