# Hikyaku

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Historical courier system in Japan

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Hikyaku from 1834 woodblock print by  	 [Katsushika Hokusai](/source/Katsushika_Hokusai) (1760–1849).

**Hikyaku** (飛脚) were [couriers](/source/Courier) in [Japan](/source/Japan) who carried letters, documents, bills of exchange, and packages, using a system of relay stations under the [bakufu](/source/Bakufu) military governments, beginning in the [Kamakura period](/source/Kamakura_period) (1185–1333), gradually yielding to more modern systems beginning in 1858.

## Kamakura period

*Courier or postman*, Japan, [hand-coloured](/source/Hand-colouring) albumen print by [Felice Beato](/source/Felice_Beato), between 1863 and 1877

During the [Asuka period](/source/Asuka_period) the government established a system called *[Five Home Provinces and Seven Circuits](/source/Gokishichid%C5%8D)*, served by messengers known as *ekishi* (駅使) who carried special [post station bells](/source/Station_bell) (駅鈴, *ekirei*). This system had broken down by the time of the Kamakura period. The [Kamakura shogunate](/source/Kamakura_shogunate) established a relay system (Roppara hikyaku) of horse-riders and stages that would carry messages from the [Rokuhara Tandai](/source/Rokuhara_Tandai) headquarters (in the [Higashiyama area](/source/Higashiyama-ku%2C_Kyoto) of [Kyoto](/source/Kyoto)) to [Kamakura](/source/Kamakura), sometimes within 72 hours.

## Edo period

The *hikyaku* system reached a degree of sophistication that led to [The Japanese Letter-Writing Era](/source/The_Japanese_Letter-Writing_Era), beginning about 1721.

There were many different types of *hikyaku*, including:

- *Tsugi-bikyaku* (継飛脚), only available to high-ranking bakufu officials such as [Rōjū](/source/R%C5%8Dj%C5%AB) (elder statesmen), the [Kyoto Shoshidai](/source/Kyoto_Shoshidai) (Kyoto Deputy), the Osaka jōdai (Governor of [Osaka Castle](/source/Osaka_Castle)), the governor of [Sunpu Castle](/source/Sunpu_Castle), [Kanjō-bugyō](/source/Kanj%C5%8D-bugy%C5%8D) (financial magistrates), and others of [Bugyō](/source/Bugy%C5%8D) (magistrate) status.

- *Daimyo-bikyaku* (大名飛脚): couriers established by individual [Daimyo](/source/Daimyo) (feudal lords) to carry messages between their domains and the domainal residence in [Edo](/source/Edo), and sometimes also to their rice warehouses in port cities.

- *Kome-bikyaku* (米飛脚): couriers who carried news about rice prices from the [Dōjima Rice Exchange](/source/D%C5%8Djima_Rice_Exchange) in [Osaka](/source/Osaka) to interested parties elsewhere.

- *Hikyaku tonya* (飛脚問屋) or 飛脚屋 (*hikyaku-ya*), commercial message-carrying services available to everyone else.

- *Tooshi-bikyaku* (通飛脚): a single runner who carried a message or parcel, without relay, from the sender to the addressee.

- *Machi-bikyaku* (町飛脚): specialized runners within the Edo Bakufu, much used during the [waning years of the Edo Bakufu](/source/Bakumatsu). With bells jingling from their message boxes, they were called "*chirin chirin no machi-bikyaku*" by the townsfolk. According to the *Morisada Mango* of 1837, "Their appearance was thus: the message box was painted in persimmon ink, the courier, place, and official's family name in [vermilion](/source/Vermilion) ink, this box on a pole slung over the back, with wind chimes dangling from the front end of the pole, warning the crowds when the courier passed through, thus the name *chirin chirin no machi-bikyaku*."

## Appearances in culture

1711. *[The Courier for Hell](/source/The_Courier_for_Hell)* 冥途の飛脚 (*Meido no hikyaku*) is a [love-suicide](/source/Shinj%C5%AB) play by the Japanese writer [Chikamatsu Monzaemon](/source/Chikamatsu_Monzaemon).

1949. A motion picture titled *Tengu hikyaku* (Goblin Courier) was produced by [Daiei Film](/source/Daiei_Film), starring [Daisuke Katō](/source/Daisuke_Kat%C5%8D).

1999. An episode of the [romantic comedy](/source/Romantic_comedy) [fantasy](/source/Fantasy) [anime](/source/Anime) series [Trouble Chocolate](/source/Trouble_Chocolate) is titled *Run, Hikyaku-kun* (走れ、飛脚くん！ (*Hashire, hikyaku-kun*)), in which a small monster named Courier (*Hikyaku*) appears.

## References

## Bibliography

- Moriya, Katsuhisa (1990). "Urban Networks and Information Networks". In Nakane, Chie; Ôishi, Shinzaburô (eds.). *Tokugawa Japan: The Social and Economic Antecedents of Modern Japan*. Translated by Ronald, Toby.

Authority control databases: National Japan

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [Hikyaku](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hikyaku) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hikyaku?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
