|
|
 |
Tickets
CONCERTS
|
Avalon Tickets
|
|
For Avalon Advance Ordering Schedule or Avalon Advance Ordering tickets availability click above link
|
 |
Tickets--Tickets.Com is one stop online shop to buy Avalon Tickets. Find detailed information to Buy Avalon tickets or to Buy Avalon CONCERTS tickets at our online store.
If you need Sports , Concert , Theater , Broadway Tickets ,SuperBowl, NBA, NFL, NHL, WNBA , Order online or call us today at 281-447-8833. You can see all your favorite events upclose and personal.
Use our search facility specially customized for you to get details of special hard to find events schedule infromation easily from comfort of your home. And once you are ready, order them with a click of a mouse or talk to us at 281-447-8833.
Do not have much time? No problem!! We will be happy to ship your tickets overnite right at your door.
Note : On-Line orders placed on the day of the show may not be filled. Please call us directly for 'same day' ordering and delivery options. We will be happy to help you. Thank you!
We appreciate your business and take great pride in serving you.
|
 |
| Avalon Schedule |
| Avalon Parking |
|
| Avalon Events |
| Avalon Refund Policy |
| Avalon |
Advanced ordering for the Avalon before the event goes
on sale is available. A fan may call to order for an event before it goes on
sale to the public. We can guarantee getting our Customers the seats they are
looking for. We do not Guarantee a row but we can guarantee an area. For the
Avalon advanced ordering, a fifty percent deposit is required in
advance of the general public on sale. Call one of our sales associates
today at 281-447-1579 and place your Avalon advanced order
today. There are no refunds for deposits once a deposit is placed. You may
request an up grade at any point and we can make every effort to accomadate
you. Avalon advance ordering is the best way to lock in your
seats before the event sells out thru the general on sale. Its really the
best way to get the best seats for a premium.
|
Avalon (probably from the Celtic word abal: apple; see Etymology below) is a legendary island somewhere in the British Isles, famous for its beautiful apples. The concept of such an "Isle of the Blessed" has parallels in other Indo-European mythology, in particular Tír na nÓg and the Greek Hesperides, the latter also noted for its apples.Avalon is sometimes referred to as the legendary location where Jesus visited the British Isles with Joseph of Arimathea and that it was later the site of the first church in Britain. This location of the Isle of Avalon is usually associated with present day Glastonbury.It is also said to be the place where the body of King Arthur is buried. He was supposedly brought there via boat by his half sister, Morgan le Fay. According to some legends Arthur merely sleeps there, to awaken at some future time.As early at least as the beginning of the 11th century the tradition that Arthur was buried at Glastonbury Tor appears to have taken shape. Before the surrounding fenland in the Somerset Levels was drained, Glastonbury Tor's high round bulk rose out of the water-meadows like an island. In the reign of Henry II, according to the chronicler Giraldus of Cambrai and others, the abbot Henry de Blois commissioned a search, apparently discovering at the depth of 5 m (16 feet) a massive oak trunk or coffin with an inscription Hic jacet sepultus inclitus rex Arthurus in insula Avalonia. ("Here lies King Arthur in the island of Avalon"). The remains were reinterred with great ceremony, attended by King Edward I and his queen, before the High Altar at Glastonbury Abbey, where they were the focus of pilgrimages until the Reformation.A nearby valley is named the Vale of Avalon.However, the Glastonbury legend has frequently been perceived as a fraud due, among other things, to the perceived anachronistic inscription which would have been more fitting to the 10th century than the 6th, the lack of any mention of said discovery in the 10th century, which would not have gone unheard of, added to possible ulterior motives from the abbey. Other theories point to l'Île d'Aval or Daval, on the coast of Brittany, and Burgh by Sands, in Cumberland, which was in Roman times the fort of Aballava on Hadrian's Wall, and near Camboglanna, upwards on the Eden, now Castlesteads. Coincidentally, the last battle site of Arthur's campaigns is said to have been named Camlann
|
|