is the generic name of a great number of roads built during the Kamakura period which, from all directions, converged on the military capital of Kamakura, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. The term itself however was created probably during the Edo period to mean simply any old road going to Kamakura; it is used for example in the Fudokikà Â. The famous Tà Âkaidà  highway which connects Kyoto to Kamakura can therefore also be considered a Kamakura Kaidà Â. Texts like the Taiheiki and the Azuma Kagami see things from a Kamakura-centric perspective and therefore use for the same roads individual names deriving from their destination, for example Kyà Âto à Âkan or the generic term . Today, modern paved roads that approximately follow one of the routes of an Old Kamakura Kaidà  are named either Kamakura Kaidà Â, as Tokyo Prefecture Machida Route 18, or .
The three main roads in the Kantà  region were called ("Upper Route"), ("Middle Route"), and ("Lower Route"). Their course is well known because it's described in several medieval books. They ended at the Shinto gate (torii) at the entrance of Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gà « in Kamakura. Like the other routes, these roads were built to allow quick army movements from and to Kamakura and were of great importance during the many internal wars of the period. The Kami no Michi, in particular, was used by Nitta Yoshisada for his 1333 attack on Kamakura, and all the battlefields of that campaign (for example the battles of and , both in today's Tokorozawa, Saitama Prefecture, or in today's Fuchà «) are therefore along its course.
The Kamakura Kaidà Â/à Âkan network remained important during the Muromachi period (1336âÂÂ1573) because Kamakura continued to be essential to control the Kantà  region, however, after the last Kantà  kubà  Ashikaga Shigeuji was driven out of Kamakura and established himself in Shimà Âsa Province, the Later Hà Âjà  clan supremacy made Kantà Â's political and economic center move to Odawara. The final blow to the network was given by the Tokugawa, who in the 17th century made Edo their capital. With Kamakura's importance waning, the network fell in disrepair and in places disappeared.
Even though they are described in several old texts like the Azuma Kagami, the Taiheiki, the Gukanshà  and the the three roads' exact courses aren't known with certainty, and their description can therefore vary considerably with the source. The following are considered the most likely.
From Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gà «'s gate, the Kami no Michi passed through the Kewaizaka Pass, then Susaki, Watauchi (today's Fujisawa), Karasawa, Iida (within today's Yokohama), then Seya, Tsuruma (today's Machida), Tamagawa, Bubai, Fuchà «, Kokubunji, Sayama, and Ogawa, then, at the Usui Pass, divided in three, forming the (that went towards today's Nagano Prefecture), (that went towards today's Gunma Prefecture) and the , that went towards Musashi Province, today's Tokyo Prefecture. For unknown reasons, this route appears to be what the Azuma Kagami calls Shimo no Michi.
The Naka no Michi departed from Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gà « with a left turn and passed through the Kobukurozaka Pass, Yamanouchi, Ofuna, Kasama (within today's Yokohama), Nagaya, Futamatagawa, and Nakayama, finally joining the Kami no Michi there. In Kamakura this particular road is still known as Kamakura Kaidà Â.
The Shimo no Michi was a branch of the Naka no Michi that departed before Tsurumi (within today's Yokohama), then crossed Maruko, Shibuya, Hatogaya, Yono, Iwatsuki, Iwatsuki, Koga, and Yà «ki, then reaching Utsunomiya. In Maruko (near today's Kawasaki), the Shimo no Michi divided into the and the the first going to Kisarazu, the second going to Ishioka in Northern Ibaraki Prefecture.