Intriguingly, paint analysis conducted by Catherine Hassall has shown that the female's gown was painted in crimson. (Revelations 17:4 The woman was clothed in purple and scarlet.) Mary's wave-like mantle though is azurite blue - phew!
The general consensus, amongst those I have talked to, seems to be that the treasure was hidden from the Puritanical vandal hordes of Cromwell during the Civil War, but is this a definite? If so, then why Sandford? Out of the way perhaps, in an unlikely place - at least to the dull wits of the parliamentarian skinheads. And could it have something to do with the church's proximity to the river? 5
And the Woman led into the Desert, where she has a Place prepared by God
It is unlikely that someone just made off with the icon and decided to bung it in the ground in any old place. There must have been a reason to choose this hiding spot; and to follow on from that would it not be beyond ken that its location would be encoded, if only to aid in its recovery at a safer period in the future? Also I would suggest that those with arcane knowledge would ensure that something of this value would be protected (enshrined) in an energetically suitable incantation. Could St John's Revelations be the key? 6
"And a great Sign was seen in Heaven; a Woman invested with the Sun, and the Moon under her Feet, and on her Head a Crown of Twelve Stars;. and being pregnant, she cried out travailing and being pained to bring forth. And Another Sign was seen in Heaven; and behold! a great fiery-red Dragon, having- seven Heads and ten Horns, and on his Heads Seven Diadems. And his Tail draws the Third of the Stars of Heaven, and cast them to the Earth, and the Dragon stood before That Woman who was About to bring forth, so that when she should bring forth he might devour her Child. And she brought forth a Son, who is to rule All the Nations with an iron Scepter; and her Child was snatched away to God, even to His Throne. And the Woman led into the Desert, where she has a Place prepared by God, that there may nourish her a thousand two hundred and sixty Days." Revelations 12:1-6.
Could the Desert be sand(ford)?
A pregnant woman Invested in (clothed in) the sun.
The Virgin Mary is rather full-bellied in the reredos and surrounded by a mandorla and 8 angels. To me this mandorla suggests an energetic portal - a doorway between dimensional realms, which is of course, in an observable way, precisely the location it was hidden in. 7
With the moon under her feet.
At her feet are two angels holding a monstrance (moons-trance). 8
And on her head was a crown of the twelve stars.
On her head is a crown bedecked with jewels or stars. 9
Whether the concealment of the reredos was to do with the Puritans' threat or something else altogether is another question. It must be very possible that the piece was secreted for another reason and at a different time. And then, is the subject not the Christian Virgin at all, but the Goddess? (Who the Virgin Mary is really a version of anyway). Her rippling gown gives the impression that she is born(e) on (from) the sea (Mer - Mary), just like Venus.
What a wonderful place for a tribute to the Goddess at the entrance to heaven (which the church building represents) - Mary is afterall known as "The Gate of Heaven". On a green hill overlooking 'the Isis'. Then there is the deliberate placing in the south, not just in the ground but subsequently on the south wall - which is lamented by Charles Tracey in his terrific article on the reredos, A forgotten Assumption of the Virgin: the reredos at St Andrew, Sandford-on-Thames, Oxfordshire:
"...the work is grievously disadvantaged in its siting on the south wall of a small single-cell parish church chancel. It receives no natural lighting from behind, and has to compete with a lancet window immediately to its east side."
Another epithet for the Goddess (Isis, Mary et al) is 'Queen of the South'.
Waiting at the tableau
Earlier I suggested that some of the damage to the reredos might be deliberate; but bear in mind too that greater forces than the minds of men are always at work.
The hands of the woman appear to have been palm out, fingers up, in a gesture of 'wait!' and it this is also a sign of time, and of fealty. For me, the manner that the hands seem to have been placed suggest revelation as well - just a glimpse of her middle could be seen then. Now, with the hands broken off her condition is obvious - she is pregnant. Perhaps she is telling us that her child waits to be born?
Open palms also signify destiny when both are revealed one means that which is and the other that which is yet to be. As both are at the same level the suggestion is that all is in balance, probably suspension - again 'waiting'.
Also missing is the left hand of the angel at the left foot of 'Our Lady'. In medieval times (and in ancient times) the left hand was believed to belong to the devil (sinister means 'on the left). It is/was also used to make the sign of the cross in diabolical rites; so it was therefore an evil omen. The hand may have been removed for protection.
Another feature that is broken is the nose of the woman. The nose symbolises, amongst other things, one's direction to travel as well as spiritual nourishment. As it is broken off it suggests limbo - 'waiting' again.
Waiting for what?
Well, how about the Age of Aquarius?
Personally I think Revelations 'a thousand two hundred and sixty' is an intentional jumble of 2160, which is the number of years in a Great Age - the length of time from one astrological age to another. (For us from Pisces to Aquarius). The numbers are repeated again in the construction of the sculpture - 2 small angels, 1 woman and 6 larger angels. There are other signifiers as well but it's probably sufficient to acknowledge that St Andrew was a fisherman (Pisces) and the womb is the watercarrier (Aquarius).
But true-sweet beauty lived and died with him.
Once outside the church building I made around the churchyard (clockwise) all of the time taking in the architectural features. I was surprised to find that the gravestones were oriented to the east at the rear and mostly to the west at the front of the churchyard. I can't say that I felt the same euphoria outside as I had in.
Rainbows
I had only one true disappointment though and that was that I hadn't brought a camera with me. I'd have loved to have photographed the reredos. I could always return to take photos of the outside but only this once had I been fortunate enough to gain entry to the inside.
The next day, after work I headed for Sandford again. It was a beautiful day and this time I had my camera. As I opened the churchyard gate it was as I expected, the door was shut. I took a few photographs of the church building and the yew tree and then walked around the back to snap the hotel and river. As I did so I passed two men and a lady who were busy chatting. They smiled and I said hello. After taking my photographs I saw that the little group had gone but then my eyes noticed that the lights were on in the church. Hurrying to the church door I found it open.
"Is it ok to come in?" I ventured. The same three people I'd seen earlier were just inside the church. "Yes, do", they answered.
"You're lucky to find the church open," the lady said.
"I know," I said smiling. "I've been here so many times and it is always locked until yesterday when a man was here playing the organ".
"We get so much trouble with vandals, we have to keep it locked. It's such a shame!"
I agreed.
"Come, let me show you this," the lady offered, as she breezed up towards the altar and pointed to the reredos.
"It's wonderful," I answered, "And so is this church."
"Would it be ok to photograph the reredos?" I asked (half expecting a refusal). Other than the photograph on the leaflet the man had given me on my previous visit I hadn't seen a picture of the icon anywhere else - not even on the net. I had wondered whether there was a prohibition for some reason against it being photographed.
"Of course you can", she said kindly, "Take as many photographs as you like."
Before I left the church we had another brief chat and she told me that everyone who comes into the church enjoys the feel of the place.
"I love it early in the morning, when it's sunny," she said. "The sunlight bursts through that window," pointing to the lancet stained-glass window on the east wall. The light streams through in all of the colours of the rainbow." Then she paused... meditating on the window and said, "I especially like it on Good Friday." My ears pricked up big time! This was the same day that the yew tree had been planted in 1800. Friday - the day devoted to Venus. What revelation was I going to hear?
"Good Friday, why?" I eagerly enquired.
"Because it's a 3-hour service and watching the light play through the window it goes by in no time", she answered.
Do you know...after the wonderful experiences I have had there recently I'm seriously thinking of attending a service at Sandford's church of St Andrew...but it won't be on Good Friday!
After all this I expect you are wondering, 'Well, where's the photo of the reredos?'
Good things come to those who wait...enjoy!
© Ellis Taylor
3rd February 2007
Footnotes:
1. Something that may or may not be relevant to this is the multiple sighting of a moon (dubbed 'Neith') around Venus that was calculated to have an orbit of 1080 days and was sighted 18 times. It was first recorded by Giovanni Domenico Cassini in 1672 (a name that is pertinent to present NASA preoccupations and, of course, the date totals 16 - which relates to the activities of Venus). Neith is the primordial Goddess of the Egyptians and is later interchangeable with Isis (both are Venus). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neith_(moon)
(On the night of 20th January 2007 my friend and I witnessed an object cavorting around Venus.
3. Barrington is a name that is well connected to the Templars as, I understand, have been the early lords of the manors of both Great and Little Barrington. Great Barrington also has a St Mary's church.
4. In her book, The Woman with the Alabaster Jar, Margaret Starbird, interprets the symbolism of the 'X' in medieval art as a sign of concealed esoteric knowledge. Of course it also denotes a kiss, and much else besides.
5. Between 1642 and 1646 King Charles I made Oxford his capital. On 27th April 1646 the king slipped out of the East gate disguised as a servant and passed, if not through, very close (within a mile) to Sandford on his way to Hillingdon. www.theteacher99.btinternet.co.uk/ecivil/charles_flees.htm
There were two significant periods in English history where any religious ornamentation was considered fair game for destruction. These were during the Reformation under Henry VIII in the 1530s and during the English Civil War (1641-1646)
6. Just some thoughts: Besides an Oxford establishment, what about Godstow Nunnery or Bisham Abbey, both on the River Thames? And then there is Wells Cathedral, known to have employed craftsmen from Oxford - dedicated to St Andrew as well. Its west front was completed in 1260. (a thousand two hundred and sixty Days.)
7. Mandorla: An almond shaped aura or sunburst found on medieval depictions of Jesus and Mary - odd how the same letters are used with 'a' and 'r' added (Ra).
8. Monstrance: A receptacle in which the consecrated Host is exposed for adoration. From Latin monstrum - a 



portent).
9. As the sculpture is high up on the wall I haven't been able to count the stars on her crown yet.