Dawn Of Man Solstice Update V1 4 1-PLAZA

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Gretchen Vansise

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Jul 2, 2024, 6:32:33 PM7/2/24
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The Axial precession cycle that you asked about, the 25,771 year cycle, often abbreviated to 26,000, right now it's closely lined up so that if lands only a couple weeks off the winter solstice. In 13,000 years or so it will line up near the summer solstice.

During the dance, which lasts all day, four songs are sung in the Tewa language (three times in each plaza) and each song is sung four times. The songs acknowledge and honor the four directions (beginning with the north, west, south with east coming last), the new dawn, the young men and women and the coming of the holy people. This dance celebrates renewal and the regeneration of the continuing process of creation.

Winter Solstice, I walked the roads of Dzibilchatun, an ancient Mayan site near the Gulf, occupied from 300BC to the Conquest. The Temple of the Dolls, greats the dawn sun on each equinox, allowing His magnificence to shine thru Her central doors.

Mexico mystique, Mayan mysteries, are foreign to my bloodline. And yet this new dawn brings the realization to the world that we are one Human Race, all connected. A thread runs through all the creatures of the Sea and the Earth to the rocks, the trees, the plants, to the stars and beyond to the great unknown.

A broad stairway, close-cut from the rock of the nearby hill, leads up from the Great Plaza to the so-called Great Basement, a plateau featuring the Temple of the Vessels, Temple 1, and a few ruins of the foundations of smaller buildings. Astronomy and astrology were of equal importance to the Maya and their cities were constructed in accordance with celestial alignment. At the top of these stairs are two stone pillars known as Los Gemelos (the twins). One of the pillars has a hole drilled through it which focuses the setting sun at the winter solstice on a small area in the Great Plaza. Archaeologists believe there was once a statue or stele at this spot which this beam of sunlight would have illuminated. In this same way, at the summer solstice, the dawn sunlight is focused through the top of Temple 1, illuminating a now-vacant spot on the ground for a full five minutes.

As it goes, high in the Pyrenees Mountains, a lantern is lit using a fire that has been burning since 1955. On the evening of June 22, hikers start a bonfire atop Canigó Mountain with that same flame. At dawn, the Canigó flame, la Flama del Canigó, travels by torch in the hands of volunteers through the Girona province from its Pyrenees peak in Perpignan, France, across the border into Spain to unite the Catalan people on both sides. The flame makes its way through ancestral Catalunya lighting bonfires, called fogueres, along the way in cities like Girona and Barcelona.

The Peace Garden was added to the park in 2004 and dedicated by Rosicrucian Imperator Christian Bernard. In 2013, a new Alchemy Museum was announced for 2020.[3][4] The opening ceremony for the preliminary exhibit in the Lecture Gallery of the Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum occurred during the Summer solstice of June 2015. The new museum in the former Rose-Croix University International building will include a working alchemy laboratory. The Alchemy garden in front of the new museum is composed of four elemental gardens representing the four elements.[5][6]

The park takes up nearly an entire city block and includes the Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum, the administration building for the Order, the Rosicrucian Planetarium, the Rosicrucian Peace Garden, the Rosicrucian Research Library, the Grand Temple, and a central fountain plaza and gardens. A rose garden is incorporated in the Park next to the Research Library. A dawn redwood grows outside of the Rosicrucian Research Library as a memorial to H. Spencer Lewis.[8] It was planted in 1950 from a seedling from the lot brought from China by Dr. Ralph Chaney,[9] and donated by an unnamed donor to H. Spencer Lewis's widow for this purpose.[8]

Consider why the other Brothers were envious when Normen described his lifestyle. After some light paranoid reconnaissance, he worked out for thirty minutes to an hour in the pre-dawn air. He might go to the bathroom, then for a walk around the inn, mostly just to take in the fresh air.

As the sun rises, energize your body, mind and spirit. Mark your calendars every year for June 21 at the Chess Plaza! Pre-dawn vegetarian breakfast will be available at 5:45 a.m. Sunrise Yoga will begin at 6:30 a.m.

Green, how I want you green.
Big hoarfrost stars
come with the fish of shadow
that opens the road of dawn.
The fig tree rubs its wind
with the sandpaper of its branches,
and the forest, cunning cat,
bristles its brittle fibers.
But who will come? And from where?
She is still on her balcony
green flesh, her hair green,
dreaming in the bitter sea.

Now the two friends climb up,
up to the high balconies.
Leaving a trail of blood.
Leaving a trail of teardrops.
Tin bell vines
were trembling on the roofs.
A thousand crystal tambourines
struck at the dawn light.

But for Arizona, the summer solstice kicks off our daytime hibernation period to avoid the heat of the day. So, what better way to harness the power of the sun and your creativity than through a fun and easy process called cyanotypes?

The December solstice (winter solstice) in St. John's is at 11:57 pm on Thursday, December 21, 2023. In terms of daylight, this day is 7 hours, 33 minutes shorter than the June solstice. In most locations north of the equator, the shortest day of the year is around this date.

With national icons framing each end of the National Mall in Washington, D.C., dawn and dusk softly illuminate silent sentinels symbolizing American history. When the blue and orange sky breaks in the east, the gleaming white Capitol dome, topped by the Statue of Freedom, is backlit by cool rays of daybreak. At dusk, try to find a spot near the steps on the western front of the Capitol building to see the sun descend behind the Washington Monument before backlighting the Lincoln Memorial.

In this week's edition, local traditions involving suits of moss, suits of banana leaves, the devil leaping over infants, horses ridden through crowds, human towers, the summer solstice sunrise at Stonehenge, and much more.

First, in their celebration of sons and daughters, of youthful dawn beings, of the dawning place, and of holy people of great vitality, the songs celebrate renewal and regeneration and the continuing process of creation. In their frequent mention of lakes, rainwater, fog rainbows, and mist cream, they express a concern for fertility. So, at the ends of songs and their dances, we often have the holy ones arriving joyously, with an abundance of corn, wheat, squash, and life-imbuing powers. (6)

E-group architectural assemblages, constructed and used for more thana millennium in the Maya Lowlands, are among the most distinctive andenduring forms in Mesoamerican monumental architecture. Since the 1920s,E-groups have been thought to mark the solstices and equinoxes, but morerecent investigations have shown that these alignments were rarelyaccurate. We argue that accurate solar alignment was probably only a minorelement, and primarily an early one, of a larger set of metaphoricallylinked design considerations that included concepts of sacred geography,ritual performance in reference to yearly solar and agricultural cycles,and longer cycles of time, especially katuns, that played a role inLowland Maya geopolitical structuring.

The entire ceremony ends with a public kachina dance. The Katsinam remain with the people for the first half of the Wheel of the Year until the summer solstice, when they return to their home in the mountains.

Almost universally, civilizations have eventually discovered the importance of the Spring Equinox as the start of the planting season. In very arid locations, such as the Southwest Desert of the United States, the growing season is short due to rainfall patterns, so it was important to know within days when to plant. Spring also had important religious connotations as the 'rebirth' of the world from the grip of winter - a time for both joyous festivities and solemn ceremony. Astronomically, this happens when the sun rises on the eastern horizon, half-way between its extreme winter position and its extreme summer position. By carefully noting these three locations on the horizon, you can anticipate when winter has ended and the seasons are moving towards spring. It was common for this equinoctial position to be encoded into important buildings through sightlines in the monument architecture, such as windows that let the light from the sun reach an interior wall only at the appointed day during the year (Hovenweep, Abu Simbel, Newgrange). For other civilizations, marking the time of the summer and winter solstices was equally important (Machu Pichu). Although the equinox position of the sun is identical for spring and fall, the solstice positions are easily distinguished by their extreme southern (winter: Newgrange) and northern (summer: Angkor Wat) locations along the horizon.

Newgrange: The Megalithic Passage Tomb at Newgrange was built about 3200 BC. A shaft of sunlight shines through the roof box over the entrance and penetrates the passage to light up the chamber. The dramatic event lasts for 17 minutes at dawn from the 19th to the 23rd of December.

Angkor Wat: Standing near the south-western corner in Angkor Thom the rising sun at summer equinox will visible through or over the eastern gate. 6 months later the alignment has shifted till its northern point of sunrise at winter solstice. The sun itself was so important to the builders of the temple that solar movement regulates the position of the bas-reliefs.

Medicine Wheel: The wheel was built between 1200 and 1700 AD. A line drawn between the central cairn and an outlying cairn at the Bighorn Medicine Wheel pointed to within 1/3 of a degree of the rising point of the sun at the summer solstice. The actual astronomical purpose of the design of these wheels remains controversial.

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