This page was created by Maren Ehlers.
An Alternative to Village Relay
Click here to read the research paper (in Japanese) that has informed this page.
Sabae domain was the last domain to be established in Echizen province. It was pieced together in 1720 from scattered lands formerly governed by the shogunate and other entities and given as a fief to a powerful shogunal courtier (click here to locate Sabae's lands on a map of Echizen).
Sabae's physicians had received transmissions from Kasahara in 1850, and in 1859 and 1860 they conducted vaccination campaigns in Ikeda, a group of mountain villages governed by Sabae domain about 20 km away from the domain headquarters and the clinic. Many details about these campaigns remain unknown, but it is clear that they were large-scale undertakings, covering almost all of the domain's villages in this area (35 villages in 1859 and 31 in 1860). In that sense, they were more successful than Kasahara's campaign to the coast.
The few sources surviving from these campaigns show that Sabae's physicians did not try to build chains between villages. Instead, they went to one village at a time and used it as a base camp to vaccinate children from up to three village communities. Vaccination events were held every six days during the spring, summer, and fall, but the date was determined by lot rather than geographic proximity. Village headmen were asked to report the names of two local children who could be sent to Sabae as "pox bases" to prepare for the big day. This method gave physicians greater flexibility than village relay. First, they could easily line up villages of different population sizes on their itinerary. Second, they could rearrange the schedule to suit villagers' needs. Third, they did not need to fear interruptions due to transportation problems--a major advantage in a mountainous area such as Ikeda.
Like village relay, this system, too, could not have functioned without governmental coordination. But Sabae domain was more effective than Fukui domain in involving local leaders. The village group headman (ōjōya) of the village group in Ikeda (38 villages) was in charge of coordinating the vaccination schedule, and village headmen below him identified unvaccinated children to be used as "pox bases." As wealthy peasants, these leaders were deeply familiar with local conditions in their communities. What is more, Sabae's village group headmen, though no samurai, were unusually powerful precisely because the domain territory was so incoherent and the grasp of domain government weak. In Fukui domain, on the other hand, Kasahara found it difficult to gain the cooperation of village headmen, especially if their village had already been vaccinated. Although subjects on the coast were eager to have their children vaccinated, it seems that their village leaders perceived vaccination management as a burden, adding another difficulty to the implementation of village relay.
In the absence of a strong central government, reliance on local community leaders was the next best solution. These conditions persisted long into the Meiji period, and local leaders therefore remained central to vaccinations in the Ikeda area for decades to come.
Click here to go back to Vaccine Stories. Or click here to move on to the next two pathways to explore vaccination practice in Ōno, another domain in Echizen with a relatively scattered territory.