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New Compostela Rules

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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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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.
 
...and ship it to Santiago for storage. You pick it up once in Santiago. Service offered by Casa Ivar (we use DHL for transportation).
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 provided I have enough stamps, this would count as a pilgrimage to Santiago.

if you

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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
 
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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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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.
That is the rule as it is applied, but it does not agree with the wording ON the compostela.

"has devotedly visited this most sacred temple having done the last hundred kilometers on foot or on horseback or the last two hundred by bicycle with Christian sentiment (pietatis causa)."

"con sentido cristiano (pietatis causa)"

There is a clear connection to Catholic Christianity and pietatis causa within it. The Cathedral sets the rules, and the Pilgrim Office enforces them. If a spiritual intent, Protestant, Buddhist, Islam, Yoga, or Shinto is fine with them, of necessity, it must be fine with the rest of us. Their game, their rules.

Is the psychic energy devoted to debating clearly arbitrary rules worth the effort? Not to me!

And, yes, I see the irony of bothering to post this sentiment...
 
Do you get certificates or something similar when you visit those others shrines without making a pilgrimage walk?

I don’t mind these changes, although it would be nice if my Compostela for walking 800 km is different from the person who took a tour bus…😕


There is the Plenary Indulgence for those who follow some specific observations. For some pilgrims it might feel more important than receiving " a paper Compostela "
I do not want to start another true pilgrim or tourist versus pilgrim discussion but I know for sure that some " tour bus " visitors to Santiago are more devout pilgrims than I with my more than 3000 km walking.


 
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I checked the date, and it seems to be neither April Fools (April 1) or Dia de los Inocentes (Dec 28). Nevertheless, I would advise waiting until this appears in the approved credencial or on the official Pilgrim Office website before relying on it to get your Compostela. It seems there are some details still to be worked out (e.g. what is required at the very end leading into Santiago). I wouldn't consider it completely to be relied upon until it is in writing somewhere official.
 
...and ship it to Santiago for storage. You pick it up once in Santiago. Service offered by Casa Ivar (we use DHL for transportation).
There is the Plenary Indulgence for those who follow some specific observations. For some pilgrims it might feel more important than receiving " a paper Compostela "
I do not want to start another true pilgrim or tourist versus pilgrim discussion but I know for sure that some " tour bus " visitors to Santiago are more devout pilgrims than I with my more than 3000 km walking.


I recently walked part of the way to Fatima from Lisbon. I was the only pilgrim walking, although I did meet one cyclist on his way to Santiago. When I got there I found hundreds of fellow pilgrims. There was no Compostela or anything like that and the spiritual experience/ reward was Fatima itself not just the journey or a piece of paper. I was allowed into the basilica’s with my backpack on and treated as a pilgrim, no one cared how I got there, just that I had bothered to make the journey. The real reward for me was joining about 300 other pilgrims in a candle lit procession at 10.15pm, a wonderful experience.
 
Do you get certificates or something similar when you visit those others shrines without making a pilgrimage walk?
I have walked the Via Francigena from Canterbury to Rome and two of the Olavsleden routes which end in Trondheim. Both walking pilgrimage routes revived or created (choose your own verb) after the success of the Camino revival and modelled upon the Caminos. Both the VF and the Olavsleden offer a certificate to those who walk at least 100km and produce a stamped credencial as evidence. No coincidence.
 
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(...) no one cared how I got there, just that I had bothered to make the journey. (...)
Portuguese pilgrims walking to Fátima often have some organization behind them, with support vans and everything. The idea that one must carry a backpack, walk a specific number of kilometers, or fulfill certain requirements to be considered a pilgrim is not a thing.

Edit: Not trying to start a debate about who's a pilgrim—just giving some context about pilgrimage to Fátima.
 
Portuguese pilgrims walking to Fátima often have some organization behind them, with support vans and everything. The idea that one must carry a backpack, walk a specific number of kilometers, or fulfill certain requirements to be considered a pilgrim is not a thing.

Edit: Not trying to start a debate about who's a pilgrim—just giving some context about pilgrimage to Fátima.

Same situation with Lourdes.
 
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Remember the Camino de Santiago is 1200 yrs. old. The only way to do it was on foot or horseback. It was taken on for some as a sentence from the Inquisition, for some as a penance from a Bishop, and for others it was to receive a Plenary Indulgence. It has nothing in comparison with Lourdes, Fatima, Medjugorje, etc. Obviously, for the first 1,000 years it was not on anybody's bucket list as a holiday outing.
 
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In addition I think that it was somewhat irresponsible for American Pilgrims to publish this video before any new rules have been published by the Pilgrims Office.
I agree. It was clearly a "reveal" that would create uncertainty, and I wonder if the Canon realized it.

What a way to create confusion at the Pilgrim Office! (Not to mention the forum!)
 
My husband just showed me a Facebook post from Johnny Walker with the same info about the changes. Sorry, I am not on Facebook myself, so can't repost it.
Regardless of what a YouTube video or Facebook post says I will wait until I read it on the Pilgrim Office website before I make any recommendations.
 
Get a spanish phone number with Airalo. eSim, so no physical SIM card. Easy to use app to add more funds if needed.
Remember the Camino de Santiago is 1200 yrs. old. The only way to do it was on foot or horseback. It was taken on for some as a sentence from the Inquisition, for some as a penance from a Bishop, and for others it was to receive a Plenary Indulgence. It has nothing in comparison with Lourdes, Fatima, Medjugorje, etc. Obviously, for the first 1,000 years it was not on anybody's bucket list as a holiday outing.
Thanks for the reminder. Sometimes I forget that some people have no understanding other than that offered by Ubend.

“sentence from the Inquisition”? Oh come on, the Inquisition acted in Spain and its colonies. It was hardly likely to sentence it’s victims to a nice stroll across northern Spain and issue a get out of jail free card to anyone who made it to St James’s bones. The origins of pilgrimage to Lourdes rest in 1858, Fatima 1917, Medjugorje 1981.

The origins of the pilgrimage to Santiago lie somewhere in the mire that was Jerusalem in the hands of the heathen, two Popes both claiming to be St Peter’s best mate and Rome being even more uncomfortable for pious visitors than modern Naples.

There, I’ve offended everyone I can think of. If I’ve missed anyone, my apologies
 
In addition I think that it was somewhat irresponsible for American Pilgrims to publish this video before any new rules have been published by the Pilgrims Office.
The pilgrim office website is already updated , at least the Spanish version. The requirement of the “last 100km” has been changed to “100km”..the English version still references “last 100km”, but I would assume that this will be updated in time also.
 
The 2024 Camino guides will be coming out little by little. Here is a collection of the ones that are out so far.
Regardless of what a YouTube video or Facebook post says I will wait until I read it on the Pilgrim Office website before I make any recommendations.
The Canon of the Cathedral has full Authority to establish such norms under the Authority provided to him by the Bishop, and he can establish them verbally or by any other means of communication of his own preference.

Websites and existing printed texts have lesser Authority than active decisions by the Cathedral Parish.

Having said that, it would be anyway sensible to await for some clarifying texts, so for example what "the last stage to the Cathedral" might mean in practice.

And I must express my sympathy to the registration software developers who may to an extent need to build everything back up again from scratch ...
 
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Actually, Lourdes has been a stage along one of the Pilgrimage Ways to (or from) Rome since Antiquity.
Arhh, that’s what I nearly said, and then in 1858 they came up with something more interesting to pilgrims than a bacon sarnie bar and a signpost saying Rome X leagues. Nothing quite like a Virgin for pulling in the crowds is there?
 
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:
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:
That was a confusing summary of the ‘new’ rules and Tom L did his best to clarify scenarios. Hopefully, someone else suggested, the Office will write an unambiguous summary somewhere on their website
 
The 2024 Camino guides will be coming out little by little. Here is a collection of the ones that are out so far.
It will probably take pressure off of the Sarria to Santiago stages.
This part I don't understand.

I just think about how inconvenient it would be to walk 100km somewhere else on the way, then catch a train or bus to somewhere close, then walk the last day, just to get a Compostela. If I were them, I'd just walk the last 100km.
 
This part I don't understand.

I just think about how inconvenient it would be to walk 100km somewhere else on the way, then catch a train or bus to somewhere close, then walk the last day, just to get a Compostela. If I were them, I'd just walk the last 100km.
It's not that inconvenient, and would allow people to walk stretches that they might enjoy more (passing through cities they want to visit, for example)
 
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This part I don't understand.

I just think about how inconvenient it would be to walk 100km somewhere else on the way, then catch a train or bus to somewhere close, then walk the last day, just to get a Compostela. If I were them, I'd just walk the last 100km.
It adds flexibility. Only walked 3 caminos so far, but on each of them i met people that had either to "abandon" a group so they could finish the last 100k in time or force march for days to make it. While maybe not perfect this now presents another option, not more, not less.
 
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And it will also allow those who take "best of the Camino" tours to legitimately earn a Compostela.
This, in all likelihood. Call me a cynic, but I immediately wondered if the moneyed few had howled once too many times.

Either that or the Pilgrim's Office realized that people were blatantly cheating just to get a piece of paper, and wanted to discourage that.
 
The 2024 Camino guides will be coming out little by little. Here is a collection of the ones that are out so far.
Remember the Camino de Santiago is 1200 yrs. old. The only way to do it was on foot or horseback. It was taken on for some as a sentence from the Inquisition, for some as a penance from a Bishop, and for others it was to receive a Plenary Indulgence. It has nothing in comparison with Lourdes, Fatima, Medjugorje, etc. Obviously, for the first 1,000 years it was not on anybody's bucket list as a holiday outing.
Medieval Christian Pilgrimage was the original vacation. If you were a serf, you worked every day but Sabbath and Holy Days. You likely died within walking distance of where you were born. If you wanted a break or new scenery, pilgrimage was the one thing your Lord could not say no to.

Pilgrims absolutely went on pilgrimage for vacation, to party, to bring space to their marriage etc. Having a few too many beers or going dancing in Leon doesn’t make you any less a pilgrim. Nor does a noble riding a horse find less divinity in the cathedral than a foot pilgrim. Neither should the young or infirm on a bus.
 
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Do you get certificates or something similar when you visit those others shrines without making a pilgrimage walk?

I don’t mind these changes, although it would be nice if my Compostela for walking 800 km is different from the person who took a tour bus…😕
Yes. You can receive a certificate of pilgrimage upon your arrival to the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem if you request it. You need not walk it, though I did from the Lebanese border. If you are Catholic, know who and where to ask, and pay a donation, the Church may also confer the Pope Leo XIII medal upon you as evidence of your pilgrimage and solemn intentions. It’s discretionary though and it was suggested to me that this practice is now less common. I’ll be buried wearing mine.

The Compostela isn’t a prize or souvenir. It memorializes a solemn moment in your life. For many, a turning point. The significance of the Compostela to the bearer, isn’t, or shouldn’t be, diminished by someone else obtaining theirs after riding in a motor carriage or hitchhiking in a lorrie.
 
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I would imagine it’s both an effort to relieve the stress on the last stages of the Frances, but also recognize that other cities have legitimate concerns that tourist tax dollars paid in their areas are being used during the last 100km and not returned to them. The village leaders of places like Burgos, Leon, and Pamplona must be very pleased at this decision.

If it’s a cultural route to you, not a spiritual route, or if you are not Catholic and are just out for a break or low cost vacation, it’s also a chance for you (to pay) to see some very significant cultural sites of importance to all Spaniards that you would miss if you don’t have the month to walk the Frances.

I don’t view this as controversial. It’s an evolving policy that’s been changing slowly the last few years.

You can now walk 25km on the beach in Florida while sleeping in water front hotels and walk 75km in Spain and still receive the Compostela. The priest briefly mentions it in the video. Why? See the last paragraph above. It’s a chance to experience the cultural impact of the Spanish church during colonial era Florida and visit several sacred places.

Does the change diminish my selfish sense of physical accomplishment? Perhaps briefly on the surface before I examine my feelings deeper. That was my first 800 km on a life journey of over 4000 km to nearly every Catholic shrine you can name. But having random tourists take home a Compostela that willl be quickly over looked or discarded certainly does not undercut the gravity of my effort as much as walking down the hill on the last day, cathedral in sight through the trees, and being overtaken by three women in their 80’s on their way to collect their 7th compostela.
 
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€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
Or wondering what old bones are actually in it, if indeed there are any bones at all...

Would be a brave church official to actually open the box and check...
Actually they did just that in around 1874. They had, believe it or not, lost the bones having hid them in 1589 to stop Sir Francis Drake (aka Drake the pirate) getting his hands on them. An excavation rediscovered them and they were formally identified as the remains that had been venerated as those of James the Apostle. No DNA test back then though.
 
Actually they did just that in around 1874. They had, believe it or not, lost the bones having hid them in 1589 to stop Sir Francis Drake (aka Drake the pirate) getting his hands on them. An excavation rediscovered them and they were formally identified as the remains that had been venerated as those of James the Apostle. No DNA test back then though.
Best that coudl be done now is probably identify them as being from male of the appropriate age, dating back around 2000 years. Cannot see a DNA test being relevant, assuming DNA could be extracted from the bones, whihc is far from a given.
 
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Fail to prepare? reduce your risk by buying this book full of practical info.
2nd ed.
Actually they did just that in around 1874. They had, believe it or not, lost the bones having hid them in 1589 to stop Sir Francis Drake (aka Drake the pirate) getting his hands on them. An excavation rediscovered them and they were formally identified as the remains that had been venerated as those of James the Apostle. No DNA test back then though.
from the internet: (https://www.trevorhuxham.com/2018/10/santiago-compostela-legends.html)

Recapping the legends surrounding St. James

In the early Middle Ages, the belief arose that St. James visited Roman Hispania, where he traveled across the peninsula and preached the Gospel before returning to Jerusalem. During his time in Spain, he stopped in Caesaraugusta (a.k.a. Zaragoza) and tried to evangelize the city’s residents, apparently with little success. The Virgin Mary—even while still alive in Palestine—bodily appeared to James to encourage him on his journey, leaving behind a marble votive column with a command to build a chapel there in her honor.

Mary is also said to have appeared to James in Muxía on the northwestern coast of Galicia. Carried to Gallaecia on a sailboat made of stone, Mary showed up at this rocky outcrop to comfort and strengthen James as he wandered across what would have felt like the ends of the Earth.

After James was executed, his own disciples retrieved his body and placed it in a stone boat that mystically made its way across the Mediterranean. It landed in Iria Flavia (modern-day Padrón), where some of James’ followers collected his remains and took them inland for burial.





These disciples asked the local Queen Lupa for assistance, but she deviously directed them to a mountain called Pico Sacro, where a hostile dragon and two wild bulls lay in wait. Although these menacing creatures nearly killed them, they relented when the disciples made the sign of the cross, which slew the dragon and tamed the bulls. When they returned to Lupa, the queen and her vassals converted to Christianity.

These disciples continued on, letting the oxen lead the way until they stopped at the summit of Mt. Libredón, the nucleus of today’s Compostela. Here they buried the apostle’s body, where it lay hidden and forgotten for almost 800 years.

Re-entering the historical record, it was the year 814 when the hermit Paio claimed to see lights glimmering in the oak groves to the north of the Church of San Fiz de Solovio. Investigating further, he stumbled upon an old Roman burial ground (a compositum, where the name Compostela comes from) that happened to contain the relics of the Apostle St. James. Paio notified Bishop Teodomiro of Iria Flavia, who quickly arrived and confirmed that the bones Paio had discovered belonged to Santiago himself.


I have no way of verifying this information, and Bishop Teodomiro's word would probaly not satisfy current forensic criteria...
 
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Thanks for the reminder. Sometimes I forget that some people have no understanding other than that offered by Ubend.

“sentence from the Inquisition”? Oh come on, the Inquisition acted in Spain and its colonies. It was hardly likely to sentence it’s victims to a nice stroll across northern Spain and issue a get out of jail free card to anyone who made it to St James’s bones. The origins of pilgrimage to Lourdes rest in 1858, Fatima 1917, Medjugorje 1981.

The origins of the pilgrimage to Santiago lie somewhere in the mire that was Jerusalem in the hands of the heathen, two Popes both claiming to be St Peter’s best mate and Rome being even more uncomfortable for pious visitors than modern Naples.

There, I’ve offended everyone I can think of. If I’ve missed anyone, my apologies
I enjoy offence, and like the Inquisition I relish the opportunity to admonish error wherever it arises. So I hate to say it, but my understanding is that the Inquisition was active during and after the crushing of the Cathar heresy in southern France in the 13th century, and persons repenting of their heresy were offered the opportunity of a pilgrimage to Santiago, instead of being burned at the stake. If this is so, it stands to reason that the authorities would require proofs of completion, to stop people from getting offside for a month or two in a local tavern. Could this be the happy origin of sellos, credentials, compostelas and all the other documents that the obedient pilgrim so diligently collects? I like to thing so. I hope I'm not wrong or some other pedant will take pleasure in correcting me and I'll fume with rage for a week.
 
Interesting. Both positives and negatives for sure.

On the one hand, it might help 'unblock' some bottle necks and particularly busy sections.
On the other, there are likely many businesses that will suffer or gain as a result, as the 'hot spots' settle into a new pattern.

But at the end of the day, does it really matter?

For those who want to walk a more 'traditional' Pilgrimage, they still can.
For those who don't, it's now more convenient to gain a Compostela.

I prefer to focus on my own journey rather than judge or worry about how others choose to undertake theirs.
 
€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
This part I don't understand.

I just think about how inconvenient it would be to walk 100km somewhere else on the way, then catch a train or bus to somewhere close, then walk the last day, just to get a Compostela. If I were them, I'd just walk the last 100km.
There is still an element with the Spanish pilgrims, particularly those in their teens and twenties, of a Compostela for one's CV. Not sure how helpful it is in the actual job market or military or university, but some youngsters do still want one for such reasons, whether these are actually valid ones or not.

Then there are the pilgrims who do the pilgrimage for actual religious reasons, who might do a little walking here or there near other religious sites, and then congregate near Santiago, which there is a lot of for St James' Day, Easter, Christmas and so on, religious youth pilgrimages in particular.

Also as someone else pointed out, the tours that organise some "best of" the Camino deals, though there are also Diocesan/Parish pilgrimages where the journey can be split between coach travel and some day hiking.

More flexibility for these sorts of pilgrims to spread things out a bit more should relieve at least some of the pressure between Sarria and Santiago, both infrastructure-wise and as far as the crowding goes -- the groups of 50 or so people with coach support and lodging pre-booked months ahead in particular should be able to do things very differently.
 
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Medieval Christian Pilgrimage was the original vacation. If you were a serf, you worked every day but Sabbath and Holy Days. You likely died within walking distance of where you were born. If you wanted a break or new scenery, pilgrimage was the one thing your Lord could not say no to.
Peasants rather than serfs ; Sundays rather than Sabbath -- and BTW for many Portuguese foot pilgrims to Fátima, things remain almost exactly like that to this very day, though nowadays it's an Employer rather than a Lord. Some rural Portuguese may have no more than one week off work per year, and can use that week for a foot pilgrimage to the Shrine.

The local Parishes can sometimes organise a group foot pilgrimage for the whole village to give everyone a needed festive and collective break from routine, a moveable feast if you like.
Pilgrims absolutely went on pilgrimage for vacation, to party, to bring space to their marriage etc. Having a few too many beers or going dancing in Leon doesn’t make you any less a pilgrim. Nor does a noble riding a horse find less divinity in the cathedral than a foot pilgrim. Neither should the young or infirm on a bus.
Well quite !!
 
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.
This text on the website has been like this since at least 30 October 2024.

And it has been like this for some time already that the Spanish version of the website gets updated while the English version remains unchanged.

I don’t recall ever having seen the 25 km + 75 km option for the Camino Inglés on the website. Or the vicarie pro option. Or that the Welcome Certificate is no longer used. There is definitely room for improvement for their information policy.

The word “ultimos” disappeared from one sentence sometime between 4 September and 30 October, and I vaguely remember that a poster even noticed it but others thought it was merely a mistake by whoever maintains the website. The text in the credencial did not change. No volunteer reported any change of policy about the requirement for having to walk the last 100 km. One would assume that the volunteers at the Pilgrim Office would be made aware of such a change in policy. Anyone?

Website on 4 September 2024
IMG_1958.webp

Website on 30 October 2024
IMG_1957.webp
 
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€2,-/day will present your project to thousands of visitors each day. All interested in the Camino de Santiago.
What is also still on the current website is the requirement that the 100 km have to continuous:
  • Se puede hacer el Camino por etapas, siempre y cuando éstas estén ordenadas cronológicamente y geográficamente. Sin embargo, si se hace solamente la distancia mínima exigida (100 ó 200 km), se debe sellar siempre al inicio y al final de cada etapa, incluyendo la fecha correspondiente, de forma que se vea que el peregrino ha retomado el Camino en el mismo lugar en el que lo había abandonado (es decir, se debe sellar siempre en el lugar en que se comienza, aunque ya hubiéramos sellado en el mismo sitio al terminar la etapa anterior).
See: https://oficinadelperegrino.com/peregrinacion/la-compostela/
 
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.
Completely agree
 
Is there any other independent source for these “new Compostela rules” other than this interview, with obviously some linguistic struggles between interviewer and interviewee, and the Facebook social media bubble?

I find it odd that I can’t find anything about this on the forum of Gronze, on the website caminosantiago.org of the Spanish Federation of the associations of the friends of the Camino or in the regional Galician press.
 
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I have not listened to this interview, but this is most likely not the way the pilgrims office would announce any new rules. I think this was just a misunderstanding / bad choice of words from the person being interviewed.
No, the Canon clarified it multiple times and in several different ways, as you can see in the transcript.

The 100K requirement remains, but not a 100K continuous walk into Santiago ; but a last stage of walking must be to the Cathedral.
 
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@SioCamino, if I remember correctly, you had been a volunteer at the Pilgrim Office and had been able to explain some new procedure clearly and accurately in the past - which is not a gift that everybody has. Do you have any contacts who would be in a position to confirm that there are indeed such new rules as described in the first post? I listened to the conversation in the video - it left me with some doubts.
 
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:
I do have to wonder about the logistics of such a move? do the 100 KM from SJPP and then bus it to Santiago? It does not seem to make sense.
 
I do have to wonder about the logistics of such a move? do the 100 KM from SJPP and then bus it to Santiago? It does not seem to make sense.
There are many alternative starting points for a Camino. Why single out SJPDP in particular if 100km on any recognised route is all that is required? Many other places would make far more sense.
 
The 2024 Camino guides will be coming out little by little. Here is a collection of the ones that are out so far.
It sounds like making a lot of things very complicated. I don't envy the volunteers in the pilgrim's office who have to figure out if the distance from town X anywhere in the world to town Y anywhere in the world is long enough to qualify for a compostela.

And also, how a pilgrim who starts in northern France is going to collect 2 stamps a day... I can tell you that 1 is already complicated if you are walking in the middle of nowhere and sleeping in salles de fêtes in villages with no facilities....

Plus all statistics down the drain indeed.
 
It sounds like making a lot of things very complicated.
It sounds to me like a simplification compared to the previous 100K/200K rules, in that it is a partial return to the earlier focus on the pilgrimage as a pilgrimage, rather than as a number of hiking routes that had been drifting too much away from that deeper purpose.

I like these changes personally.

They will help the Ways of Saint James as a whole, and not just in Western Europe -- but throughout the world.
And also, how a pilgrim who starts in northern France is going to collect 2 stamps a day...
The Canon made it fairly clear that this is not an expectation upon those walking in places where they are not available.
Plus all statistics down the drain indeed.
Not sure about that -- I think it's actually likely that the stats 2025 onwards will somewhat more accurately portray the real numbers, as many pilgrims ineligible under the old rules will instead be counted.

Not fully though, as those pilgrims not collecting their Compostela for other reasons and those not finishing in Santiago that year will still slip through the gaps.

Still, likely a massive increase in numbers from 2025 forwards, and not just from the Jubilee Year.

Which reminds me.

Jubilee OED :

1. a.1.a Jewish Hist. (More fully year of jubilee). A year of emancipation and restoration, which according to the institution in Lev. xxv was to be kept every fifty years, and to be proclaimed by the blast of trumpets throughout the land; during it the fields were to be left uncultivated, Hebrew slaves were to be set free, and lands and houses in the open country or unwalled towns that had been sold were to revert to their former owners or their heirs.

b.1.b fig. or transf. A time of restitution, remission, or release.


This release from the old 100K/200K rules is not without pertinence in this Jubilee Year, starting tomorrow.
 
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One of the benefits for veterans of multiple Camino adventures is that they are often not interested in receiving more Compostelas. We are free to simply walk a pilgrimage when and where it feels right without any "rules".

For many of us these changes have no actual meaning.
The end is near.IMG_0036 (1).webp
 
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