![]() Its route ascends to the Fuenfría Pass, the highest. The Camino de Santiago from Madrid passes through Segovia and Valladolid, crossing the Sierra de Guadarrama. The route has a distance of approximately 600 kilometres. In addition, its gastronomy has the reputation of being a successful memory of our journey, so the choice of this route is synonymous with sure success in our desire to discover the magic of the Camino de Santiago. The Camino de Madrid is the route that leaves from the Spanish capital and arrives at the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela. The Northern Way is possibly one of the options that will provide us with the most beautiful landscapes, thanks to its discourse between sea and mountain, where the greenery of small Basque, Cantabrian, Asturian or Galician villages is blurred in the distance with the pristine blue of the Cantabrian Sea. It is the second longest route, only behind the Silver Route, which will surround us with the tranquillity of the coastal and sailor villages that we will reach on our way and with a route that, except in the climbs to the mountains, where we will need to have our full strength, is characterized by being quite quiet. We find in this slope, a less overcrowded Way than the French, which has a good signaling but on the other hand also has less infrastructure. The presence of these Christian temples, Templar settlements or pilgrim hospitals also contributed to positioning the route along the coast in the place it occupies today. When most people think of the Camino de Santiago, they usually are picturing the most popular route, the Camino Francés (the route featured in the Martin Sheen film The Way). In spite of it, the persistence of pilgrimages that sometimes arrived by coast to the Basque and Cantabrian ports, finally managed to consolidate what would become known as the Coastal Way.Ĭelebrity pilgrims contributed to this process of rebirth and consolidation of the Northern Way, as in the case of San Francisco de Asís, who made a pilgrimage to Santiago in 1214 and who, according to legend, took advantage of his pilgrimage to found numerous Franciscan temples. However, it lost protagonism due to the stabilization of the southern peninsular territories after the Reconquest and the development of the French layout by the 12th century monarchy. It was the route used many times by the kings of the whole European continent to reach Santiago. ![]() While it’s not the oldest of the routes, it has been the most popular and well-known route ever since the Middle Ages. This is one of the routes with the greatest history together with the Primitive Way, and with an age similar to the French route. The Camino Frances is the most famous Camino de Santiago trail, featured in books and movies about the Camino, such as ‘The Way’ with Martin Sheen and ‘The Pilgrimage’ by Paulo Coelho. Arrived at the locality of San Vicente de la Barquera, in Cantabria, there is the opportunity to follow a route with its own history, so important is that it has its own Jubilee Year, sharing this honor with the pilgrimages to Rome or Santiago de Compostela itself, this route is called the Lebaniego Way.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |