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Spirituality : Ancient Sites
 

London's Lost Camelot: A Place of Magic and Many Mysteries.
By Chris Street

Has been researching London’s ancient sites and their mysteries since the early 80s. Some of his other titles are; Earthstars (1990), Earthstars, the Visionary Landscape (2000). The Beer Guru’s Guide (2006). See www.earthstars.co.uk for details.

Jan 14, 2010 - 12:24:09 PM

An extract form new book, LONDON’S CAMELOT AND THE SECRETS OF THE GRAIL , by Chris Street, published by Earthstars Publishing
(Amazon UK, Amazon USA).


London's Lost Camelot: A Place of Magic and Many Mysteries. If I were to tell you that Camelot is in North London and you can go and visit it at the far end of the Piccadilly Line, you would probably think I was stark raving bonkers. Yet all the evidence (and there is plenty of it) indicates that a real Camelot once existed at the very centre of Enfield Chase, the Royal Hunting Ground of the Plantagenet Kings.

Today it is still there, a moated island hidden in woods on the fringe of Trent Country Park, and known as Camlet Moat. Archaeological digs have been conducted, back in the 1880s and again in 1923 and some interesting finds were unearthed. They suggest a substantial structure with stone walls over five and a half feet thick, a massive drawbridge 38ft long and a subterranean dungeon. Sounds like a castle, doesn’t it? It is even called Camelot Castle in some old books.

The Camelot connection here seems to have been overlooked, the assumption being that the name was simply inspired by the Arthurian legends rather than anything directly connected with them. Local folklore contradicts this, telling us the name dates back to the time of William the Conqueror, nearly a hundred years before Camelot first appeared in Chretien de Troyes Arthurian Romances around 1170.

At least one leading expert on the etymology of local place names is on record as stating that the name Camelot here is “indisputably of Celtic origin.” That places it over two thousand years old, at the very least, and dates it to more than a thousand years before the mediaeval Dan Browns started writing about any kind of Camelot.

In confirmation, some small Roman finds suggest the site was occupied that far back. Ironically the earliest written mention of the Camelot name here dates from 1439, when “Camelot Manor” was demolished –that’s  40 years before Mallory’s Morte D’Arthur was printed.

What all this adds up to is that this could be a real Camelot, not a mythical one. As it has connections to Royalty dating back a thousand years, it may even been a location used by, or at least known to,  a real warrior King of the ancient Britons. Whether it was ever used by King Arthur, is open to debate, but it is certainly a possibility.

The site also has some intriguing associations with the Grail Legends and is as much a place of magic and mystery as the mythical Camelot. A cross bearing the name of King Arthur was found nearby IN 1981 and a map drawn by a prominent member of an occult  “secret society” shows Camelot at this location rather than the more accepted sites, like Tintagel, Cadbury Castle or Camulodunum.

It has a Holy Well, where apparitions of a Guinevere-like “White Lady” or “Grail Maiden” have been reported and it is regarded as a place of healing, vision and inspiration by many visitors. Some have suggested it is the location of an “inner-world grail castle” where access to the grail mysteries may be found.

After my own personal experiences at the place, I wouldn’t be at all surprised, though, in this world, I think it was the site of an ancient British oracular shrine dedicated to Brigit (or Bride) and centred on the Holy Well.

Camelot Moat’s mystical atmosphere may be connected to the fact that it is a crossing point of numerous ley energy lines. In fact, it was one of the first sites that triggered my Earthstars discovery – an amazing pattern of sacred geometry linking many of London’s most ancient sacred sites.

The geometry forms a vast “round table” covering the landscape of London. Many visitors to the place fall under its enchantment. Speaking from personal experience, the atmosphere of the site is haunting and other-wordly. Crossing the moat to the island sometimes feels like stepping through a portal to another realm, to a sacred site and shrine of considerable antiquity. As if finding a Camelot in London isn’t astonishing enough, the location of Arthur’s Sword in the Stone also seems to have been in London.

This was as much as surprise to me as anyone else. I merely followed clues clearly spelled out in the works of Sir Thomas Mallory. A little research combined with my knowledge of London’s ancient sites unearthed some convincing evidence that the stone actually once stood where Mallory said it did. Amazingly, it may still exist nearby, built into a wall, and like London’s Camelot, largely been unnoticed and ignored for centuries.

About the book:
The book is not simply about Camelot. That discovery leads to a secret mystery-school tradition concealed within the Arthurian Romances. The Arthurian/Grail legends were the Da Vinci Code of their day. They embody a mystery and a living tradition of wisdom and knowledge which is particular to Britain and encoded in the land and its sacred sites. Places like this over-looked and long forgotten Camelot.

If you live in London, this is a book you must read and a place you must visit. It has as many mysteries as Dan Brown's Da Vinci Code.



London’s Camelot and The Secrets of the Grail, by Chris Street is available in central London from The Atlantis Bookshop and Watkins Bookshops, on-line from www.lulu.com, or direct from Chris
(email: starman144@hotmail.com)
(Amazon UK, Amazon USA).


 See www.earthstars.co.uk for details.





 

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