was the sixth of the fifty-three stations of the Tà Âkaidà Â. It is located in the present-day city of Fujisawa, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan.
Fujisawa-shuku was established as a post station on the Tà Âkaidà  in 1601, but did not become the sixth post station until Totsuka-juku was later established. Before the establishment of the Tà Âkaidà Â, Fujisawa flourished as a for Shà Âjà Âkà Â-ji, also known as "Yugyà Â-ji" (), the head temple of the Ji-sect of Japanese Buddhism. It was also located on a fork along the Odawara Kaidà Â, which connected Odawara Castle and its two supporting castles, Edo Castle and Hachià Âji Castle during the period of the Late Hà Âjà  clan. The toward Edo was to the east of Yugyà Â-ji, and the gate towards Kyoto was on the western side of the modern Odakyà « Enoshima Line; these boundaries mark the general limits of Fujisawa-juku.
It was said that there were over 1,000 buildings in the post town, including honjin, hatago, etc. Up until 1745, the honjin for Fujisawa-shuku was the Horiuchi Honjin, but after that, the Maita Honjin was used. At the temple of , there are a number of graves of the meshimori onna who worked at the local hatago.
The was built at Fujisawa-shuku in the early days of the Tokugawa Shogunate. The first three Shà Âgun (Tokugawa Ieyasu, Tokugawa Hidetada and Tokugawa Iemitsu stayed at this palace on a total of some 30 occasions. Records indicate that it was a large structure, measuring 106 x 32 bays, and was surrounded by a wide moat. It was located next to the Fujisawa daikansho, which is now between the present-day Fujisawa Municipal Hall and the Fujisawa Municipal Hospital. It was dismantled and moved to Edo after the Great Fire of Meireki in 1657 and its materials were used to rebuild part of the Shà Âgunal palace at Edo Castle.
The classic ukiyo-e print by Andà  Hiroshige (Hà Âeidà  edition) from 1831âÂÂ1834 depicts a village with a bridge. In the background is the temple of Yugyà Â-ji on a hill, and in the foreground is a torii with a path leading to Enoshima. The bridge is crowded with pilgrims, and four blind men, apparently on their way to the Enoshima Benten Shrine are following each other alongside a stream.