A shrine located in Chuo-ku, Chiba, and considered to be the center of one of Japan's leading "Myōimi Faith". In ancient times, he received the name of the temple of Hokutosan Kongo-senji Sonkoin in the second year of Nagaho (1000), and in the Edo period, it was renamed Myōyō-ji by the order of Tokugawa Ieyasu, and it became Chiba Shrine by the Shinto-Buddhist separation order of the Meiji period. The bright vermilion shrine, which was newly completed in 1990, is the first double-layered shrine in Japan with two halls of worship at the top and bottom. It is famous for its "Abomination" and "Happo Exclusion", and will be filled with about 700,000 worshippers on January 1-3. The old main shrine, which was rebuilt in 1954, was relocated to the west side of the precinct to become a prayer hall for Tenjin-sama, and it is dedicated to praying for passing the examination.