The Via Francigena (), also known as Francisca or Romea, is an ancient road and pilgrimage route running from the cathedral city of Canterbury in England, through France and Switzerland, to Rome and then to Apulia, Italy, where there were ports of embarkation for the Holy Land. It was known in Italy as the Via Francigena ("the road that comes from France") or the Via Romea Francigena ("the road to Rome that comes from France"). In Middle Ages times it was an important road and pilgrimage route for those wishing to visit the Holy See and the tombs of the apostles Saint Peter and Paul.
At the end of the 10th century Sigeric, the Archbishop of Canterbury, used the Via Francigena to and from Rome in order to receive his pallium; he recorded his route and his stops on the return journey,The transcript, formerly in the Cottonian Library, is now in the British Library (Cotton Tiberius B.v., folios 34 and 35; On-line map of Sigeric's route but nothing in the document suggests that the route was then new, nor if he made the journey by foot or on horseback.
Later itineraries to Rome include the Leiðarvísir og borgarskipan of the Icelandic traveller Nikolás Bergsson (in 1154) and the one from Philip Augustus of France (in 1191).Nikolás is noted in F. P. Magoun, Jr., "The Italian Itinerary of Philip II (Philippe-Auguste) in the Year 1191", Speculum 17.3 (July 1942:367–376) p. 367 note 2 Two somewhat differing maps of the route appear in manuscripts of Matthew Paris, Historia Anglorum, from the 13th century.
The Welsh king Rhodri Mawr in 880 and his grandson Hywel Dda in 945 are both known to have visited Rome towards the end of their lives, but it is not known whether they went by land or by sea via the Straits of Gibraltar. The Benedictine William of St-Thierry used the roads towards Rome on several occasions at the end of the 11th century. The return journey by sea was likely to be easier, thanks to the prevailing south-westerly winds, but tacking down to the Mediterranean would have made a very long journey indeed.
The Via Francigena was not a single road, like a Roman road, paved with stone blocks and provided at intervals with a change of horses for official travellers. Rather, it comprised several possible routes that changed over the centuries as trade and pilgrimage waxed and waned. Depending on the time of year, the political situation, and the relative popularity of the shrines of the saints situated along the route, travellers may have used any of three or four crossings of the Alps and the Apennine Mountains. The Lombards financed the maintenance and security of the section of road through their territories as a trading route to the north from Rome, avoiding enemy-held cities such as Florence. Unlike Roman roads, the Via Francigena did not connect cities but relied more on .
Modern pilgrims from England would follow Sigeric's route in the reverse order, and so would set off from the zero milestone in the South Porch of Canterbury Cathedral. Pilgrim passports are available from The Beaney Museum in Canterbury or from the information office of the Cathedral. Canons based at Canterbury Cathedral can also be arranged to offer blessings to pilgrims setting off on the journey. Modern pilgrims would then follow the route, walking out of Canterbury via St Martin's Church, Canterbury, which is the oldest church in England still in use as a Church. Heading onwards, pilgrims pick up the first stamp in their pilgrim passport at the village church of St. Mary's in Patrixbourne. It is possible to "Champ" and stay by arrangement at St. Mary's. Heading on towards the English coast, pilgrims would travel through the Kentish villages of Womenswold and Woolage Green before arriving in Shepherdswell which is the end of the first stage (of 79 stages). The second stage continues to Dover through the Waldershare Park Estate and then joins the old Roman Road at Studdal outside Dover, to walk into the town. Pilgrims then cross the English Channel to Sumeran (now called Sombres), landing at the village of Wissant. The route continues through Guînes (Sigeric's Gisne), Thérouanne (Teranburh), Bruay (Bruaei) and Arras (Atherats), before continuing on to Reims, Châlons-sur-Marne, Bar-sur-Aube, Langres, Champlitte, Besançon, Pontarlier, Lausanne and Saint-Maurice. From Saint-Maurice, the route traverses the Great St. Bernard Pass to Aosta and then to Ivrea, Vercelli, Pavia, Fidenza, Pontremoli, Filattiera, Aulla, Luni, Lucca, San Gimignano, Poggibonsi, Siena, San Quirico d'Orcia, Bolsena, Viterbo, Sutri and finally Rome.
+ Sigeric's journey compared to today's route ! No. | Today's stages of the Via Francigena | ||||
Across the English Channel | |||||
19.7 | |||||
20.2 | |||||
15.7 | |||||
23.9 | |||||
13.2 | |||||
15.1 | |||||
19.0 | |||||
33.6 | |||||
26.2 | |||||
25.3 | |||||
3.0 | |||||
29.2 | |||||
17.0 | |||||
33.0 | |||||
18.6 | |||||
4.5 | |||||
20.1 | |||||
16.3 | |||||
28.1 | |||||
25.8 | |||||
27.0 | |||||
25.7 | |||||
17.8 | |||||
26.9 | |||||
32.9 | |||||
40.9 | |||||
27.0 | |||||
27.7 | |||||
5.5 | |||||
20.6 | |||||
16.4 | |||||
17.0 | |||||
27.0 | |||||
9.8 | |||||
18.0 | |||||
17.0 | |||||
40.2 | |||||
Orbe | |||||
32.0 | |||||
12.9Distances given by Ingrid Retterath: Via Francigena von Lausanne nach Rom. Outdoor guide Bd. 201. Conrad Stein Verlag 2011. | |||||
11.3 | |||||
8.4 | |||||
5.9 | |||||
12.7 | |||||
18.0 | |||||
17.0 | |||||
18.5 | |||||
15.4 | |||||
13.8 | |||||
6.3 | |||||
25.6 | |||||
15.9 | |||||
22.3 | |||||
22.4 | |||||
15.9 | |||||
25.2 | |||||
21.4 | |||||
16.2 | |||||
28.6 | |||||
19.7 | |||||
14.2 | |||||
18.1 | |||||
13.5 | |||||
18.1 | |||||
27.4 | |||||
38.2 | |||||
Piacenza | |||||
26.4 | |||||
22.3 | |||||
10.8 | |||||
9.7 | |||||
9.2 | |||||
19.8 | |||||
10.4 | |||||
29.4 | |||||
Pontremoli | |||||
19.1 | |||||
15.3 | |||||
16.3 | |||||
12.7 | |||||
14.8 | |||||
15.8 | |||||
8.2 | |||||
24.2 | |||||
10.6 | |||||
19.7 | |||||
4.9 | |||||
7.6 | |||||
12.1 | |||||
12.2 | |||||
14.5 | |||||
20.5/25.5 | |||||
Gracciano (Pieve d'Elsa. Part of Colle di Val d'Elsa) | |||||
Badia a Isola. Part of Monteriggioni | |||||
3.5 | |||||
20.5 | |||||
17.9 | |||||
9.8 | |||||
5.7 | |||||
13.5 | |||||
7.4 | |||||
5.3 | |||||
27.4 | |||||
10.7 | |||||
13.8 | |||||
20.2 | |||||
18 | |||||
18.7 | |||||
17.9 | |||||
22.1 | |||||
22.3 | |||||
25.6 | |||||
14.8 | |||||
As of 2016, the old guest houses dedicated to pilgrims were not reconditioned by tourist operators, due to the lack of economic return.
In England, the Via Francigena starts at the southern portico of Canterbury’s cathedral where the milestone zero of the route is located. "The Via Francigena in England", viefrancigene.org The route passes through part of the county of Kent, from Canterbury to the ferries at Dover.
In France, the Via Francigena (given the Grande Randonnée designation 'GR145') goes through the régions Hauts-de-France, Grand-Est and Bourgogne-Franche-Comté before reaching the Swiss border.
In Switzerland, the Via Francigena (with the route designation '70') goes through the cantons of Vaud and Valais.
In Italy the Via Francigena goes through the Aosta Valley, Piedmont, Lombardy, Emilia-Romagna, Tuscany and finally about halfway through Lazio to Rome.
Walkers could choose to walk along the EuroVelo EV5 cycling route which bears the name "Via Francigena". However, this EuroVelo route varies substantially from Sigeric's route and the one given by the Via Francigena Association.
In 1994 the Via Francigena was designated a Cultural Route, and in 2004 a Major Cultural Route.
In November 2009, the Italian government launched a project to recover the Italian leg of it. The object of the plan is to recover the entire route (disjointed parts of which are already signposted) "not only in spiritual and religious terms but also in terms of the environment, architecture, culture, history, wine and cuisine and sport". The initiative was promoted by the Tuscany, which hosts of the Via, and which presented a plan detailing the low environmental impact infrastructures to be created. The plan will be shared with other local authorities located along the route as an encouragement to carry out similar recovery work. 128-page PDF in Italian, with plans and pictures Tuscany has also announced cooperation with the Opera Romana Pellegrinaggi (ORP), the Holy See's organisation for encouraging pilgrimages.
The final stretch, from Rome to the ports of embarkation for Jerusalem, has been renamed Via Francigena nel Sud ("Via Francigena in the South (Italy)") or else Vie Francigene del Sud ("The Francigena Ways to the South").
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