Overview
This fifth-order energy node represents a concentrated point within the broader Wiltshire sacred landscape grid. The layering of pre-Christian and Christian worship over millennia has created a site with remarkable energetic depth and spiritual potency. Visitors sensitive to subtle energies report feeling a vertical column of light rising from the earth through the churchyard. The site facilitates connection between earth consciousness and higher dimensional awareness, acting as a stepping-stone in the larger network of sacred nodes across the Wessex landscape.
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History, Archaeology & Significance
The churchyard at Ogbourne St Andrew in Wiltshire sits upon a site of pre-Christian sacred significance, with evidence of Neolithic activity in the surrounding landscape. The current church of St Andrew dates from the Norman period around 1100 AD, built upon what local dowsers and earth-mystery researchers identify as a significant energy node. The village lies along the Ridgeway, one of Britain's oldest trackways, and the surrounding area contains numerous Bronze Age barrows and field systems. The church was likely established on a pre-existing pagan sacred site following the common Christian practice of sanctifying earlier holy places.
Rory's Field Notes
One of Britain's finest 5th-order nodes. Six major leylines plus both Emperor Dragons converge beneath the ancient yews. Stand quietly behind the other side of the altar and feel your heart chakra open in seconds.
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