Minoji
The Minoji (美濃路 Mino Road) was a 60 km (37 mi) highway in Japan during the Edo period. It was a secondary route, ranked below the Edo Five Routes in importance, and connected Miya-juku on the TÅkaidÅ with Tarui-juku on the NakasendÅ.[1]
The road received much use before and after the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600. Fukushima Masanori, the leader of the eastern armies, traveled the Minoji from Okoshi (modern-day Ichinomiya) to Mino Province for the battle. Tokugawa Ieyasu, the victor of the battle, traveled the route afterwards to a hero's welcome. It was also referred to as the Kichirei KaidÅ (å‰ä¾‹è¡—é“).
Major travelers
- Royal embassies to Tokugawa Japan from Korea traveled along the route ten times. Their general itinerary was they stayed the night in ÅŒgaki-juku, then rested at either Sunomata-juku or Okoshi-juku, before spending the following night in Nagoya-juku.
- Official travelers from the Ryukyu Islands also traveled along the Minoji. Though initially just traveling along the TÅkaidÅ, they began traveling along the Mioji in 1714.
Stations of the Minoji


Including the starting and ending points, there were only nine post stations on the Minoji.[2] The route was named after Mino Province, which makes up the southern portion of the modern-day Gifu Prefecture. As such, the route spans both Aichi and Gifu prefectures. The stations are listed below, with their current municipality in parentheses.
Aichi Prefecture
- 1. Miya-juku (宮宿) (Atsuta-ku, Nagoya) (also part of the TÅkaidÅ)
- 2. Nagoya-juku (åå¤å±‹å®¿) (Naka-ku, Nagoya)
- 3. Kiyosu-juku (æ¸…é ˆå®¿) (Kiyosu)
- 4. Inaba-juku (稲葉宿) (Inazawa)
- 5. Hagiwara-juku (è©åŽŸå®¿) (Ichinomiya)
- 6. Okoshi-juku (起宿) (Ichinomiya)
Gifu Prefecture
- 7. Sunomata-juku (墨俣宿) (Ōgaki)
- 8. Ōgaki-juku (大垣宿) (Ōgaki)
- 9. Tarui-juku (垂井宿) (Tarui, Fuwa District) (also part of the NakasendÅ)
Other uses
The TÅkaidÅ Main Line, the TÅkaidÅ Shinkansen and the TÅmei and Meishin expressways all follow the historical TÅkaidÅ from Tokyo to Nagoya. From Gifu to Kusatsu, the routes all follow the historical NakasendÅ. As such, the route between Nagoya and Gifu is also called "Minoji." Also, the modern Route 22 follows the path of the Minoji.
See also
References
- ↑ Hiroshige - Kisokaido Road. Hiroshige.org. Accessed December 8, 2007.
- ↑ Minoji: KaidÅ. Chubu Wide Area Tourism. Accessed December 8, 2007.