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| ===[[Nikko Kaido|Nikkô Kaidô]]日光街道=== | | ===[[Nikko Kaido|Nikkô Kaidô]]日光街道=== |
− | (NR4, NR 119) The Nikkô-kaidô, also known as the Nikkô Dôchû 日光道中, ran from Edo to [[Nikko|Nikkô]], where [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] was enshrined. It separated from the Ôshû-kaidô in [[Utsunomiya]] 宇都宮. | + | (NR4, NR 119) The Nikkô-kaidô, also known as the Nikkô Dôchû 日光道中,<ref name=dochu>The alternate names of several highways as ''dôchû'' instead of ''kaidô'' stems from an effort by Confucian scholar [[Arai Hakuseki]] in the 1710s to "[[rectification of names|rectify the names]]" of these highways, which do not run by the sea, and thus he felt should not be called "sea roads" (海道, ''kaidô''). Watanabe Hiroshi, ''A History of Japanese Political Thought, 1600-1901'', International House of Japan (2012), 148.</ref> ran from Edo to [[Nikko|Nikkô]], where [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] was enshrined. It separated from the Ôshû-kaidô in [[Utsunomiya]] 宇都宮. |
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| Its 21 stations included Utsunomiya, Shimo-, Naka- and Kami-Tokujira (徳次郎), Ôzawa, Imaichi, Hatsuishi(鉢石), and Nikkô bôchû 坊中. These were located roughly five kilometers apart, and in 1843 each station had an average of 2,264 residents and 39 ''hatagoya''.<ref name=gokaido/> | | Its 21 stations included Utsunomiya, Shimo-, Naka- and Kami-Tokujira (徳次郎), Ôzawa, Imaichi, Hatsuishi(鉢石), and Nikkô bôchû 坊中. These were located roughly five kilometers apart, and in 1843 each station had an average of 2,264 residents and 39 ''hatagoya''.<ref name=gokaido/> |
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| ===[[Koshu Kaido|Kôshû Kaidô]]甲州街道=== | | ===[[Koshu Kaido|Kôshû Kaidô]]甲州街道=== |
− | (Chûô 中央 Expressway; NR 20) The Kôshû-kaidô ran from Edo to Lake Suwa 諏訪湖, where it joined the Nakasendô, passing through [[Kai province]], which was also called Kôshû. The modern NR 20 passes south of [[Mt. Takao]] 高尾山 in Tokyo, but this is a route developed for automobiles. The original route went north of Mt. Takao through the Kobotoke Pass 小仏峠, parallel to the route today of the Chûô train line 中央線. | + | (Chûô 中央 Expressway; NR 20) The Kôshû-kaidô or Kôshû-dôchû<ref name=dochu/> ran from Edo to Lake Suwa 諏訪湖, where it joined the Nakasendô, passing through [[Kai province]], which was also called Kôshû. The modern NR 20 passes south of [[Mt. Takao]] 高尾山 in Tokyo, but this is a route developed for automobiles. The original route went north of Mt. Takao through the Kobotoke Pass 小仏峠, parallel to the route today of the Chûô train line 中央線. |
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| Kai had come under Ieyasu's control in [[1582]], and during the Edo period the Kôshû Highway was considered a militarily sensitive escape route. Only a few daimyo were allowed to use it; most had to take the longer route of the Nakasendô highway. | | Kai had come under Ieyasu's control in [[1582]], and during the Edo period the Kôshû Highway was considered a militarily sensitive escape route. Only a few daimyo were allowed to use it; most had to take the longer route of the Nakasendô highway. |