Glastonbury has a rich history, yet within it there are mysteries, sagas and ethereal traditions which have a reality of their own. These mystery traditions variously infer that Glastonbury was:

a remnant of the Atlantean civilisation

settled by Sumerians who laid out a vast landscape zodiac here

a centre of teaching and initiation in ancient times

a place of the Goddess and Goddess traditions

the site of a classical Cretan labyrinth on the Tor

visited by Jesus as a young man *as in *And did those feet in ancient time, walk upon England's mountains green?*

later settled by the refugee Joseph of Arimathaea and twelve acolytes, bringing the Holy Grail and founding one of the world's earliest proto-Christian settlements

the burial place of King Arthur and Guinevere and the resting place of many saints

and, in recent times, Glastonbury has been called the heart chakra of the planet.
Glastonbury abbey is Believed to be Avalon. There's something about the land of Avalon which makes it slightly shimmer, as if the subtle energies and perceptions of the inner worlds or the imagination permeate the physical fabric of this place and the life that goes on here. The veils between the worlds are thin here, opening doors of deepened perception. This seems to have existed since the beginnings of time. When all the beliefs are taken together, they show how the name Avalon could have settled on Glastonbury. First came its eerie non-Christian aspects as an enchanted Glass Island and as a point of contact with Annwn. One Celtic Otherworld could easily be equated with another; Annwn and Avalon did tend to merge or overlap; and at some stage, no one knows when, the idea took hold that Glastonbury might be the true Avalon.
Then, in the twelfth century, the monks learned the Welsh tradition of Arthur's burial and supposedly confirmed it by digging him up. His last earthly destination was agreed to have been Avalon. That clinched the identification. Glastonbury was now Avalon indeed, and the low-lying area round about became the Vale, or Vales, of Avalon.

It appears again in the Abbey's chronicles which is based on a document *in a holy house of religion in the Isle of Avalon, where King Arthur and Queen Guinevere lie*.

Beautiful, ain't it
