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Drombeg Stone Circle was located down a signposted path off of the Glandor and Clonakilty Road in County Cork, Ireland. Of the seventeen original stones, thirteen megaliths remain. There were two portal stones on the northeast side of this Bronze Age Stone Circle. Nearby attached round huts, cooking hearth, well and hot stone trough to boil water indicate that the area was a sacred site where seasonal gatherings took place through the fifth century ACE. Bohonagh Stone Circle and Reanascreena South Stone Circle were nearby. Drombeg Stone Circle is a Sacred Site focal point a group of Proactive Omniangel, the Ireland Proactive Omniangels. Proactive Omniangels have additional roles and tasks as straightforward perpetuators, practical doers, and tangible executors of down-to-earth agendas and realistic plans. They facilitate positive concrete achievements and make possible the hard work, applications, and step taking necessary for matter of fact results.
Enabling, proceeding,
solving, acting, and reinforcing Getting Something Constructive Done schemes of
visionaries to be comprehensive, optimistic, specific, affirmative, and
successful, they carry out, complete, apply, and take hands on action.
The Proactive Omniangels
motivate, activate, perform, establish, and affirm whichever and whatever
initiative summarily produces the desired outcome. Holy Ground and Sacred Site Spaces suffused the "trifold land-sea-sky divinity" that was intrinsic to the Wholeness of the British Isles Natural World Natural World. The divine radiance and empowered grace of Sacred Groves, Healing Springs, Holy Lakes, and Hallowed Hills further sanctified the Druidic Celtic landscape. The Celts preferred to perform their rituals outside in the Natural World underneath the never-ending circle of sky in forest clearings, in open air shrines, and in sacred groves. While the Greeks and Romans built elaborate temples to their gods and goddesses, the Celts preferred the hallowed places and natural sanctuaries of the Earth. All of the animals, forests, lakes, mountains, rivers, and trees were blessed and holy to the Celts and worthy of their utmost reverence. The Natural World inspired their imaginations and enlivened their art. Some of these blessed countryside settings were further enhanced for ceremonial connectivity purposes by the addition of Megalithic Standing Stones, Passage Cairns, and Stone Circles.
The ancient Celts were
devoted to maintaining their spiritual balance and sacred connectivity with the
natural world by treating all things hallowed with the respect and reverence
they deserved.
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