Chōgō 澄豪 (1259–1350, traditional lifedates) was a late-Kamakura to Nanboku-chō Tendai esoteric (Taimitsu 台密) master, in the Sanmai-ryū 三昧流 line of descent from Ryōyū 良祐 (良祐) and ultimately from Chōen (長宴). He served as zasu (主) of the Sanzen-in 三千院 at Ōhara — one of the principal Tendai cloister-temples in the Kyoto vicinity — and as a court-ranked Tendai ajari.

His KR6t0112 Zǒng-chí chāo 總持抄 (“All-Holding Compendium,” J. Sōji-shō) is a ten-fascicle compendium of Tendai-esoteric deity-rites, indexed by deity. The work treats approximately fifty principal deities — Akṣobhya, Ratnasaṃbhava, Amitābha, Śākyamuni, Bhaiṣajyaguru, the Cakra-Cintāmaṇi forms of Avalokiteśvara, the eleven-faced Avalokiteśvara, the Uṣṇīṣa deities, the Wisdom-Kings, and others — providing for each the procedural details, mantras, mudrās, contemplative sequences, and kuden of the Sanmai-ryū tradition.

He is contemporary with Kōshū (光宗, 1276–1350) and represents the same scholastic generation that produced the Keiran-shūyōshū — the high-water mark of medieval Tendai encyclopedic-scholastic compilation.