Wednesday, March 05, 2025

Santiago de Compostela

Santiago de Compostela has been famous for its pilgrims since the Middle Ages. My friend T and I visited a few weeks ago, because he found super cheap tickets - for only 35€, we could travel there and back by train, spending nine hours in the city and managing it in one very long day.

A lot of people have heard of the Camino de Santiago, which pilgrims traveled for weeks or months. In reality, there are perhaps ten different Caminos that passed through countries like Spain and France. All of them end at the Santiago Cathedral. Catholics believe that the bones of Santiago (i.e. St. James) were discovered at this location and that's why they built the cathedral. The bones were lost for a few centuries, but they were rediscovered in the 19th century. It appears that the cathedral and pilgrims continue to be a huge part of the city's economy.

It rains a lot in the region of Galicia, but we had luck because it only started to rain an hour before we needed to return. It's a beautiful city, with tiny streets and old buildings. The worst part was that I had to wake up at 6am to catch the train. This is something extremely rare for me, because my retired life in Spain normally lets me sleep in a lot later.

Saint James dressed as a traditional pilgrim, with a large hat and a cape decorated with conch shells. // Santiago está vestido con el uniforme de un peregrino, con un gran sombrero y una capa decorada con conchas.  

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Santiago de Compostela es una ciudad famosa por sus peregrinos, desde la Edad Media hasta hoy. Mi amigo T y yo la visitamos hace algunas semanas, porque T encontró billetes baratos. Por sólo 35€, hicimos un viaje de tres horas en tren, pasamos nueve horas en la ciudad y regresamos el mismo día. 

Mucha gente ha oído hablar del Camino de Santiago, por ser el que los peregrinos recorren durante semanas o meses. En realidad, quizá haya un total de diez caminos diferentes que abarcan países como  España y  Francia entre otros.Todos ellos terminan en la Catedral de Santiago. Los católicos creen que los huesos de Santiago fueron descubiertos en este lugar, y por eso se construyó la catedral. Los huesos estuvieron perdidos durante algunos siglos, pero fueron encontrados de nuevo en el siglo XIX. Me parece que la catedral y los peregrinos siguen siendo un pilar fundamental de la economía de la ciudad.

Llueve muchísimo en la región de Galicia, pero tuvimos suerte de que solo empezara a llover una hora antes de que necesitáramos regresar. Es una ciudad preciosa, con muchas calles pequeñas. Lo peor del viaje fue que necesité levantarme a las 6 de la mañana, algo excepcional en mí, porque en mi vida de jubilada en España normalmente me despierto a las nueve.

7 comments:

de-I said...

I've always heard of the long trudge down those Camino paths to get to Santiago de Compostela. Who knew there was a 35 Euro train path?

adventures and misadventures abroad said...

Sounds like a fun but exhausting trip!

Anonymous said...

Did you walk on the trail?

Renee Michelle Goertzen said...

I might ride (or bike) the train in the future, but I didn´t this time. 35€ is a pretty good deal for salvation, right Uncle de-I?

de-I said...

Damn Right! I'd pop 35 euros for salvation in a second!

Anonymous said...

Fue un viaje increíble 😃 muchas gracias 😊

alexis said...

you lucked out on the weather. I cannot remember if I ever went there during my year studying ages ago