Tokugawa Japan: Peace, Isolation, and Hidden Power — Fexingo History

The Shogun's Forgotten Roads: Travel and Authority in Tokugawa Japan

7 min · 11. juli 2026
episode The Shogun's Forgotten Roads: Travel and Authority in Tokugawa Japan cover

Description

When Tokugawa Ieyasu unified Japan in 1603, he inherited a country of fragmented domains and restless samurai. But instead of building walls, he built roads—specifically, the five great highways radiating from Edo, known as the Gokaidō. These roads, especially the Tōkaidō linking Edo to Kyoto, became arteries of control, commerce, and surveillance. In this episode, Lucas and Luna walk the Tōkaidō with woodblock-print artist Utagawa Hiroshige, stopping at post stations like Hakone and Shōno, where daimyo processions, peddlers, and pilgrims converged. They explore the sankin-kōtai system, which forced feudal lords to alternate residence between Edo and their domains, turning the highways into instruments of political stability. Along the way, they encounter sekisho (barrier stations) where travelers were checked, the hidden world of female travelers and prostitutes, and the unofficial travel guides known as kaidō chūkō. Through Hiroshige's famous 'Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō', they see how art captured a nation on the move—and how the shogun's roads held a country together for over two centuries. #TokugawaJapan #EdoPeriod #Gokaidō #Tōkaidō #Hiroshige #SankinKōtai #UtagawaHiroshige #JapaneseHistory #Edo #Kyoto #Hakone #Sekisho #TravelHistory #UkiyoE #FiftyThreeStations #PostStations #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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