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Cornwall Morganeering Copyright

 

Camino Frances - 2014

Day 2 Thursday 17th April 2014

Refuge Orisson to Roncesvalles

21 km - 5 hours

 

 

Ready for off

Onwards and Upwards

Another wonderful contraption for carrying a rucksack...... but is it worth the effort?

 

 

 

 

Vierge d'Orisson
(Marian shrines to Our Lady appear all along the route and are one of the
most common symbols of devotion on the Camino)

Marian Shrines

In the culture and practice of some Christian churches - mainly, but not solely, the Roman Catholic Church - a Shrine to the Virgin Mary (or Marian shrine) is a shrine marking an apparition or other miracle ascribed to the Blessed Virgin Mary, or a site on which is centered a historically strong Marian devotion. Such locales are often the destination of pilgrimages.

Some of the largest shrines are due to reported Marian apparitions to young and simple people on remote hilltops that had hardly been heard of prior to the reported apparition. The case of Saint Juan Diego's reported vision of Our Lady of Guadalupe in 1531 is similar to the case of Saint Bernadette Soubirous's vision in 1858 of Our Lady of Lourdes. Both saints reported a miraculous Lady on a hilltop who asked them to request that the local priests build a chapel at the site of the vision. Both visions included a reference to roses and led to large churches being built at the sites. Like Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico, Our Lady of Lourdes is a major Catholic symbol in France. Both visionaries were eventually declared saints.

The number of pilgrims who visit some of these shrines every year can be significant. E.g. Lourdes with a population of around 15,000 people, receives about 5,000,000 pilgrims every year and within France only Paris has more hotel rooms than Lourdes. Over 1,000,000 pilgrims visit the Black Madonna statue in the Chapel of Grace in Altötting, Germany every year, where for more than 500 years miracles have been attributed to praying to the Virgin Mary at that shrine.

 

 

 

 

Cruceiro

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fontaine de Roland

 

 

Our first glimpse of Roncesvalles

 

Ibañeta

Roncesvalles Monastery

Roncesvalles (Basque: Orreaga, French: Roncevaux) is a small village and municipality in Navarre, northern Spain. It is situated on the small river Urrobi at an altitude of some 900 metres in the Pyrenees, about 4 kilometres from the French frontier as the crow flies, or 21 kilometres by road.

Roncesvalles is famous in history and legend for the defeat of Charlemagne and the death of Roland in 778, during the battle of Roncevaux Pass, when Charlemagne's rear guard was destroyed by Basque tribes.

The small collegiate church contains several curious relics associated with Roland. The battle is said to have been fought in the picturesque valley known as Valcarlos, which is now occupied by a hamlet bearing the same name, and in the adjoining pass of Ibañeta (Roncevaux Pass). Both of these are traversed by the main road leading north from Roncesvalles to Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port, in the French Basque Country.

Since the Middle Ages, this collegiate church has been a favorite resting place for Catholic pilgrims along the Way of St. James, since it is the first place to have a rest after crossing the French Pyrenees. Every year thousands of pilgrims begin their way to Santiago de Compostela at Roncesvalles.

The area was also the site of the 1813 Battle of Roncesvalles during the Peninsular War.

 

The Death of Roland

 

 

 

Pilgrim's meal at La Posada - L to R - Dianne (Florida), Glenn, Jane. Mick,
Watze (Holland), John(Ireland) and a Korean man

 

Accommodation Notes

 

 

 

Registration at Roncesvalles

Good bunk beds, but no protection against falling out of the top bunk!