Skip to main content

Camino Portugues


The Camino Portgues runs from Lisbon to Santiago a distance of 620km although most pilgrims choose to start in Porto which is 230km from Santiago. The route runs close to the coast (indeed there is a possibility to walk along the coast for some of the route) and the route leads you through Barcelos (where there is another version of the Pilgrim and the Cockerel story), Tui and Padron (famous for its peppers and as the spot where the stone boat carrying Saint James was supposed to have landed). Historically this was the route used by Queen Isabel of Portugal when she made a Pilgrimage to Santaigo.
Image from http://www.gregspurgin.com/walking-the-camino-in-portugal/ (a blog written by a couple who walked from Lisbon to Santiago)



Initially from Lisbon there is a lot of road walking and some of the Way after Porto is on cobbled roads which are tiresome on the feet. It is well waymarked after Porto from where you will also see blue arrows pointing towards Fatima another centre for Pilgrimage.



As this route is close to the Atlantic the weather can be changeable so it can be just as wet as Galicia although it is quite hot during Summer so Autumn and Spring are better times to go.
Before Porto Pilgrim accommodation is more sparse but after this there are albergues in Rates, Barcelos, Ponte de Lima, Rubiaes, Valenca de Minho, Tui, Porrino, Mos, Redondela, Cestantes, Pontevedra and Padron. The Portuguese pilgrims’ Association Via Lusitana has a list of accommodation in both countries at http://www.vialusitana.org/en/albergues_eng/

In 2015 43, 137 Pilgrims (16.44% of the total) arrived in Santiago having walked the Camino Portugues compared to 172, 206 (65.61%) who travelled on the Camino Frances making the Camino Portugues the second most popular Camino (statistics taken from   http://peregrinossantiago.es/eng/pilgrims-office/statistics/?anio=2015&mes=).                 

Guidebooks:
  • The Confraternity of Saint James publishes two guides: ‘The Camino Portugués, Lisbon to Porto’ and ‘The Camino Portugués, Porto to Santiago’ both published in 2014 both of which are available from their shop or to download for a donation at http://www.csj.org.uk/planning-your-pilgrimage/csj-guides-and-updates/
  • John Brierley’s guide ‘A Pilgrim’s Guide to the Camino Portugués’  was last published in 2015 and is available from  http://www.findhornpress.com/categories/nature-travel/camino for £15 (or just the maps are available for £10 or for download for $10 [I couldn't find a price in pounds])
  • The Associacão Dos Amigos Do Caminho Portugues de Santiago, Ponte de Lima publishes ‘Camino Portugués Porto Santiago – the Portuguese Way’ which is available in Ponte de Lima. 













Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Camino Primitivo

The Camino Primitivo (or the Original Way) is reportedly the very first Camino Way to Santiago in the 9 th century when most of Spain was under the control of the Moors and it runs from near the city of Ovideo in Asturias as it starts in Villavicosa (which also lies on the Camino Norte so many people follow this Way from   Basque city of San Sebastian (Donosti in Basque) or in from the French border at Irun ( this route then hugs the Bay of Biscay passing through Guernica, Bilbao, Santander, Llanes before going under the Picos de Europa and then heads along the coast to Ovideo) before branching off onto the Primitivo which goes across the mountains and through the city of Lugo before joining the Frances at Melide. The route is 320km long. Image taken from https://viaalpina2013.wordpress.com/2013/04/14/camino-del-norte-camino-primitivo/

Symbols of the three main Christian Pilgrimages

The symbol of the Pilgrim to Santiago is the Scallop shell  of which many can be found on the coast of Galicia and it is actually a symbol of the Pilgrimage (and has become a symbol of other Christian Pilgrimages too) partly because you could find the shell easily there and so could go back home and show it off as proof that you had done the Pilgrimage. It has also been included in carvings in some Churches.

Pilgrims' Trail to Saint Michels Mont, France

I have only walked two of the Camino routes (the Frances and Portuguese) and still want to try many of the others and yet I am also finding other Pilgrimage routes that I want to walk - I did the Pilgrims' Way in the summer which starts from Winchester which is also the starting point for the Pilgrims' Trail a 155 mile route that finishes at Mont St Michel in Normandy, France. The cult of saint Michel was popular in Britain from the 9th century and the Pilgrims walking this way were called Miquelots and many Pilgrims on their way to Santiago. The route is marked by green way markers in Hampshire taking walkers from Winchester to Bishop's Waltham to Southwick and then to Portsmouth where ferries are caught to France and Way markers become blue. Tradition says that, in 709 Saint Michael the Archangel appeared to the bishop of Avranches, Saint Aubert, and told him to build a chapel in his honour on the island. The bishop obeyed and soon sent a group of monks over...