What follows is my attempt to chronicle and recreate a few of experiences in Spain and France this summer for those interested. Focus primarily will rest on history and religion, and in particular the history that lives in the churches and castles that line the pilgrim roads toSantiago Compostella in Spain. The Muslim conquest of the Holy Land in the Seventh and Eighth centuries caused the traditional pilgrimage to Jerusalem to become increasingly dangerous. As the Middle Ages unfolded, the journey across the Pyrenees and into Spain to the traditional burial place of St. James became the dominant pilgrimage route. The results were dramatic. The first great wave of Christian churches in the Middle Ages sprung up along the pilgrim roads - the age of Romanesque was born. Architecture, spirituality, culture and politics would all be dramatically affected by the great mass of Medieval Christians on the road to Compostella.
Thursday, August 6, 2009
More Rocamadour
Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament in one of the shrines
All the buildings are built right in to the mountain
The medieval statue of Our Lady of Rocamadour
Ascending the "Holy Steps" the pilgrims and penitentes took
This blog is dedicated to Isabel of Andalucia, a mysterious, Spanish flamenco dancer sometimes seen shimmering through the lush gardens and cool fountains of the Alcazar in Sevilla.
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