Mitake-juku
[file:Nakasendo Mitake-juku honjin site ac.jpg|thumb|right|270px|Site of the honjin].
Mitake-juku was the forty-ninth 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 town of Mitake, Kani District, Gifu Prefecture, Japan. Travelers often came straight to Mitake-juku to avoid the difficult paths near Hosokute-juku.
History
The temple of Gankō-ji was founded by Saichō, the founder of Tendai Buddhism in Japan in 815 AD, and Mitake-juku grew as a temple town in front of the gates of this temple. It was thus a station on the ancient Tōsandō highway long before the creation of the Nakasendō. The area was devastated by floods in 995 AD, but the temple and settlement were spared - a fact commemorated in a festival to this date. The temple was repeatedly destroyed by natural disasters and by wars, the last of which was during fighting between Takeda Shingen and Oda Nobunaga in 1572. Many of the structures of the temple date to the late Sengoku period or early Edo period. When the system of post stations on the Nakasendō was formalized by the Tokugawa shogunate in 1602, and Mitaka-juku became a stopping place for traveling merchants and for various western daimyō on the sankin-kōtai to-and-from the Shogun's court in Edo. Sekigahara is 443 kilometers from Edo.Per the 1843 guidebook issued by the Inspector of Highways, the town had a population of 600 people in 66 houses, including one honjin, one waki-honjin, and 28 hatago. Mitake-juku is 376.4 kilometers from Edo.
Modern Mitake-juku is fairly well-preserved. The honjin and several machiya, including the Tateya hatago still survives, as does the teahouse which was the subject of Hirsohige's print. Mitake-juku has a local museum, the Nakasendō Mitake-kan with documents and displays pertaining to the history of the post station.