Walk away your worries: The Easter weekend is the perfect time to start planning a holy hike — and any of these enlightened trails might just change your life
- The Camino, the most famous of all pilgrimages, ends in the Spanish town where James the Apostle is buried
- Israel's The Jesus Trail starts in Nazareth, where Christ grew up, and ends at the ruins of Capernaum
- St Cuthbert’s Way runs from Melrose in the Scottish borders to Holy Island in Northumberland
- Here the Archbishop of York writes about the joy of walking and the sacred trails he has tackled The modern pilgrim is not necessarily a Christian. Many are people wishing to escape the digital age and re-engage with nature for a while.
Others may simply be seeking the meditative, therapeutic value of a long walk.
SERENITY IN SPAIN
Camino de Santiago de Compostela (Camino Ingles), from Ferrol or A Coruna to Santiago de Compostela
Best foot forward: A pilgrim on the Camino nears Cirauqui in Spain
There are numerous routes on the trail including the original Camino Primitivo, which involves walking 195 miles over 16 days
The most famous of all pilgrimages, the Camino is also known as the Way Of St James, as it ends in the Spanish town where James the Apostle is said to be buried. It now attracts 330,000 pilgrims a year, up from fewer than 2,000 in 1986.
There are numerous routes, from the original Camino Primitivo, which involves walking 195 miles over 16 days, to the Via de la Plata, 610 miles over 49 days.
Given that we live in a time-poor culture, the relatively short Camino Ingles (English Way) is increasingly popular. Historically the route taken by British seafaring pilgrims, it starts at the northern Spanish ports of either Ferrol or A Coruna and passes through marshland, farmland, forest and across rivers en route to Compostela.
It stretches about 50 miles (from A Coruna) or 75 miles (from Ferrol) and qualifies the walker for a compostela, the certificate that proves you have completed the Camino. To get one, though, you must obtain a credencial (pilgrim passport) that needs to be stamped at hostels, cafes and churches along the route.
Distance: From 50 miles (allow a week).
How to do it: London to A Coruna, via Barcelona, from £112 return (Vueling.com). Santiago Ways offers half-board accommodation and luggage transfer between stages from £385 pp (santiagoways.com).
ISRAEL’S HOLY TRAIL
The Jesus Trail, Nazareth to Capernaum
While many Christian pilgrimage routes have been walked for centuries, one that covers the area where Jesus grew up was only established in 2009. It starts in Nazareth, where Christ grew up, and ends at the ruins of Capernaum, where he lived in adult life.
The route takes in many important Christian sites, including that of Jesus’s water-into-wine miracle at Cana.
Distance: 40 miles (allow six days).
How to do it: London to Tel Aviv from £182 return (easyjet.com). Abraham Tours offers accommodation and luggage transfers from £825 pp (abrahamtours.com).
PORTUGAL’S PILGRIMS
The Tagus Way, Lisbon to Fatima
This route will take you to the Shrine to Our Lady of Fatima, erected to mark visions of the Virgin Mary seen by three shepherd children in 1917.
Named after the River Tagus, the Fatima pilgrimage starts at the cathedral in Lisbon. For the first three days you have the river as a backdrop.
The final two stages take in the plateaus, mountains and valleys of the Sierra de Aire and Candeeiros Nature Park, the caves of which are a magnet for speleologists.
On day five you arrive at Fatima, where there are two basilicas, two chapels and a monument to the Sacred Heart of Jesus.
Distance: 93 miles (allow eight days).
How to do it: Stansted to Lisbon from £20 return (ryanair.com). Accommodation and luggage transfers from £550 pp (travelnet.ie).
GERMAN PRAISE
Via Coloniensis, Cologne to Trier
The Via Coloniensis is just one of about 30 major routes used by German pilgrims ultimately heading for Santiago de Compostela.
It runs between two of Germany’s key Roman cities, passing through rolling countryside and woodlands.
The journey begins in Cologne, and highlights along the route are the spa town of Bad Münstereifel and the medieval town of Blankenheim.
Trier has well-preserved Roman monuments such as the 2nd-century gate Porta Nigra, the Basilica of Constantine, the Cathedral of St Peter, and the Church of Our Lady.
Distance: 149 miles (at least 11 days).
How to do it: London to Cologne from £26 (ryanair.com). B&B and camping options en route, but for a treat stay at the Hotel Marielle in Bad Münstereifel, doubles from £84 a night (hotel-marielle.de).
GREAT SCOT!
St Cuthbert’s Way, Melrose Abbey to Holy Island
This route, which was only opened officially in 1996, runs from Melrose in the Scottish borders, where St Cuthbert spent his formative years as a monk in the 7th century, to Holy Island, where he ended his days as Bishop of Lindisfarne.
The man who became the patron saint of Northumbria gained a reputation as a healer and people flocked to his burial place after his death.
His remains became so sacred that when Vikings attacked the island in AD 75, monks hid his allegedly uncorrupted body in caves and forests for seven years.
Pilgrims pass St Cuthbert’s Cave, which has religious graffiti, some of it centuries old, carved into the sandstone rocks.
It was here that the monks of Lindisfarne are said to have rested overnight on the way to Durham Cathedral, where Cuthbert was reinterred.
St Cuthbert ended his days as Bishop of Lindisfarne, also known as Holy Island. Pictured is Lindisfarne Priory
Distance: 53 miles (eight days).
How to do it: Accommodation and luggage transfers from £690 pp (sherpaexpeditions.com).
ITALIAN SAINT
St Francis’ Way, La Verna to Assisi
This walk starts at the Sanctuary of La Verna in Tuscany.
After a hike through the Casentinesi Forests, pilgrims reach the gentler hills of the upper Tiber Valley in Umbria, and then Gubbio, the place of St Francis’s first pilgrimage.
Soul-searching strolls: The Basilica of St Francis of Assisi dominates the Umbrian landscape
The journey ends at the Basilica of St Francis of Assisi, an opulent memorial to a simple man who is now known as the patron saint of ecologists.Distance: 111 miles (allow nine days).
How to do it: London to Florence from £59 return (vueling.com). Accommodation and luggage transfers from £520 pp (umbriafrancescosways.eu).
SWISS SALVATION
Via Francigena, Lausanne to Aosta
Hikers standing on the monument at Great St Bernard Pass
The original Via Francigena, or Way Through France, ran from Canterbury to Rome.
Sigeric the Serious, the 10th-century Archbishop of Canterbury, travelled it in 990, and wrote down his itinerary on his return.
But few modern travellers will want to walk the full 1,000 miles.
One of the most picturesque stretches runs from Lausanne on Lake Geneva, through the Great St Bernard Pass to Italy’s Aosta Valley.
Distance: 95 miles (up to nine days).
How to do it: London to Geneva from £53 return (easyjet.com). Accommodation from £880 pp and luggage transfers of one bag £275 (francigenaways.com).
PRAY FOR ENGLAND
Winchester to Canterbury Cathedral
Canerbury Cathedral became England’s most important centre of pilgrimage after four knights murdered its Archbishop Thomas a Becket there in 1170. He was hailed as a martyr and canonised in 1173.
The route today passes through vineyards, lavender fields and orchards.
Distance: 130 miles (allow two weeks).
How to do it: Accommodation and luggage transfers from £1,569 pp (responsibletravel.com).
WELSH WORSHIP
Holywell to Bardsey Island
When the 7th-century noblewoman Winefride was decapitated by her suitor Caradoc after she told him she was to become a nun, legend has it that a healing spring appeared at the spot where her head fell.
St Winefride’s Well, below the town of Holywell, has been a place of pilgrimage ever since.
One pilgrims’ route leads to Bardsey Island: St Leuddad is reputed to have said that no one who died there would go to Hell.
Distance: 130 miles (14 days).
How to do it: Wales Walking Holidays offers luggage transfers for the middle of the route (waleswalkingholidays.com). Walkers should make their own accommodation arrangements.
No comments: