Posted on 12/05/2018 2:39:13 PM PST by BenLurkin
In 990AD, the Archbishop of Canterbury named Sigeric the Serious had a more practical reason to walk to Rome. Having risen into his prestigious office, he needed to visit the Vatican to be ordained and collect his official garments. At the time he made the journey, there were many different paths to Rome. But Sigeric, whod left from Canterbury, wrote down his route home through Italy, Switzerland, France and into the UK, cataloguing the towns he stayed in on his journey. The route he took now makes up the official Via Francigena. The only part that cannot be completed on foot is the English Channel, which medieval pilgrims crossed by boat (and modern pilgrims on the Dover-to-Calais ferry).
As the Renaissance blossomed in Europe, the Via Francigena began to decline in popularity. Trading routes multiplied and shifted to pass through Florence, one of Italys most significant intellectual, artistic and mercantile cities at the time.
The Via Francigena became, for the most part, forgotten, although sections remained in use as local roads and footpaths. Things remained that way until 1985. That year, a Tuscan anthropologist, writer and adventurer named Giovanni Caselli was looking for new topics to write travel books about. As an enthusiastic hiker who had also walked the old Silk Road through China, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, Caselli decided to walk the Via Francigena after learning about Sigerics route.
After Caselli published his book about the Via Francigena in 1990, the route started gaining attention. In 1994, the Via Francigena became one of the Council of Europes designated Cultural Routes. Then in 2006, the organisations that oversee the Via Francigena decided on the official route that pilgrims walk today. Many pilgrims see it as an alternative or follow-up to Spains better known and much busier Camino de Santiago.
(Excerpt) Read more at bbc.com ...
ping
What an interesting article! Thank you for posting it!
YouTube has some videos about the Via Francigena. Here’s one.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=__nP7rjGd3c
Nice!
BTTT
European Appalachian Trail
Santiago de Compostela,,,
The Sheens’ movie,
The Way.
Via Francigena... [singing] Hey, Francigena... [/singing]
Thanks BenLurkin and a fool in paradise!
flr
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