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Fand was a Land, Sea, and Sky Celtic goddess of wellbeing and happiness who had a red silk dress called Tarraingteach which gave the wearer divine beauty and a Pearl of Beauty that made anyone beautiful. Seafoam Fairy Queen, Gentle Crimson Mantled Beauty, and Earthly Oceanic Sky Goddess, Fand was equally at home in both the Earthly Realm and the Otherworld.
Patroness of healing, plenty,
prosperity, water magic, and worldly comforts, her home was called Tír
Tairngini, The Land of Promise.
The Sacred Sites focal points of Hierarch Fand and the Sixth Ray of Traditions Preservation are the Wetlands on Cape May Peninsula, which is located on the southernmost point of the state of New Jersey, U.S.A.; and, the Hill of Tara which is located in County Meath, Ireland. Named for Cornelius Mey, a Dutch Explorer, the Cape May cape and peninsula separates the Atlantic Ocean from Delaware Bay. One of the most renown birding sites in North America, Cape May has many nature preserves and wildlife refuges. Every May, the Word Series of Birding is hold at the Cape May Bird Observatory. Numerous birds congregate on Cape May during the spring and fall seasonal migrations. The town of Cape May with its white sandy beaches dates back to the 1700s. The oldest seaside resort in America, the entire city of Cape May is a National Historic Landmark. Much of the original Victorian architecture in Cape May has been maintained over the years and the buildings still remain in prime condition and retain their pristine appearance. Cape May Peninsula municipalities include: Avalon, Cape May Point, Dennis Township, Lower Township, Middle Township, North Wildwood, Stone Harbor, West Wildwood, Wildwood, Wildwood Crest, and West Cape May. The Hierarch Fand shares this Sacred Site focal point with her soulmate husband Hierarch Mannan, also a Hierarch of the Sixth Ray of Traditions Preservation. Hierarch Fand also regularly visits the Hill of Tara Sacred Site focal point with her soulmate husband Hierarch Mannan, also a Hierarch of the Sixth Ray. Once upon a time, the Hill of Tara was a portal entrance into the Otherworld to the sacred dwelling places of the Tuatha Dé Danann. The Hill of Tara, which had a view of the hills at Loughcrew, was used as a sacred temple and astronomical observatory. It was also the ancient seat of power for Irish High Kings. The most renown of them was the third century ACE Irish King Cormac Mac Airt. A ring fort know as Cormac's house was situated within the large hill fort know as the Royal Enclosure. Aligned on the ancient Celtic cross-quarter festivals of Samhain on November 8th and Imbolc on February 4th the Duma na nGiall Passage Chamber was built around 2,500 - 3,000 BCE. Subdivided into three compartments by sill stones, the megalithic passageway was about one metre wide and 4 metres long. "Three" was a holy number for the Celts of Ireland and the Celtic Ancient Civilization which had many different meanings beside the most traditional of the representations, that of the three realms of Land, Sea, and Sky. Triplication or the power of a group of three was a significant symbolic pattern or design that recurred in Irish Celtic art, mythology, and spirituality. There were the Three Kindreds (ancestors, fairies, goddesses and gods). Storytellers told tales of goddesses and Otherworld Beings appearing at critical life passage moments in groups of three. Triple faced; triple headed Celtic deities were venerated in various forms with the most popular being the triplicity of the mother goddess energy. Sometimes the three goddesses depicted were identical; while, at other times their overall potency was heightened by showing three different aspects of the divine feminine role.
Observable from the entranceway, there was a stone
engraved with solar and other sacred symbols that may have also served as an
ancient calendar. The sacred Lia Fáil, Standing Stone of Destiny, was probably
positioned at the passageway entrance of the Duma na nGiall Passage Chamber... Hierarchs Goddesses Gods of Twelve Universal Rays
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