Kameido Sengen Shrine
亀戸浅間神社Kameido Sengen Shrine was founded in 1527 (7th year of Onaga) according to the legend. The deity of the festival is Kibana Sakuyahi. Originally, the land around here was called Takakaisu. This is due to the fact that the sea became raging when Japan Takeson marched east, so his brother Tachibana threw himself into the sea, and the hat he wore at that time washed up in the area where Kameido Sengen Shrine is located. Later, Emperor Jinggyo (said to be the twelfth generation) is said to have built a mound on the site. Fujizuka was built on the site of this mound, and it attracted many worshippers in the Edo period (see the cultural property explanation board of the precinct "Fujizuka of Kameido").
The main shrine was damaged by the Great Edo Earthquake in 1855 and the Great Kanto Earthquake in 1923. The current main shrine was built in the first year of the Showa era, and was moved to its current location in conjunction with the Oshima-Kameido-Komatsugawa disaster prevention redevelopment project in 1998. In the precincts, there are many cultural properties such as the Fuji Mound of Kameido, the Fuji Sengen, Kameido Tenjin, Rokuamida, and Asakusa Signpost (all of which are designated tangible cultural properties) in the first year of Kyowa (1801). In addition, the tracks of the Joto Electric Railway, which once passed by the shrine grounds, have been preserved, and the Shinto ceremony of making the largest thatch ring in the Kanto region (thatch ring circle) is held twice a year.