The AinSoph Stargates are a network of twelve sacred gateways spaced around the planet. The work began in 2013 at Glastonbury — Stargate One — and has rippled outward ever since, with each gateway holding a particular frequency and a small team of keepers.
The name comes from the Kabbalistic Ain Soph — the limitless, the light without end — and the network reaches out from Avalon to twelve corners of the world, from Skellig Michael in the Atlantic to Mt Kailash in the Himalayas, from the Drakensberg to Jerusalem.
The twelve gateways
Each AinSoph Stargate carries a number and a place. The list below is the network as held by its keepers — beginning, as always, at the Tor.
Why Glastonbury comes first
Stargate One was opened at Glastonbury Tor — and from that point the rest of the network unfolds. To stand on the Tor this July is to stand at the threshold of the entire AinSoph grid: every other stargate, in a sense, runs through this one.
This is the simplest reason for being at Glastonbury during the four-day window. Whatever else passes on the land in those days, the Tor remains what it has always been to this network — the first gateway, the place where the work began.
To return to the Tor is to return to Stargate One — the first ring of the AinSoph network around the Earth.
◆ The Full Network
The complete AinSoph Stargates record — with the keepers, the crystals, the photographs, and the histories of all twelve gateways — is held on the AinSoph Wix site.
Visit AinSoph Stargates →From the first network — the global ring — the path turns to the second, the City of Light.