Overview
Mount Cavo carries the immense accumulated power of being the sacred mountain of two civilizations over three millennia. The volcanic geology of the Alban Hills generates strong telluric currents that the ancients perceived as divine presence. The summit produces a commanding energy of sovereignty, authority, and cosmic order reflecting its association with Jupiter-Zeus as sky father. Visitors experience expansive awareness, a sense of overview and perspective, and connection to the archetype of sacred kingship and divine law. The layered history creates a rich energetic palimpsest where Latin, Roman, and Christian frequencies coexist.
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History, Archaeology & Significance
Mount Cavo (Monte Cavo) rises 949 meters in the Alban Hills southeast of Rome, Italy. It was the most sacred mountain of the Latin peoples and later the Romans, who knew it as Mons Albanus. The temple of Jupiter Latiaris stood at its summit from approximately 1000 BC, serving as the religious center of the Latin League. Roman generals celebrated ovations here, and the annual Feriae Latinae festival drew all Latin communities to the mountain. The Via Triumphalis, a sacred road of volcanic basalt, still leads to the summit. A Passionist monastery occupied the site from the 17th to 20th centuries.
Rory's Field Notes
Albano lake sacred mountain with Type 5 node at the summit.
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