The five centrally administered routes, or kaidō, that connected the de facto capital of Japan at Edo (now Tokyo) with the outer provinces during the Edo period
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English: A map of the Gokaidō (五街道, Five Routes). These were the five centrally administered routes (kaidō) that connected Edo (now Tokyo) with the outer ...
Apr 21, 2021 · Japan's most famous highway, the Tōkaidō, was an essential transportation route between Edo (now Tokyo) and Kyoto during the Edo period (1603–1868).
Five Main Roads (Gokaidō): 1. Tōkaidō (Eastern Sea Road); 2. Nakasendō (Middle Mountain Road); 3. Kōshū-kaidō (Kōshū Road); 4. Nikkō-kaidō (Nikkō ...
There are five highways (“gokaido”) in Japan which were formally established during the Edo period as the official routes which the daimyo should follow.
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Th century woodblock-print of a map of the Dochu, published in the late modern period when travel to shrines and temples were flourishing for ordinary ...
May 6, 2024 · Subcategories ; K · Kōshū Kaidō · (7 C, 26 F) ; M · Maps of the Five Routes of the Edo period · (6 C, 5 F) ; N · Nikkō Kaidō · (4 C, 18 F) ; O · Ōshū Kaidō ...
五街道ネットワーク / Edo Five Routes map. 五街道ネットワーク / Edo Five Routes map. ↑Back to Top. @chizutodesign.
Edo Five Routes. Five Highways in Edo period Japan. Gokaidō; Five Highways ... Gokaido Edo Five Routes Map.png 1,566 × 1,295; 807 KB. 0 references. 1830 map ...
Jan 7, 2019 · The five routes were gradually created during the 17th and 18th centuries: the Tokaidō was completed in 1624, the Nikko Kaidō in 1636, the Oshu ...