
A sign showing the way, located in
Italy.
The 'Via Francigena' is an ancient road to
Rome for those coming from France. It was an important
medieval road and
pilgrimage route connecting north-Western Europe with Rome and the harbours to
Jerusalem in
Apulia (
Bari,
Brindisi,
Otranto).
The pilgrimage to Rome
The Via Francigena was the major pilgrimage route to Rome during
Medieval times; even today pilgrims travel this route but in far fewer numbers than the
Way of St. James. The route was first documented in the
10th Century when the
Archbishop of Canterbury Sigeric the Serious travelled to Rome to see the
Pope in order to be
consecrated.
The Via Francigena is not a single 'road' in the strict sense. It comprises a number of possible routes which changed over the centuries as trade and pilgrimage developed. Depending on the time of year, the political situation and the relative popularity of the shrines of saints along the route, travellers may have taken one of three or four crossings of the
Alps and the
Apennines. The
Lombards paid for the maintenance and defence of the road as a trading route to the north from Rome, avoiding enemy held cities such as
Florence.
Usage
It is not strictly correct to use the name ''via Francigena'' for the whole route used by archibishop Sigeric in the year 990. This is because the name ''Francigena'' means "generated in France" in
Latin; therefore only the Italian part of the route can correctly be called "Francigena".
The Via Francigena today
Today those who make the pilgrimage to Rome on foot, horseback or bicycle still travel this route but in far fewer numbers than the
Way of St. James. There are fewer facilities for pilgrims than on the
Way of St. James and pilgrims are forced to camp out or stay in more expensive accommodation such as hotels and ''pensions''.
The Via Francigena was designated a
cultural route by the
Council of Europe in
1994.
In
November 2005, Italian politician
Romano Prodi announced he would revitalize the Via Francigena if elected
Prime Minister in the
2006 election.
On 11 August 2007, a group of 27 cyclists, including several members of Canterbury City Council set out from Canterbury Cathedral in an attempt to cycle the Via Francigena from Canterbury to Rome in 16 days to raise money for the restoration of Canterbury Cathedral and other charities.
See also
★
Way of St. James
★
Valdorcia
★
Ponte della Maddalena - a river crossing en route.
Literature
Kerschbaum & Gattinger, Via Francigena - DVD- Documentary, of a modern pilgrimage to Rome, ISBN: 3200005009, Verlag EUROVIA, Vienna 2005
External links
★
Information for pilgrims on the Via Francigena - Maps, History...
★
Via Francigena website
★
Via Francigena Association
★
Cyclelog of the route
★
Giovanni Caselli's site - La Via Francigena: Highway to Heaven
★
Via Francigena In Italy
★
Centro Studi Romei
★
European project : Pilgrims walks
★
European association : Via Francigena