Britains Mysterious Landscape: What Is It Really? A Section Of Albion - Heart Of The World
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We've looked at the nature of reality and the Earth energy grid with its center in the British Isles, and now we ease the pace and meander through beautiful Britain to feature two of the major lines of force that form the heart of the world.
The Michael Mary Line between the west and east coasts of England, and the Spine of Albion between southern England and the north of Scotland.
Both are expressed as male and female lines, which cross at particular power centers,
featuring ancient hill forts, churches, cathedrals, and locations the ancients considered special or sacred.
Albion is crisscrossed by an incredible network of energy lines, ley lines,
and power points where they cross.
But some have become better known than others in esoteric circles, and I'm walking towards one of them now.
It's called the Michael Mary Line.
This is Brentor Church, built in the 13th century at the point on Brent's Tor where the Michael and Mary lines cross and interweave.
It's the highest parish church in England at 1,100 feet, and it's among the smallest, as we'll see.
And every time I come here and I look out across beautiful, beautiful Devon from this
high point, I think I've died and gone to heaven.
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You see what I mean about one of the smallest Paris churches in England?
Dedicated to Saint Michael.
Appropriate on the point where the Michael Mary lines meet.
So why is it that so many churches, not just in Albion, But all over the world are built on these power points, on these ley lines that were so important to the pagans, the Celts, the Druids.
Because some Christian believers knew the power of these centers and wanted to harness that power with their churches and through their churches.
And others who came from a different direction believed that the pagan power points were evil.
And a church had to be built upon them to suppress that evil.
So, this is why you see churches, cathedrals, galore on these PowerPoints across the world.
So from here at Brentoor, the Michael Mary line weaves its way east through Glastonbury with its Amazing tour through the Stone Circle of Apri and on to Hopton-on-Sea and out into the ocean.
And way east from here, it crosses another major line in the heart of England.
And that one is going to take me home to the Isle of Wight.
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♪♪ This is one of my favourite places on earth.
I know it as Culver Cliff.
The official name of this headland is Fembridge Down on the Isle of Wight and there behind me the sweep of Sandown Bay.
And I fell in love with the Isle of Wight when I was just a little kid on holiday here.
And I was playing Isle of Wight ferries in the paddling pool at infant school.
And I Always wanted to live here and I moved here in 1982 I'd come here often several times a week ever since year after year after year and then I did a talk on the Isle of Wight and the next day I was showing someone this this view when I saw someone walking down the road with a t-shirt on that told me that they'd been at the
at the show the day before.
So I stopped, wound the window down, and said, oh hello, what are you doing up here?
He said, oh, he says, I'm following the information in this book.
And he gave me this, The Spine of Albion, by Gary Biltcliffe and Caroline Hoare.
And it's an absolutely fascinating book which tells the story of how over 20 years, using dowsing rods and other techniques, they charted an energy line through the centre of Britain, Albion, Which is why they call it the Spine of Albion, which starts on the Isle of Wight and goes all the way up and out through the top of Scotland, and goes through cathedrals, standing stones, standing stone circles, sacred hills, earthworks, and what have you that the ancients left us.
And I realized that I'd been drawn to this place And it was actually where part of this line comes into Britain.
The Spine of Albion has two lines, like the Michael Mary line, one male, one female.
The female they call Ellen, the male they call Belenus.
The Belenus line comes on to the Isle of Wight, into Britain, down the bottom of the cliff.
And right through this cliff, this place I've been drawn to, for so long, comes the Ellen Line.
And they go up through the centre of the British Isles, and they're like, almost like a serpent.
They are coming together at key points, famous points, sacred points, as they are perceived, where they cross what are called nodes.
And this is a line With the Michael Mary line that is a key part of the heart of the world, Albion.
Well, since we've been following it from Winchester, we've been sort of used to the feel of her flow, the width of her flow, the bands within it, and even the colour.
Because if you use a spectrum, a colour spectrum, you can ask, what colour is this line?
And we find the female current is often a violet colour.
The female current tends to be more sinuous through the landscape, and the male current tends to be much more straighter.
And the male current goes mainly to hilltops and mounds, tumuluses, where the female current tends to stick to valleys and watery places and caves.
And this is where she enters here, the Isle of Wight, the first point in Britain, a cave.
That's the edge of her flow here.
And it's pointing in the direction she's flowing.
So it's coming this way?
It's coming this way, yeah.
And her width at the moment, this is something we've practiced for a long time.
It's quite wide.
So start and come to the edge here.
Right.
So that's a fairly wide line.
And that differentiates what we call an energy dragon line from an ordinary ley line or Because lines are like the veins in the body.
There are major lines and major veins and capillaries and small lines.
But these energy lines, like elenoblinus, are major.
They're like main arteries.
And how do you know the difference between the male and the female?
Again, there's a feel for them.
We often douse, is this Ellen I'm standing in, with a yes or no response.
But because we started a trail by following the female and keep following her, we knew it was Ellen because we never lost a trace of her.
We just carried on and carried on right to the end here.
But I often find that we know, as soon as we walk into Ellen, there's a warmer, more feminine feel, whereas there's like a watery, sort of lunar-y feel, whereas the male current feels a lot more powerful, much more sharper.
Now, you've gone from here all the way up the centre of the country and out to Scotland, dowsing these lines.
Yeah.
How the hell long did that take?
Well, it started in the early 90s with this sense that there was a north-south equivalent to the East-West Michael Line.
That was a north-south through route.
And I came across a book in the Glastonbury bookshop by Guy Ragland Phillips called Brigantia.
And he had discovered this alignment of sites back in the early 70s, but he'd only explored it within the north of England.
He hadn't explored it down south.
All that he knew is that it progressed down to Winchester.
So using Google Earth and lots of other satellite maps, Which are more accurate, I was able to accurately project it.
And then I thought, well, I'm going to...
If there is a male or female aspect to this enlightenment, then I'm going to have to go to somewhere where I'm sure it
would cross, and that seemed to be Winchester's and Catherine's Hill.
So, Gary, we've come from the end of Culver, And following the Ellen line, and the first thing we see is a bloody grey obelisk, which I know very well, coming up here so often.
Yeah.
What is it about obelisks?
Because I think you've found there's a lot of obelisks on the Albion line.
There are.
There are a number on private estates, introduced in the 19th century and 18th century.
The currents seem to be drawn to them as if they're objects of power.
And we believe that they're like stone aerials.
And they draw the energy down from the upper atmosphere, like organ energy, and empower whatever's on the obelisk.
So, this obelisk is dedicated to Lord Yabra, the Earl of Yabra.
So, he would be taking that power.
It's important what's carved in the stone on the obelisk and the power that's been drawn to it.
But the lion doesn't like it.
We found Ellen comes here and she kind of shrinks a little bit as if she doesn't like the energy of this great masculine sort of phallic symbol.
Yeah, and the Freemasons obviously, the whole obelisk thing goes back much further to Egypt etc and beyond, but the Freemasons use obelisks profusely everywhere.
But it's always felt to me that These were ways of diminishing the power in the line.
And it's granite as well, a very high vibrational crystalline substance.
So it is, and often when we come here we feel quite dizzy.
Well we've come further down from Culver, or Bembridge down as it's Properly known and it's a chalk seam Gary that starts where the cliff is at the end and goes right the way through the island and it's like a, just like a snake.
Yes.
What's the significance of chalk?
Because I remember I've been to other places like Uffington and many other places.
Sacred sites, power centres and there's chalk.
Yes.
So what is it about chalk?
Well I think because it's permeable and water goes through it and often you find underground lakes because usually at the bottom of chalk you find a layer of clay and the water can't get past that.
So it's a clay, the chalk holds a lot of water underground, which we found with sacred sites and ceremonial places and psychic energies and apparitions, water seems to be the key factor.
So I think the chalk plays a part there with sort of creating underground lakes beneath its layers.
There's a lot of things that I've said over the years which were perceived to be crazy.
and then suddenly they start to move mainstream.
I'm waiting for someone to convince me that we don't live in a simulation.
I'm so sorry.
What is real?
How do you define real?
If you're talking about what you can feel, what you can smell, taste and see, then real is simply electrical signals interpreted by your brain.