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Bäldér, a Norse, Icelandic, Anglo-Saxon, and Germanic god of light, was known as "The Glorious", handsome, shining young hero who embodied the hopes of his people because of his pristine goodness. Mentioned in the Icelandic codices, Snorri's "Prose Edda, the Saxo "Historia Danica", and runic inscriptions, Bäldér was depicted on stone carvings. Baldér radiated so much beauty, grace, joy, innocence, peace, purity, and sunshine that he warmed the hearts of everyone. Because of his wisdom, eloquence, and friendly, sterling character, Bäldér was loved by both deities and humans with the exception of Loki. So heartfelt was the esteem everyone held for Bäldér that when asked all natural things promised never to harm him in anyway. According to the prevailing mythos when Loki found out that Mistletoe had not been asked to do no harm to Bäldér, he controlled and manipulated the blind god Hoder's into hitting him with a lethal dart comprised of a sprig of mistletoe. Bäldér was akin to the Elves portrayed in the "Lord of the Rings Trilogy" who had the eternal lifespans of immortals, yet, could be killed in battle. Although believed to be residing in the Underworld since then, the severely wounded Bäldér was taken to the Lemurian Pleiadian home world where he was healed and remained until the time was more auspicious to return to the Earth.
A gifted prophetic dreamer
and regenerative reconciler, Bäldér has bestowed a great blessing on the
peoples of this planet by returning with his wife, Nänná, to help
coordinate the awakening and quickening of the hidden seed potentials for
healing and restoration.
The Sacred Site focal point of Hierarch Bäldér and the Fifth Ray of Rainbow Healing is the Botanisk Have is Copenhagen Haves (Botanisk Have, Kongens Have), which are located in Copenhagen, Denmark. Botanisk Have is located at Gothersgade at the University of Copenhagen in Copenhagen, Denmark. Hortus Medicus, the first Botanical Garden, was founded in 1600 by royal charter without an endowment on land by Skidenstraede which is now called Krystalgade. Almost a hundred years later, one of the garden supervisors set up an endowment to pay for a gardener in 1696. In 1621, Ole Worm, a prominent botany and medicine teacher, decided to become the caretaker of the neglected garden and brought in numerous Danish medicinal plants, as well as, rare foreign species. The first Botanical Garden was closed in 1778. Almost a hundred years had passed before, the present garden was established in 1872 on the former city fortifications. Situated on a lake that was a once part of the moat, the rock gardens and the more elevated areas of the Botanical Garden were all once part of the old ramparts. The garden has harvested and stored seed from cultivated plants and wild Danish plants since the 1790's. Planting of the 1872 Botanical Garden took place from 1871-1874. Encompassing ten hectares in the middle of a capital city, the current Botanical Garden has a diverse array of plant collections which include 25,000 living specimens that represent many families and genera and more than 13,000 species. There are also around 2,700 subspecies, cultivars, forms, and varieties. There are several special collections in the garden such as Denmark plants, East Asia orchids, Thailand orchids, Greek mountain plants, and Greenland plants. The Palm House has a historical collection of Cycads, cacti and other succulents, orchids, tropical plants, and subtropical plants. Greenhouses display Bromeliads and insectivorous plants, as well as, Madagascar plants. Outdoor sections of the Botanical Garden showcase alpine plants from around the planet, wild Danish plants, multitudinous annuals, perennials, and tuberous plants like Crocus, Cyclamen, and Fritillaria. As an Institute of the University of Copenhagen, the Botanical Garden cultivates living plants for educational, informational, and research purposes with the intent of increasing, both nationally and globally, overall awareness of nature, as well as, botanical knowledge. The Botanical Garden also houses the only wild species gene bank facility for long term storage of seed and in vitro plant material. There is also a modern seed, cell and tissue biology laboratory with an ex situ conservation program. Integrative research has focused on cryopreservation, gymnosperms, and woody plant micropropagation. Kongens Have (The King's Garden, Rosenborg Castle Gardens) is located in the center of Copenhagen by Rosenborg Castle. The oldest royal garden in Denmark, Kongens Have is also the oldest and most frequently visited park in Copenhagen. Flowers bloom in front of Rosenborg Castle during the summertime. Rosenborg Castle was built by Christian IV in 1606 as a country summerhouse in the Dutch Renaissance style. The barracks of the Danish Royal Life Guards (Den Kongelige Livgarde) are next to the castle. The Danish Regents used the castle until about 1710. Afterwards it was only used in 1794 after the Christiansborg Palace burnt down and in 1801 when the British attacked Copenhagen. Open to the public since 1838, the Rosenborg Castle is now state property. There are exhibitions of royal Danish cultural artifacts dating from the late 15th to 19th centuries such as a Coronation Carpet, Crown Jewels, and Crown Regalia.
Hierarch Baldér shares this
Sacred Site focal point with his soulmate wife Hierarch Nänná,
also a Hierarch of the Fifth Ray... Hierarchs
Goddesses Gods of Twelve Universal Rays
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