The CrossField


The Domani National Register of Freeholds, Glades, and Haunts



The purpose of the DNR







Freeholds, Glades, Haunts and Refuges: their definitions in Domani terminology




The DNR FGH List
  Alphabetical Listing
       A to G
       H to K
       L to P
       Q to V
       W to Z
  Listing by Realm
       Fantasia, I.D.
       Aleutia
       Aquaterra
       ArkenStone
       Astoria
       Belle Terres
       the Black Hills
       Cascade
       Celtica
       Cibola
       the Dells
       the Dreamtime
       Eastern Divisia
       EternalBeauty
       FairyStone
       GreyHaven
       LoneStar
       Lumina
       the Mists
       Orinoco
       Pacifica
       Plainitia
       Remal
       Saint Lawrence
       Sil Magra
       Snake Mound
       Snowdonia
       Western Divisia|





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The Domani National Register Listings: Celtica






Here are listed the current entries for freeholds, glades, and haunts: for the Realm of Celtica. Feel free to peruse them at your leisure.

Good Dreaming to you, and Blessed Be.




Callanish National Glade(The Callanish Stones)
On the shore and lands surrounding Loch Roag, on the Isle of Lewis, in the Outer Hebrides of the Celtican province of Caledonia(Scotland)
Celtica
"This is one of four Stone Circles on the Isle of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides island chain in the northwest of Scotland.
From the website:
"This site dates from about 1800 BC, but precise dates and proven functions have been hard to establish. Callanish I consists of a 43 x 37 ft circle of 13 tall slender Lewisian gneiss stones. In the middle is another stone, the tallest of all - 15 ft 6 in. Four incomplete avenues lead away, with single rows of stones to the east, south and west, and a double row just east of north. Had all the rows been completed, their axial alignments would have converged at the centre stone.
        Inside the circle are the remains of a chambered round cairn of Neolithic type, but archaeologists are undecided whether this was built before or after the stone circle and stone rows. Archaeologists find that looking south along the line of the stone avenue gives the point at which midsummer full moon sets behind Clisham, the highest peak in the Outer Hebrides.
        In the same area there are several other stone circles, like Cnoc Ceann a'Gharaidh (Callanish II), Cnoc Filibhir Bheag (Callanish III) and Ceann Hulavig (Callanish IV).
        Local tradition explains the presence of these stones by saying that when giants of old who then lived on the island refused to be Christianed, St.Kieran turned them to stone. Another local belief of this Gaelic-speaking community was that when the sun rose on midsummer morn, the sun god, Lugh, walked along the stone avenue, his arrival heralded by the cuckoo's call. - http://www.stonepages.com/
- information researched and provided by Lady Dame FionaBrigit ni NicLeoid, ruler of Cibola




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