Tuatha Dé Danann

From Ascension Glossary

Although the Irish Goddess Danu is generally expressed to be the progenitor of the Tuatha Dé Danann, we take the position that this narrative appears to be stemming from later renditions of historical accounts crafted by the Thothian-Enki-Enlil collectives to cover up the authentic Israelites from Éire, after the fall of the solar dragon queens during the Ascension Timeline Rebellion. Subsequently, the stolen material was issued as the Emerald Tablet in Egypt, along with cloned lunar female deities generated by the Annunaki’s Isis Treaty, beginning to show up in the Planetary Grid Network as “witches” to control the Collective Egregores after the Atlantian Flood, which is also when they brought in the Lunar Matrix.[1]

Emerald Crystal Heart of Éire

During the Dark Aeon after the Luciferian Rebellion, the eternal living light sentience of the Emerald Crystal Heart of Éire and its core heart tone resonance was turned off in the Crystal Core when the Alien Machinery was embedded throughout the planetary grid system. The NAA invasion further blocked the organic portal systems connected to the constellations and local star holographic maps, so that the planet could not receive organic star system transmissions that linked the star consciousness intelligence streams into the planetary grid. Recent Guardian Host projects reverse engineering more of the stolen architecture of the Cosmic Clock Aeonic Pairs and Emerald Founder body parts connected to the previous timelines of the Celtic-Druid lineages, revealed the extent of the Thoth-Enki-Enlil plunder with Corvidae black magic crow curses used by the invaders to cause spiritual blindness in the Cosmic Dragon Eye principles in the Albion. Thus, with recent events, the Cosmic Mother’s Dragon Eye in Ireland was returned to her upon discovering that her Emerald Crystal and Dragon parts were located at the Teach Cormaic, Hill of Tara.

This Luciferian miasmatic Corvidae black magic curse and the ongoing Celtic Massacres contributed to some of the distortions held in the legends, which recount the Tuatha De Danann in Ireland said to arrive there from the east, namely from Egypt and the Black Sea. Some of these factions were Annunaki hybrids that were forcibly merged with the subsequent waves of the Tu’Atha Celtic-Druid maji lineages of Solar Rishi from Ursa Major, earning them the moniker Tuatha De Danann (Children of Goddess Danu).[2]

Wikipedia

The Tuatha Dé Danann (usually translated as "people(s)/tribe(s) of the goddess Danu"), also known by the earlier name Tuath Dé ("tribe of the gods"), are a race of supernaturally-gifted people in Irish mythology. They are thought to represent the main deities of pre-Christian Gaelic Ireland.

Much of Irish mythology was recorded by Christian monks, who modified it to an extent. They generally depicted the Tuath Dé as kings, queens and heroes of the distant past who had supernatural powers or who were later credited with them. However, some writers acknowledged that they were once worshipped as gods. A poem in the Book of Leinster lists many of them, but ends "Although [the author] enumerates them, he does not worship them".

Danann is generally believed to be the genitive of a female name, for which the nominative case is not attested. It has been reconstructed as Danu, of which Anu (genitive Anann) may be an alternative form. Anu is called "mother of the Irish gods" by Cormac mac Cuilennáin. The Tuatha Dé Danann then fought the Second Battle of Magh Tuireadh against the Fomorians. Nuada was killed by the Fomorian king Balor's poisonous eye, but Balor was killed himself by Lugh, the champion of the Tuatha Dé, who then took over as king.

A third battle was fought against a subsequent wave of invaders, the Milesians, from the northwest of the Iberian Peninsula (present day Galicia and Northern Portugal), descendants of Míl Espáine (who are thought to represent the Goidelic Celts). The Milesians encountered three goddesses of the Tuatha Dé Danann, Ériu, Banba and Fodla, who asked that the island be named after them; Ériu is the origin of the modern name Éire, and Banba and Fodla are still sometimes used as poetic names for Ireland.[3]


References


See Also

Lost Tribe of Dan

Emerald Crystal Heart of Éire

Corvidae Curse