|
|
|
Amergin was the Chief Bard of the Milesians. He was reknown as a Harper, Magickian, and Seer, as well as, for his poem I Am the Stag of Seven Times, and other poems with reincarnation themes. Amergin was also widely known by the Celts under varying local names like Atepomarus and by the pre-Homeric Greeks as Apellon. Later on bardic god Amergin was known as Apollo, a Greek, Roman, Lycian, Minoan Crete, and bardic shaman hunter god who epitomized youthful masculinity. Apollo was associated with the Delphic Oracles and Purification Rites in the latter days of the prominence of Delphi.
Often depicted with a bow
and arrows, a stag, or lions, the dualistic nature of Apollo was also portrayed
as that of a lyre playing warrior who slew both the Delphic Python and the
Olympic Cyclopes. He was also the patron god of Poets and the leader of the
Muses according to the prevailing mythos.
The Sacred Site focal point of Hierarch Amairgin and the Third Ray of Harmonics Restoration is the Via Appia by Rome including Parco dell'Appia Antica, which is located in the suburban areas of Appia Antica and Tor Marancia and the municipalities of Ciampino, Marino, and Rome, Italy. Encompassing around 3,500 hectares, Parco dell'Appia Antica includes the Aqueducts, via Appia Antica, the Caffarella Valley, and via Latina. The Roman country landscape of Parco dell'Appia Antica has an alluvial valley, archaeological sites, lush vegetation, pastures, watercourses, and shrubs. The park provides habitat for a variety of flora and fauna. The fauna include many different animals and birds such as emerald green toads, foxes, goldfinches, greenfinches, horned owls, kestrels, larks, moles, nightingales, pigeons, porcupines, robins, sparrows, titmouses, turtledoves, weasels, wild rabbits, and wrens.
The flora of the Parco
dell'Appia Antica includes a variety of tree species of trees like Cypress, Elm,
Eucalyptus, Laurel, Oak, Pine, and Poplar trees...
Hierarchs Goddesses Gods Divinities
|
|
|