![]() Lisbon, Santarem, Coimbra, Oporto, Barcelos, Ponte de Lima and Valença do Minho became a vertical route that crossed the Portuguese country from south to north creating a road network designed to reach the bank of the river Miño and make the leap to Galician lands. King Manuel I of Portugal (The Fortunate) and his pilgrimage from Lisbon in 1502, who ordered the installation of a lamp to light day and night the Cathedral of Santiago, the Jesuit Fathers and their route in 1543 from Coimbra, the Portuguese painter, humanist and architect Francisco de Holanda in 1549, the bishop of Tui in 1604 or the viscount of Ponte de Lima in 1610 were other representatives of the nobility and the clergy who contributed to the establishment of the Portuguese route as an important pilgrimage route to the tomb of the Apostle. She was buried in Coimbra with a pilgrim staff as described before her death. Documentary reports of these events are still in force, such as the case of the pilgrimage of Doña Isabel de Portugal who, after walking the After walking the Camino to Santiago in the 14th century, she offered before the altar of the Apostle her crown of Empress of the Holy Roman Empire and, after her death, she became known as the “Holy Queen”. Numerous representatives of the nobility, kings and high clerics contributed with their pilgrimages to establish a Jacobean devotion that would gradually increase until consolidating itself as one of the most frequented in our days. The cultural and economic reasons, created human ties between the neighboring territories that prevailed in the time, giving form to a route with a rich history that would keep numerous cultural and commercial exchanges between Galicia and its neighboring country. Pilgrims who left Portuguese lands towards the north of the peninsula did so for more varied reasons than spiritual ones. The importance of this route began to be latent from the twelfth century, after the independence of Portugal commanded by King Alfonso I. ![]() The fact of not being overcrowded, its great natural beauty and allows us to travel two countries, make this route, a highly recommended option to walk to the Galician capital. The signposting of the route is correct, especially in the Galician territory and the number of establishments is growing with an extensive public and private hostel service, especially from Porto. It’s a easy ride to the finish line through magical paths that cross forests, villages, pazos and fortresses while saving rivers over medieval bridges.Ĭhapels, churches and convents are our constant travel companions in this adventure that consolidates each year with more strength among the pilgrims, coming to situate the Portuguese Way as the most traveled of all the ways in the last years, only behind the most famous of the routes, the French. It crosses O Porriño, Redondela, Pontevedra, Caldas de Reis or Padrón before reaching Santiago and being able to hug the image of the Apostle. ![]() Two routes are even drawn, one of them known as the Portuguese Way along the coast that reaches Galician lands through A Guarda, passes through Baiona and Vigo and connects in Redondela with the other slope that enters Galicia through Tui, the most popular and recurrent.
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