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As Borvo (Bormanicus, Bormanus, Bormo), he was the Pan Celtic, a prosperity healing god Borvo who was revered in a wide range of locales including the Alps, the Loire and Rhone valleys, Galacia, and Provence. A fecund healer, whose name means to boil or to bubble, Borvo was also protector of hot mineral springs. He was called "Restorative Benefactor", "Effervescent Curer", and "Heart Hearth Warmer, as a Roman, Celtic, and Gallic god of healing. Borvo was associated with numerous therapeutic baths and curative mineral springs throughout those environs. As Wayland (Weland, Wyland, Wieland), hw was a Pan-Celtic Germanic Teutonic mythic traditions hero god. As a skillful, shamanic smith, he imbued the coins, swords, and tools he made with magical strength. His molten melting vat was considered a regenerative cauldron. Wayland was also known for his powerful healing ability to strengthen and help in the restorative of traumatized limbs.
Credited with the Uffington chalk drawings in
England, as well as, several small Bronze Age relics, Wayland once escaped a
king who held him captive because he wanted him to make him a magical sword, by
flying away on wings that he had crafted himself.
The Sacred Site focal point of Hierarch Borvo Wayland and the Fifth Ray of Rainbow Healing is the Newton Lake Park and Knights Park, which are located outside Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in southern New Jersey, U.S.A. Encompassing more than one hundred three acres, Newton Lake Park is managed by the Camden County Parks and Recreation Department. The park is bounded by Cuthbert Boulevard and the White Horse Pike and runs through Collingswood, Haddon Township, and Oaklyn. Within Newton Lake Park there are three picnic areas, two playgrounds, bike paths, fishing piers, and a Matrimony Garden. Encompassing more than sixty acres, Knights Park is a public park across from Collingswood High School in the Borough of Collingswood. The large green space park has numerous ponds, fountains, trees, benches, and recreational team sports areas. Oakland was once a dense forest inhabited by the Lenni-Lenape Native American Indians. In 1681, a group of Quakers from Wickloe, Ireland sailed up the Delaware River and decided to form a settlement on Newton Creek. So William Bates, the Quaker leader purchased two hundred fifty acres located on the south side of Newton Creek from the Lenni-Lenape. The Quaker settlement was called Newton Colony. As the colony grew more and more of the land was cleared for farming. Eventually, the farms along Newton Creek were divided into housing lots for development and the colony was renamed "Oakland the Beautiful". Then in 1894 the name of the town was changed to Oaklyn, to avoid confusion with another Oakland in Northern New Jersey. Over the course of time two highways through the area were laid out along old Native America Indian trials. The White Horse Pike, which had been known as "Long-a-Coming Trail", began at Camden went through Berlin and the ended at Atlantic City The Black Horse Pike began at the Delaware River and ended at Egg Harbor.
Hierarch Borvo Wayland shares this Sacred Site focal point with his
soulmate wife Hierarch Divona Devi, also Hierarch of the Fifth Ray of Rainbow
Healing...
Hierarchs Goddesses Gods of Twelve Universal Rays
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