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hatagoya 旅籠屋 | ||||||
KEY WORD : architecture / folk dwellings | ||||||
Also hatago 旅篭. A common term for an inn
from the late Heian to the early modern periods. In the ancient period, the term
hatago referred to a bamboo basket or trunk, takekago 竹籠, used by
travelers to store provisions, both for themselves and their horses, and utensils.
At that time, it was common for travelers to hire only a lodging, yado
宿, and make their own meals from the food stored in their basket. The lodging
house itself gradually came to be referred to as hatagoya. In the mediaeval
period, such lodgings were used by individuals of all ranks: aristocrats, warriors
and commoners (though upper-class individuals generally rented the entire building,
while ordinary people might share). In the Edo period, alternative facilities,
notably high-class inns *honjin
本陣 and government-designated inns *wakihonjin
脇本陣, were provided for the use of the elite. Mainly were located in post towns
*shukubamachi 宿場町,
so the Edo period hatagoya thus catered primarily to commoners. They also
began to provide meals for guests as a matter of course, and the alternative term
kichinyado 木賃宿 came into use for the more basic boarding houses which did
not offer meals. Hatago varied both in size and layout from district to
district, but a widespread late Edo period arrangement had guest rooms (generally
shared) upstairs, with the owner's living quarters and the kitchens below on the
ground floor. |
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