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This emblem is the
compasses
and the set square,
one of the most powerful of Masonic symbols. If you draw a line between the points of the set square, and another through the compasses you will form a six-pointed star. This is the symbol upon which the town of Crieff has been designed - an ancient knowledge which has been lost. The town of Crieff can be likened to a huge open-air Masonic Temple, hidden in full view. The small market town of Crieff, Perthshire, situated close to the Highland Boundary Fault in the Scottish Highlands, has an unique association to the Freemasons, showing that they had mastery of the ancient esoteric knowledge of ley lines. The ley line system is several thousand years old, and, around the early 1800s, a more modern design was super- imposed upon the old. Two of the streets, Burrell Street and King Street, meet at a point, like the bottom part of a star, and it is this which alerted me to the possibility that the town had been deliberately designed and planned as an esoteric symbol following an existing system of ley lines. ![]() King Street, shown in the diagram,
running
vertically, has James Square at the top. The square, of course, is a
well-known
Masonic symbol, but Burrell street has an eight-sided square at the
top,
called the Octagon - so important that the Masonic Museum in the U.S.A.
is
also built to this design.
Between the two streets is (Masonic) Lodge Street leading into West High Street. The angle between Burrell Street and King street is 24 degrees, reflecting another of the most important symbols in freemasonry - the 24 inch guage or ruler. This layout has been
superimposed
upon a much older ley system laid down by our ancestors thousands of
years
ago.
KING
STREET LEY
LINE
Following the ley line down King street to the south I came to Dalchirla standing stone (below) at the edge of the ley. ![]() and then, about 20
miles
further on, the source, Dumbarton Castle, (below left), an ancient seat
of
the kings and a volcanic plug
Dumbarton
Castle,
the source of the ley line up King Street
The ley from Dumbarton
Rock up King Street to Tullybelton Stone Circle
![]() To the north, this ley travels through a four-stone circle in the golf course and on to a double stone circle at Tullybelton, near Perth (above, right). BURRELL STREET
Following the ley down
Burrell
Street to the south led me to a standing stone at Concraig Farm, (below)
![]() <>Stirling
Castle, on
a volcanic plug, source of the ley line up Burrell Street
<> <> <> ------------------------------------------------------- <> The West High
Street
in Crieff, leading to Lodge Street, of course, should yield an
interesting
ley, which I duly followed to the west,
until I came to a standing stone, part of a four-stone circle at Braefordie, Balmuick, near Comrie (below). This is the source of this ley, and is placed on top of a volcanic pluton, a volcano which never erupted. <>
<> ![]() Above and below: Braefordie or Balmuick Stone Circle, Balmuick, placed on top of a volcanic anomaly <>
![]() <> <> <> Walking to the east of
West
High Street, following this ley I came to the Crieff Parish church and
burial
ground, then on to Dunning church and burial-ground (below).
![]() (Above): the ley line from the
volcanic
pluton at Balmuick, Comrie, through West High Street, Crieff Parish
Burial
Ground and on to its target, Dunning Church and Burial-ground (below)
![]() You can see here that the modern streets were superimposed upon the ancient ley line system. In addition, Ochtertyre mausoleum is situated on top of the Highland Boundary Fault and is part of a ley line through the centre of Crieff symbol to Innerpeffray Church and burial-ground (not shown on this map). <>
![]() <> <> (Above).
Machuim stone circle, Loch Tay, transmits a ley line through Ochtertyre
mausoleum,
the centre of the Masonic symbol and on to Innerpeffray Church
and
burial-ground (below).
The mausoleum is directly on top of the Highland Boundary Fault
![]() Not only did they place their dead on fault lines, they used other faults to transmit ley lines through the same burial-grounds. It is now obvious that the Freemasons had a profound knowledge of earth energies and used it to plan towns, cities, churches, cathedrals and burial-grounds in the United Kingdom, carrying their knowledge abroad to the United States, where they built the capital, Washington, and many others. ![]() (Above): St. Michaels
church,
Crieff,
the centre of the star shaped symbol
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