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London's Ley Lines Pathways of Enlightenment

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These days Camberwell artist John, 62, can use Google Earth to do the same thing and he is convinced he has found London's lost Ley Lines. Explora la mayor tienda de eBooks del mundo y empieza a leer hoy mismo en la Web, en tu tablet, en tu teléfono o en tu dispositivo electrónico de lectura. Some recent stories I am most proud of are this report on the killing of a restaurant owner in Elephant and Castle, this weird situation a Kings College student found herself in, and my review of eating a pigs ear salad in Bloomsbury. The symbolism behind the decapitated head was simple: the head contained the soul and the soul was a particle of God, a hologram of the ultimate Creative Force, therefore to add the head of a great leader or religious person to a mound served to accentuate the energy of place, for the sacred mound was itself the head of the body of the land, the point where the Earth’s magnetic forces congregate. Watkins believed that the Long Man of Wilmington in Sussex depicted a prehistoric " dodman" with his equipment for determining a ley line.

Continuing belief [ edit ] Modern Pagans in Britain often believe in ley lines running through ancient sites, such as the Coldrum Long Barrow in Kent. I have, randomly, looked at OS maps and church and tumuli type sites often do seem disproportionately to line up. He argued that straight lines could be drawn between various historic structures and that these represented trade routes created by ancient British societies.It's made me slow down and actually take in my surroundings and release that you can find spiritual connections even on the busy London streets.

Paul’s Cathedral – a ley line can be drawn that connects to another nearby sacred mound, the Tower of London. Like the fate associated with the aforementioned menhir of London, when Bran’s head was removed from the mound Bryn Gwyn, Britain was indeed invaded, by William of Normandy, who proceeded to built his White Tower upon the sacred mound, henceforth to be known as the Tower of London.Like the Bryn Gawr mound two miles to the east, it was associated with Brutus the Trojan, but its fate was less fortunate and survived only up to the 18th century. And although the sacred mound has been obliterated, its processional causeway is commemorated by Tothill Street – tot meaning ‘sacred mound’ – the precise location being Tothill Fields, a small, grassy meeting place sitting between the street and the majestic building now placed to its east, Westminster Abbey, still the place of proclamation of kingship in Britain. To our ancestors these locations were places of the gods, places of healing, places of power, places of vision initiation, inspiration and revelation.

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