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Freyr Nergal Kuthumi was the Norse Germanic warrior fertility god Freyr; the Mesopotamian Sumerian Babylonian-Akkadian chthonic warrior fertility gods Nergal and Marduk; and, the Theosophical Chohan Ascended Master Kuthumi. As Freyr (Frey, Fro, Frodi, Froh, Yng, Ing, Ingwaz, Ingwe), he was an Icelandic, Norse, Swedish, Germanic Warrior and horned fertility god. His Nordic Vanir name means "Lord", and, he was concerned with the fecundity, peace, and prosperity of the world. Revered since before the Viking Period around 700 ACE until the present day, there were shrines honoring him throughout the Nordic countries including Uppsala, Sweden and Thrandheim, Norway where he was linked with a sacred stable of horses. Mentioned in votive inscriptions, place names, the Icelandic codices, Snorri Prose Edda, and Saxo Historia Danica, he was depicted in stone carvings. According to the Icelandic Flateyjarbok, a statue of Freyr, accompanied by a priestess, was carried about the countryside in a covered wagon as a seasonal blessing. Frey was known to have developed his Divine Feminine attributes by cross dressing as a female. Festivals with ritualized dramas were also held in his honor where male attendants dressed in effeminate costumes. The dwarves made Freyr a ship called Skidbladnir (Skioblaonir) that sailed through air, land, and sea, which could be folded up small enough to fit inside his pocket. Freyr Ing also had a chariot drawn by two boars Gullenbursti and Slidrugtanni. He also rode Gullenbursti, the golden bristled, daybreak, boar through the sky and over water. As Nergal (Erakal, Lugal-Irra, Mes Lam Taea), he was a Mesopotamian Babylonian-Akkadian chthonic underworld warrior. Revered from about 3500-200 BCE, his main sanctuary centers being at Emešlam, Kuthu, and Tarbisu. Mentioned in cuneiform texts especially Nergal and Ereškigal, he was depicted in glyptics, plaques, and votive stelae. The word Lugal means Lord. Nergal was usually depicted bearded and carrying a double-edged scimitar mace. As Marduk (Lugal-dimmer-anki-a, Ašalluhe, Merodach), he was a Mesopotamian Babylonian-Akkadian warrior fertility god who was known as the divine king of heaven and earth. Revered from around 2000-200 BCE, he was the chief diety of Babylonia and tutelary god of the city of Babylon. Mentioned in cuneiform texts and the Babylonian creation epic, Enuma Eliš where he was engaged in a primal cosmic battle with the powers of the more chaotic and discordant aspects of the cosmic ocean, he was depicted in glyptics, plaques, and stelae votives. The main festival held in honor of Marduk was the akitu which was also performed at the New Year. His main Babylonian ziggurat sanctuary was Esagila and Etemenanki. As Kuthumi (Koot Hoomi, K. H.), he was an ascended master who was one of the founders of the Theosophical movement. He was an adept who lived a secluded life for the most part who had a lamasery in Shigatse, Tibet. In 1850 ACE, he attended Oxford University.
He also sojourned in Dresden, Wurzberg, Nurnberg, and a Leipzig
where he worked with the psychologist Dr. Gustav Fechner. As a member of the Hierarchy
as described in the Theosophical books, Kuthumi was first a Chohan of the Second
Ray and then one of the World Teachers on the First Ray.
The Sacred Sites focal points of Hierarch Freyr Nergal Kuthumi and the Second Ray of Matrix Synthesization are the Pacific Rim National Park Reserve and the Carmanah-Walbran Provincial Park, which are located on the south-west coast of Vancouver Island east of the Insular Mountain Range and west of the Pacific Ocean in British Columbia, Canada; and, the Flora and Botanical Gardens, Cologne, Germany. Encompassing 511 square kilometers of rugged coasts and temperate rainforests, the Pacific Rim National Park Reserve has three separate regions that include the Broken Group Islands, Long Beach, and the West Coast Trail. There are Sitka Spruce trees closer to the coast and Western Hemlock and Western Red Cedar forests further inland. Extending for 75 kilometers from Bamfield to Port Renfrew, the West Coast Trail, also known as the Lifesaving Trail, was constructed between 1907-1910 to assist sailors that had been shipwrecked. The Carmanah Valley is the home of the largest tree in Canada, a 95 meters tall Sitka Spruce. The Carmanah-Walbran Provincial Park is located about 20 km Northwest of Port Renfrew on the Southwest coast of Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. The pristine rain forest, with wilderness trails, waterfalls, and spectacular old growth Sitka Spruce and Red Cedar trees, is accessed from three different roads that lead to the Caycuse River Bridge. An abundant variety of wildlife make the park their home including bears, cougars, deer, flickers, owls, thrush, sapsuckers, squirrels, thrushes, wrens, and wolves. The Germany Cologne Sacred Site focal point includes the Flora and Botanical Gardens, along with other gardens, municipal parks, and green belts in Cologne, Germany. A "green city", Cologne has around seventy-five square miles of gardens and municipal parks including Blücherpark, Forestry Garden, Kaiser-Wilhelm Ring, Rheingarten, Rheinpark, Römerpark, Theodor Heuss-Ring, and Volksgarten. About three thousand plants beautify the Forestry Garden south of Cologne where the woods provide a natural haven for lengthy walks. West of Cologne, there is a twelve kilometer "Green Belt" with old growth trees, ponds, and canals; as well as, many biking and walking paths. The Rheingarten is located in front of Old Town, close to the center of the city of Cologne. Across the Rhine from Rheinpark there is a zoo with an Elephant Park, Ape House, Aquarium and around seven thousand animals. Next to the zoo, the Flora and Botanical Gardens house superlative orchids, palms and other noteworthy plant life. A short walk away, the works of contemporary artists are displayed in a natural setting in the Sculpture Park.
Opened in 1997, the park
encompasses twenty-five thousand square meters. About thirty works of art are
displayed for about two years, documenting the diversity in global sculpture... Hierarchs
Goddesses Gods of Twelve Universal Rays
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