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Camino de compestella
Camino de compestella








camino de compestella

Safety recommendations and restrictions during a pandemic can change rapidly. You might also like: Hiking the Kumano Kodō: Japan's ancient pilgrimage route Best foot forward: hiking your way around the world The world's walking routes with the most traffic on Instagram Two excellent resources for finding out more are this Camino de Santo forum and the blog Trepidatious Traveller by Maggie Woodward. There are dozens of other established routes from all over Spain, from Portugal, France and even beyond. The caminos mentioned in this article are just the most popular ones. Medefietser(s) gezocht voor de Camino del Norte. Zin om een van hen te zijn Het Vlaams Compostelagenootschap helpt je op weg. An alternative starting point is A Coruña, just two or three days’ walk from Santiago. Camino de Santiago Routes Information, Stages, Map and Points of Interest The French Way Start: St. Jaarlijks stappen en fietsen velen, jong en oud, naar Santiago de Compostela.

camino de compestella

It combines stretches along picturesque rías (coastal inlets) with sections across green countryside and through the medieval towns Pontedeume and Betanzos. Practicable year-round, this is an obvious choice if you have limited time, and the Inglés’ popularity has mushroomed in the last decade (15,000 people a year now). It owes its name to medieval pilgrims from Britain, Ireland and other northern locations, who would sail to ports like Ferrol then complete their journey to Santiago overland. Eeuwenlang trokken pelgrims langs deze route naar het graf van de apostel Jacobus in Santiago. The “English Way” runs about 115km/71mi (five days) to Santiago from Ferrol in northern Galicia. De Camino naar Santiago de Compostela ook wel de St Jacobsroute genoemd is het oudste lange afstandspad van Europa. Short, relatively easy route within Galicia It’s about 86km (53mi) from Santiago de Compostela to either Fisterra or Muxía across mostly gentle countryside, and a 28km (17mi) stretch links the two places. At Muxía an 18th-century church on the rocky seashore marks a spot where the Virgin Mary is said to have appeared in a stone boat. The name Fisterra/Finisterre means Land’s End: cliff-girt, lighthouse-capped Cabo Fisterra (Cape Finisterre) certainly has an end-of-the-earth feel.










Camino de compestella