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The Brú na Bóinne Visitor Centre, near the villages of Donore and Slane, offers tours of the three Boyne valley passage chambers (Dowth, Knowth, Newgrange). The Valley Mound built around 3,200 BCE with a facade of sparkling white quartz was a Sacred Healing Temple, spiritually and astronomically aligned with the Winter Solstice Sunrise. Ninety Seven Kerbstones surround the kidney shaped Passage Chamber. Many of the Kerbstones were inscribed with megalithic sacred art such as sacred triple spirals, concentric circles, and triangle symbols.
An UNESCO World Heritage
Site, Newgrange is older than either the Egyptian Giza Pyramids or the British
Stonehenge.
Newgrange was a Megalithic Irish Passage Chamber located north of the river Boyne near the village of Donore in County Meath, Ireland. Re-discovered when building a road in 1699, Newgrange underwent a major excavation in 1962. White quartz found at the site was used to rebuilt the original facade. Only twelve of standing stones remain of the thirty-five standing stones that originally formed a circle which surrounded the Sacred Mound. The doorways between the standing stones of the Stone Circle served as interstellar portals and interdimensional travel gateways between the Earth and the Lemurian Orion and Pleiadian home worlds.
One of the sacred symbols
found inside the Newgrange passage chamber and on the entrance stone, the triple
spiral, was carved 2,500 years before the peoples who became known as the Celts
were believed to have settlements in Ireland... Continue on
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