Oiwake-shuku

Oiwake-shuku (追分宿, Oiwake-shuku) was the twentieth of the sixty-nine stations of the Nakasendō. It is located in the present-day town of Karuizawa, in the Kitasaku District of Nagano Prefecture, Japan.

Oiwake-shuku
Keisai Eisen's print of Oiwake-shuku, part of The Sixty-nine Stations of the Kiso Kaidō series

History

This post town was named Oiwake, which means "where two roads split," because it was at this point that the Nakasendō split from the Hokkoku Kaidō. In the late 17th century, during the Genroku period, it flourished as a post town that could hold over 200 guests. There are still many remnants from the Edo period in the town today.

Though not a neighboring post town, Matsuida-shuku also provides a direct connection to Oiwake-shuku along the Nakasendō, by way of a minor hime kaidō. This hime kaidō allows travelers to avoid the Usuinoseki Checkpoint, one of the major checkpoints along the highway.[1]

Neighboring post towns

Nakasendō
Kutsukake-shuku - Oiwake-shuku - Otai-shuku
Hokkoku Kaidō
Oiwake-shuku (starting location) - Komoro-shuku
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gollark: Also, how do you get certain fluids out of the reactor?
gollark: Ah. There definitely isn't.
gollark: I'm going to replace it with D-D, D-T and D-He3, assuming there's actually any way to make the amount of fuel balance out.
gollark: This explains the terrible power output of my fusion reactor. H-H isn't a good reaction.

References

  1. Hiroshige - Kisokaido Archived 2007-10-29 at the Wayback Machine. www.hiroshige.org.uk. Accessed October 24, 2007.

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