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New Compostela Rules

SYates

Camino Fossil AD 1999, now living in Santiago de C
Time of past OR future Camino
First: Camino Francés 1999
...
Last: Santiago - Muxia 2019

Now: http://egeria.house/
New rules for obtaining the Compostela have just been announced. It is not anymore necessary to walk/bike/ride/sail the LAST 100km into Santiago, any 100km on any Camino will do AS LONG as the last stage you do ends in Santiago. Source:
 
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It would be best if this were put in written form and in clear language. Is it on their website - at least on one of them, be it the website of the Pilgrim’s Office or the Cathedral’s website itself. Has the national Camino association of Spain been informed? Other major international Camino associations?
 
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Wow !! That's a huge change, and will take a lot of the pressure off the Sarria to Santiago section.

And apparently from what the Canon is saying, it's 2 stamps per day on the whole route unless that's not possible.
 
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From the Pilgrim office website :
Peregrinación a pie o a caballo: haber caminado 100 km por cualquiera de las rutas reconocidas como oficiales por la S.A.M.I. Catedral de Santiago.

The English language version still uses the word "last" around the 100km. The above does not but I don't know if this is new wording in Spanish or not. It certainly reads as any 100km to me.
 
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It would be best if this were put in written form and in clear language. Is it on their website - at least on one of them, be it the website of the Pilgrim’s Office or the Cathedral’s website itself.
Past experience has been that it can take a very long time for the websites to be updated to reflect changes in policy. And the cathedral/pilgrim office are rarely proactive in publicising such changes. A simple unambiguous statement of what the pilgrim office now requires for a Compostela would be very helpful. Announcing what appears to be a major change in policy on the hoof in a video interview for a fairly limited foreign audience may create far more confusion than clarity.
 
I tried to follow the transcript of the video and it is downright ridiculous. Words fail.

According to the rules as explained in de video, I could walk 100 kms along the Northern camino in my home area, sleep every night in my own bed (with a little planning), take a flight to SdC and walk from the airport to the Cathedral and providing I have enough stamps, this would count as a pilgrimage to Santiago.

if you

8:19
start the Camino in USA for example I

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don't know in San Diego and complete and

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complete the the 100 kilometers with the

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last stage in

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Santiago and I can get you the the

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compostella very good so yeah that's new

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with San Antonio and uh I believe it's

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St Augustine in Florida and San Antonio

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in Texas uh there may be others uh that

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are doing that so you can do I think

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it's 25 kilometers in the United

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States yeah and then the other 75 yeah

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and now now is it that that's one thing

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that a lot of pilgrims have questions of

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is it the last

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75

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kilometers continuous into

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Santiago is that or not continuous or

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not continuous the last stage

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yeah

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last the last stage yeah you have

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to to do the the Camino to Santiago but

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not necessarily you have to do uh the

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others I don't know 90 kilomet uh

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by continue

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continuous continuous yeah you can

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Santiago jump uhuh in the same Camino

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you can jump you can yeah so so let me

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ask you this if I started in sanan

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France and I know many Spaniards don't

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believe in starting in San but if I

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start J to buros or Leon and you

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continue to Santiago but how about if I

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started in s Johan and then I skipped

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and I started in

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Azura that's not that's not far enough

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is it or is it far enough if I get a a

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full 100 kilometers

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in yeah you can do it you can yeah so

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you could start in

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Azura or yeah yeah or in Istanbul in

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Ean
 
According to the rules as explained in de video, I could walk 100 kms along the Northern camino in my home area, sleep every night in my own bed (with a little planning), take a flight to SdC and walk from the airport to the Cathedral and providing I have enough stamps, this would count as a pilgrimage to Santiago.
Personally I would argue that anyone who flies to SdC and visits the cathedral and the tomb of the Apostle in the right spirit is making a pilgrimage to Santiago. 30 years ago the cathedral made the decision to make receiving a Compostela dependent on an additional condition of walking or cycling a set minimum distance. This has distorted the basic understanding of pilgrimage in relation to Santiago in a way that does not apply for almost all other Christian pilgrimage destinations. Making a pilgrimage to Santiago and qualifying for a Compostela under the cathedral's rules are different things.
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
New rules for obtaining the Compostela have just been announced. It is not anymore necessary to walk/bike/ride/sail the LAST 100km into Santiago, any 100km on any Camino will do AS LONG as the last stage you do ends in Santiago. Source:
Let us wait, Ivar will clear the question. Will not beleave, that I can made the 100 km somewhere and finish from Monte Gozo to the cathedral.
 
Just imagine. A Compostela is awarded to anyone who makes pilgrimage to the shrine of Santiago, with religious intent or at least in a sense of search.

There will be no prize for walking 100km in the best trainers; merino knickers; finest poncho; lightest backpack etc. There will be no prize for collecting stamps (philatelists excepted: theirs is the prize). There will be no prize for pounding the dust for 1400km while blogging everyday.

The only prize will be for looking at that splendid box and wondering if those old bones mean something else
 
Personally I would argue that anyone who flies to SdC and visits the cathedral and the tomb of the Apostle in the right spirit is making a pilgrimage to Santiago. 30 years ago the cathedral made the decision to make receiving a Compostela dependent on an additional condition of walking or cycling a set minimum distance. This has distorted the basic understanding of pilgrimage in relation to Santiago in a way that does not apply for almost all other Christian pilgrimage destinations. Making a pilgrimage to Santiago and qualifying for a Compostela under the cathedral's rules are different things.
I agree with you 100%. Millions of pilgrims visit dozens of Christian shrines every year without having to walk there. The 100km rule introduced by the cathedral in the 1990s created huge crowds walking from Sarria and accusations of cheating for those who might start their walk further back and take occasional transport before arriving in Sarria. Walking pilgrims usually account for a small % of pilgrims who visit Santiago, especially in Holy Years.
 
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