Millenarian Gates

First Appearance and Context

The term "Millenarian gates" is invoked during a teaching on the popular iconographies that outsiders project onto the mathic world. In that discussion, the Moshianic iconography is described as peaking when people expect the Centenarian or Millenarian gates to open—raising expectations to the point of delirium and drawing many pilgrims and attention. The phrase refers to extremely rare openings on the thousand‑year cycle within the same family of periodic portals as other time‑governed gates.

Relationships and Affiliations

  • Part of the periodic gate system associated with the great clock housed in the Mynster. The thousand‑year member of this system is documented as the Millenium Gate.
  • Parallels other interval gates, including the Centenarian Gate and the Decade Gate.
  • Public anticipation around such openings often coincides with wider observances like Apert, when gates are known to open for limited exchange.
  • In current discourse, expectations tied to the Millenarian gates are connected to movements such as the Warden of Heaven, cited as an example of the Moshianic iconography gaining influence.

Description and Characteristics

  • The page tracks a recurring event/occasion (the thousand‑year opening) rather than a specific piece of machinery. Mechanical details of the millennial portal belong on the Millenium Gate page.
  • Within the narrative context available so far, no ceremonial particulars are described beyond the expectation of a very rare opening and the social response it provokes among Saeculars and visitors.

Current Status

No millenarian opening is underway in the current account. The Millenarian gates are discussed as a focus of expectation and pilgrimage rather than as an event presently occurring.

Summary:

A rare, thousand-year opening associated with the mathic gate system. In current discussions it is invoked within the Moshianic iconography, which anticipates the avout emerging through the gates to enlighten the Saecular world and draws pilgrims.

Known as:
The Millenarian Gates