is the name for a collective group of three Shinto shrines now forming a single religious corporation, located at Mount Shizuhata in Aoi-ku, Shizuoka, in Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan. These shrines are the , , and . The main festival of the shrine is held annually on April 5.
It is the sà Âja shrine of Suruga Province.
The primary kami of Kanbe Jinja is à Ânamuchi-no-Mikoto, who is regarded as the mythical founding deity of Suruga Province.
The primary kami of Asama Jinja is Konohanasakuya-hime, the deity of Mount Fuji.
The primary kami of à Âtoshimioya Jinja is , who appears in the Kojiki as a wife of Susanoo and a kami protecting markets and commerce.
The date of Shizuoka Sengen Jinja's foundation is unknown. The area has been inhabited since prehistoric times, and a Kofun period burial mound has been excavated at Mount Shizuhata. Per the Nihon Shoki, the area was colonized by the Hata clan during this period. According to unsubstantiated shrine legend, the foundation of the Kanbe Jinja dates to the reign of Emperor Sujin, that of the à Âtoshimioya Jinja to the reign of Emperor à Âjin, both from the Kofun period.
Per the Engishiki records, Kanbe Jinja was given national recognition and status of the Sà Âja of Suruga Province in the Heian period. Also, the date of 901 is given for the foundation of Asama Jinja, as a subsidiary branch of the Fujisan Hongà « Sengen Taisha, and initially was referred to as the "Shingu" (new shrine).
Through the Kamakura and Muromachi periods, the shrines enjoyed the patronage of the powerful warrior clans who dominated the Suruga area: the Minamoto clan, Hà Âjà  clan, Imagawa clan, Takeda clan and the Tokugawa clan. In particular, the first Tokugawa shà Âgun, Tokugawa Ieyasu, sponsored the rebuilding of the shrines after his retirement to nearby Sumpu Castle, and subsequent shà Âguns continued to worship at the shrines throughout the Edo period. The 3rd shà Âgun, Tokugawa Iemitsu, granted the shrines lands with 2313 koku in revenue for their upkeep. However, the shrine complex burned down in a fire of 1804. It was rebuilt over a 60-year period at a cost of over 100,000 gold ryà  by the Tokugawa shogunate in its flamboyant Momoyama style, with extensive use of lacquer, wood carvings, and gold leaf. Today, 26 structures in the shrine complex are protected by the national government as Important Cultural Properties, forming one of the largest such complexes in the country.
During the 19th century, Shinto priest Nagasawa Katsutate attended the at Asama Jinja when he was a teenager.
In the modern system of ranked Shinto Shrines, Shizuoka Sengen was listed among the 3rd class of nationally significant shrines or .
In addition to the three main shrines, the Shizuoka Sengen Jinja complex also has four subsidiary shrines:
Today, 26 structures in the shrine complex are protected by the national government as Important Cultural Properties (ICP), forming one of the largest such complexes in the country.
The shrine has a small museum, which displays finds from the Shizuhatayama Kofun archaeological site, artifacts pertaining to Tokugawa Ieyasu and the history of the shrine, as well as the shrine's non-structural ICPs, including a Muromachi-period tachi Japanese sword and 17 diagrams of the shrine prior to its late Edo-period rebuilding.