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As Góntia (Gontia, Guntia, Candida), she was a Celto-Germanic bright, glistening, moon goddess and bringer of good fortune. Known as the "Glittering White One", Góntia was the maidenly queen goddess of the river Gunz and the tutelary goddess of Roman Guntia (Gunzburg, Germany). Also the horse goddess of the Cantii, Cantabri, and the Ghent (Ganda), Belgium, her name was derived from the Welsh canda (shining white) and the Celtic condate (confluence). As Fortuna, she was the Roman goddess of good fortune, especially for women who consulted oracles. Portrayed with a cornucopia, a globe, and a rudder, her main symbol was the wheel of fate. She was depicted in stone carvings and paintings. One of most her most renown sanctuaries was the Fortuna Redux temple in Rome. Of "Achiever Orion" heritage, her recent return from Orion to this planet was a great blessing.
A talented destiny mapper
and light spiral weaver, Góntia Fortuna will be working with Ostara Eostre to
help bring about a shining new beginning for the legends of Avalon and Camelot,
which were originally about the restoration of unity and the integration of
ascendancy amongst the scattered Pleiadian and Orion kinfolk, especially those of
the Anglo-Saxon, Celtic, and Germanic rooted lineages.
The Sacred Sites focal points of Hierarch Góntia Fortuna and the Sixth Ray of Traditions Preservation are the Absecon Lighthouse near Atlantic City, New Jersey, U.S.A.; and, the Stones of Stenness, which are located near the village of Stenness about a mile from the Ring of Brodgar in Orkney, Scotland. The light station was first established and lit on Absecon Island in 1857. The original optic was a First Order Fresnel Lens installed the same year. Constructed of brick and iron on a foundation of granite blocks, the conical shaped attached to keepers, light was 169 feet high. The yellow tower has a red band midway. The keepers quarters were demolished but there are plans to construct a replica of them. Replaced by a light on the City Pier, the light was deactivated from 1933-1997. The original optic is still in the tower, and, Absecon Light was relit in 1997. Currently under rehabilitation as a Historic Site with a Visitors Center, the lighthouse is managed by the State of New Jersey and the Inlet Public/Private Association. Hierarch Góntia Fortuna shares this Sacred Site focal point with her soulmate husband Hierarch Fides Lancelot, also a Hierarch of the Sixth Ray of Traditions Preservation. Hierarch Góntia Fortuna occasionally visits the Stones of Stenness Sacred Site focal point which she shares with her soulmate husband Hierarch Fides Lancelot, also a Hierarch of the Sixth Ray. According to radiocarbon tests, the three remarkable megalithic Stones of Stenness, which still remain upright, date from sometime around 3,000 BCE, the same period as the pottery from the Skara Brae coastal settlement. The original circle of twelve standing stones was about 30 meters in diameter and was set inside a rock cut ditch henge similar to that of the nearby Ring of Brodgar. At the center of the Stones of Stenness, there are stones set in the shape of a large hearth similar to those found at nearby Skara Brae or Barnhouse Settlement. The tall "Watch Stone" remains, but, the "Troth Stone", where bargains were sealed and love troths plighted in ages past through a small hole in the stone, has been destroyed by a local farmer around 1814 ACE.
Pots found at the megalithic
site have been linked to Maes Howe as well and there is also some evidence that
there may have been a stone avenue between the Stones of Stenness and the Ring
of Brodgar which included both the Troth Stone and the Watch Stone... Hierarchs
Goddesses Gods of Twelve Universal Rays
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