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God Gibil (Gerra) serves as a Hierarch of the Seventh Ray of Mythos Transformation. The Sacred Sites focal points of Hierarch Gibil (Gerra) are the East Point Lighthouse in Cumberland County, New Jersey, U.S.A. and Panagitsa Hill, Mycenae, Mainland Greece. Gibil (Gerra) was a Mesopotamian Fire and Light god known as Gibil in Sumeria and as Gerra in Akkadia who protected others against dark wizardry.
Later on Gibil was known as the Egyptian and Greek
messenger god Hermes; as well as, Mercury (Mercurius) the Oneicopompus and
Psychopompus who oversaw the world of dreams and guided souls after death.
The Sacred Sites focal points of Hierarch Gibil (Gerra) and the Seventh Ray of Mythos Transformation are the East Point Lighthouse, which is located by the Maurice River/Delaware Bay near the city of Heislerville in Cumberland County, New Jersey, U.S.A.; and, the Panagitsa Hill, which is located about 90 kilometers southwest of Athens in Mycenae in northeastern Peloponnese on Mainland Greece. Constructed of whitewashed brick on a stone foundation, the tower was 40 feet high. The original optic was a Sixth Order Fresnel Lens installed in 1849. Built in the integral octagonal shaped on roof of a house architectural style, the lighthouse has a red roof and a black lantern. Automated in 1911, the light was deactivated from 1941-1980. The present 250 mm optic was installed in 1980. The two and a half storied Existing Keepers Quarters were constructed of brick in 1849 in the Colonial Integral architectural style. In July of 1971, the lighthouse was badly damaged by fire. The lighthouse was restored and relit in 1980. Still operational as an active guide to navigation, the lighthouse is managed by the State of New Jersey and the Maurice River Historical Society. Hierarch Gibil shares the East Point Lighthouse Sacred Site focal point with his soulmate wife Hierarch Ishtar, also a Hierarch of the Seventh Ray of Mythos Transformation. Hierarch Gibil occasionally visits the Panagitsa Hill Sacred Site focal point with his soulmate wife Hierarch Ishtar, also a Hierarch of the Seventh Ray of Mythos Transformation. A pre-existing, Celtic Lemurian Sacred Mound Immortality Chamber, Panagitsa Hill was turned into a large round hill "tholos" tomb called the Treasury of Atreus about 1250 BCE. Mycenae was one of the major centers of the ancient Grecian civilization from around 1600 BCE until 1100 BCE. Vestiges of edifices constructed from massive, monumental, "cyclopaean" stone blocks linger on into the modern era as remnants on surrounding hills and on the "high city" Mycenean acropolis fortifications. The economic, military, and political power of Mycenae once stretched into Athens and Thebes, as well as, into Crete and Pylos.
The nearby renown Lion Gate
was also constructed in 1250 BCE around the same time that the Sacred Mound
Immortality Chamber was converted in the Treasury of Atreus. Homer immortalized the
memory of Mycenae in his "Iliad" and "Odyssey" epic poems...
Hierarchs Goddesses Gods
Divinities
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