Ōkute-juku (大湫宿, Ōkute-juku) was the forty-seventh of the sixty-nine stations of the Nakasendō connecting Edo with Kyoto in Edo period Japan. It is located in former Mino Province in what is now part of the city of Mizunami, Gifu Prefecture, Japan. Alternative kanji for the post town are 大久手.[1]

Ōkute-juku

大湫宿
post station
Hiroshige's print of Ōkute-juku, part of the Sixty-nine Stations of the Kiso Kaidō series
General information
LocationMizunami, Gifu (former Mino Province)
Japan
Coordinates35°26′01.9″N 137°17′42.3″E / 35.433861°N 137.295083°E / 35.433861; 137.295083
Elevation512 meters
Line(s)Nakasendō
Distance358.7 km from Edo
Location
Ōkute-juku is located in Gifu Prefecture
Ōkute-juku
Ōkute-juku
Location within Gifu Prefecture
Ōkute-juku is located in Japan
Ōkute-juku
Ōkute-juku
Ōkute-juku (Japan)
Modern Ōkute-juku

History

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Ōkute was a settlement on the ancient Tōsandō highway from the Nara period, which preceded the construction of the Nakasendō. Between Ōi and Ōkute, the road was very narrow and mountainous and goes through 13 passes (Jusan-toge), with irregular stone steps in places. In the early Edo period, the system of post stations on the Nakasendō was formalized by the Tokugawa shogunate in 1602, and Ōkute-juku was constructed in 1604, became a stopping place for traveling merchants and was also on the sankin-kōtai route used by various western daimyō to-and-from the Shogun's court in Edo. The station itself was located with the territory of Owari Domain. The station is located at the foot of the Biwa Pass (琵琶峠, Biwa-tōge), which has a monument with a poem by Princess Kazu-no-miya, who stayed overnight at Ōkute-juku en-route to her marriage to Shogun Tokugawa Iemochi in Edo.

Per the 1843 "中山道宿村大概帳" (Nakasendō Shukuson Taigaichō) guidebook issued by the Inspector of Highways (道中奉行, Dōchu-būgyō), the town had a population of 338 people in 66 houses, including one honjin, one waki-honjin, and 30 hatago. At an elevation of 512 meters above sea level, Ōkute-juku is the highest station in the Mino section of the highway. It is 358.7 kilometers from Edo.

Today, only remains of the station are part of the waki-honjin, the kosatsuba or official notice board and a few machiya. The honjin was on the hill above the city, but it has been destroyed and a school has been built at its former location.

Ōkute-juku in The Sixty-nine Stations of the Kiso Kaidō

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Utagawa Hiroshige's ukiyo-e print of Ōkute-juku dates from 1835 -1838. The print is a bizarre composition showing surrealistically shaped boulders which make the work an almost abstract landscape. Two woodcutters with tall stacks of firewood on their backs are depicted climbing a steep slope and gazing at a hillside with blocks of exposed rock and weirdly-shaped pine trees and featureless hills. There is no sign of the post station.

Neighboring post towns

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Nakasendō
Ōi-juku - Ōkute-juku - Hosokute-juku

Notes

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  1. ^ Nakasendo Ōkute-juku. Ibisoku Co., Ltd. Accessed July 11, 2007.

References

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  • Izzard, Sebastian (2008). The Sixty-Nine Stations of the Kisokaido. George Braziller. ISBN 978-0807615935.
  • Berna, Cristina (2019). Hiroshige 69 Stations of the Nakasendō. Missys Clan. ISBN 978-2919787661.
  • Kishimoto, Yutaka (2016). 中山道浪漫の旅 書き込み手帖. Shinano Mainichi Shimbun. ISBN 978-4784072972. (in Japanese)
  • Yagi, Makio (2014). ちゃんと歩ける中山道六十九次 西 藪原宿~京三条大橋. 山と渓谷社. ISBN 978-4635600781. (in Japanese)
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