
A thirteen-hundred-year-old Shinto shrine that sells microchip-shaped charms to protect your computer from viruses. That is not a joke. Kanda Myojin, founded in seven thirty AD, sits right next to Akihabara, and it has fully embraced its tech-adjacent location. The IT protection omamori is shaped like a circuit board and offers divine protection against server crashes, data loss, and cyber attacks. Tech workers from the surrounding companies come here to pray for server uptime before product launches.
The shrine was moved to its current location in sixteen sixteen by Tokugawa Ieyasu himself. It enshrines two of the Seven Lucky Gods — Daikokuten, the god of wealth, and Ebisu, the god of commerce and fishing. Given that Akihabara is one of the biggest commercial districts in Tokyo, the shrine's portfolio is well-suited to its neighbourhood.
In twenty fifteen, the anime character Nozomi Tojo from Love Live was officially recognised as the shrine's mascot. Anime-themed ema — the wooden prayer tablets where visitors write their wishes — are now commonplace. You will see hand-drawn anime characters alongside traditional prayers for exam success and business prosperity. The shrine does not seem to see any contradiction between thirteen centuries of Shinto tradition and anime merchandise.
The current building dates from nineteen thirty-four, rebuilt in reinforced concrete after the nineteen twenty-three earthquake destroyed the previous wooden structure. The Kanda Matsuri festival, held here in mid-May during odd-numbered years, is one of Tokyo's three great festivals and dates back to the Edo period. Massive portable shrines are paraded through the streets while tens of thousands celebrate. Ancient gods, anime girls, and microchip charms — Kanda Myojin contains all of Tokyo's contradictions in a single compound.
Verified Facts
Sells IT protection omamori shaped like a microchip for computer virus/server crash protection
Founded 730 AD, moved to current location 1616 by Tokugawa Ieyasu
Love Live! character Nozomi Tojo officially recognized as shrine mascot in 2015
Tech workers pray here for server uptime and product launches
Enshrines Daikokuten and Ebisu, two of the Seven Lucky Gods
Get walking directions
16-2 Sotokanda 2-Chōme, Sotokanda, Chiyoda, 101-0021, Japan


