Northern Spain Travel Tips - Santiago de Compostela & more
What to do in Northern Spain? I went to explore Galicia, met pilgrims in Santiago de Compostela and ate amazing Spanish food! Come with me on an adventure!
Visit the Cathedral de Santiago:
Find out more about the Camino de Santiago here:
Visit the mussel boat:
Visit the winery:
Check out my fellow traveller Paul here:
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Galicia, I'll be back!
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This video is sponsored by the Spanish Tourism Board
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Spanish History on the Camino de Santiago: A Hiking Adventure
Before you apply @ join faculty leader Nanette Hanks for a walk along the the bank of the Mississippi River with a group of students who previously walked the Camino with her.
MORE ABOUT THE ADVENTURE:
You will hike approximately 300 miles of the historic Camino de Santiago in northern Spain which follows ancient Roman roads and the pilgrimage path of the Crusades. Beginning in the town of Roncesvalles on the border between France and Spain, you will walk through several of the unique regions (Basque, Navarre, Rioja, Castille, Galicia) that comprise northern Spain and will gain an understanding for what makes this route uniquely Spanish and historically significant.
As you make your way across the Spanish countryside, you will discover and experience the many cultures (Germanic, Arab, Celtic) that have created modern day Spain and influenced the Camino. The Camino passes through the cities of Pamplona, Burgos, and Leon which are all rich with historic significance to Spanish and European history, and ends in the city of Santiago de Compostela. Drawing on literary, historical, and art historical references, you will learn about the more than 1,000 year-old route as well as experience it firsthand by visiting cathedrals, museums, monasteries, and ruins along the way.
Course Description
In this unique Global Seminar you will focus on three areas: the physical experience of hiking on the historic Camino de Santiago pilgrimage route in northern Spain, the cultural and historical experience of the villages and cities of Spain, and the personal experience of transformative travel.
Learn more about the Camino de Santiago by watching the film The Way, available on Amazon and Neflix.
This will be a very physically demanding program. You will be hiking approximately 15 miles, or 5–6 hours, almost every day of the program, rain or shine.
Housing & Meals
You will live in backpacker-style housing, such as hostels and hotels, with other program participants. A welcome meal, farewell meal, and daily breakfasts are included in the program fee. Additional meals can be taken in the housing or at local eateries.
Excursions
Excursions will illuminate the program coursework. These excursions will take place along the Camino de Santiago in northern Spain and may include: a city tour of Pamplona, a visit to a monastery, bodega, and wine museum in Irache, a cave tour in Atapuerca, a city tour of Leon, and the Museum of the Camino.
Group Flight
You will fly with the group to Spain, and can choose to fly back with the group, or deviate your return flight. The Learning Abroad Center will book your flight for you, and the cost is included in the program fee that will be posted to your student account. If you deviate your return flight, the additional cost will be billed to you directly. Do not book your own flight. You will receive information from the Learning Abroad Center regarding your seat on the group flight once your participation has been confirmed.
Learning Outcomes
Develop independence by challenging yourself in a new environment
Function as an effective team member by utilizing your personal strengths in a group setting
Explore a specific topic through experiential and interdisciplinary approaches
Faculty & Staff
This Global Seminar will be led by Nanette Hanks, an Assistant Dean in the College of Liberal Arts. She has degrees in Art History (with a focus on the medieval period in Spain) and Humanities from the University of Minnesota, extensive international experience, and has led hiking groups as a trail guide on the Camino de Santiago for the past 15 years.
About the Learning Abroad Center
Learning Abroad Center programs are:
Affordable: our programs are cost effective.
Academically strong: many programs have strong University of Minnesota departmental support and offer pre-approved courses for many majors.
Culturally rich: regardless of the program you choose, you will have the opportunity to immerse yourself in the local culture.
Expertly managed: our staff in Minnesota and abroad are trained professionals and are always available to answer your questions from extensive pre-departure advising and online orientations to reentry programming. Your safety and well-being are paramount, and we work hard to ensure you have a rewarding and safe experience abroad.
El Camino de Santiago ⛪️???????????? - Beginner Spanish - Places in Spain #3
The Easiest Videos to Learn Spanish!
The famous pilgrimage of El Camino de Santiago, AKA Way of St. James.
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This is a channel that tries to provide interesting listening practice for learners of Spanish. Get used to real Spanish used in context, and eventually develop a native-like intuition for the grammar and the vocabulary, together with a clear pronunciation.
The videos try to be easy enough for a complete beginner in the language to get the gist of the story and start picking up vocabulary.
They are based on the ALG method ( ) and Stephen Krashen's Comprehensible Input theory.
Read my blog to know more about it:
Why the Camino Del Santiago Was a Symbol of Spanish Defiance
In northern Spain lies a collection of stunning churches built in a line known as the Camino Del Santiago. They represented a symbol of defiance, a rallying cry against the Moorish invasion of Spain.
From the Series: Sacred Sites: Camino
Camino de Santiago Full Doumentary (The Way of St. James )
Camino de Santiago full documentary in english and spanish.
Camino de Santiago (The Way of Saint James) is the perfect mix of touristic-sports adventure and religious sentiment. This documentary shows all of the story from the origins until today.
The discovery of the sepulcher of the Apostle Santiago, in the first third of the IX century, compelled many Christians to make pilgrimages to Compostela doing the Camino de Santiago (Way of Saint James) to worship his relics.
This required the construction of a church. This building, besides guarding and honoring the relics of the Apostle and his disciples Teodoro and Atanasio, had to take in a greater number of pilgrims coming from the Peninsular kingdoms, as well as from the rest of Europe. The purpose of its builders was not only to construct the most perfect church dedicated to the cult of the pilgrims; they wanted to make Compostela a religious and artistic reference for the world, like Rome and Jerusalem.
These are the beginnings of a fascinating story, a fabulous saga spanning centuries carried out
by thousands of people united in their devotion to the figure of the Apostle Santiago, in a remote corner of Finisterre. They called it Compostela: the field of stars.
The present state of the Santiago Cathedral is the result of numerous changes, projects, works, remodeling; in short, an evolving and impassioned architectural and artistic creation developed throughout many centuries.
Camino de Santiago. The Temple of the Stars - Full Documentary
Even though Jerusalem, Rome and Santiago have been the three great destinations for pilgrims
since the Middle Ages, the Camino de Santiago (Way of Saint James) to Santiago is the only one that is still traveled the same way today as it was back then: on foot and with little else than a shoulder pouch.
It had been a long time since news of the discovery of the Santiago sepulcher had reached France. Those were dark and dangerous times.
Terror broke loose when the Saracen army flattened Compostela. Almanzor had destroyed its basilica and other churches and monasteries. Bishop Diego Peláez decided to build a new church
to replace the pre-Romanesque Basilica. We fly over the city of Santiago. From up here, we can see the cathedral and near it, the church of San Félix de Solovio.
And it is in this place where chronicles tell of a hermit known as Pelayo who, as he fasted, observed some lights shining on the ancient Roman citadel. Before such news, the bishop arrived at the site and discovered the entrance to a small sepulcher among the weeds.
A church was built above the sepulcher to worship the Apostle’s relics. Construction was finished in 830 and Bishop Teodomiro consecrated the first Church of Santiago.
In the year 1101, while in Santiago after being named bishop by Pope Paschal II Diego Gelmírez initiated his projects. The first would be the conclusion of the cathedral. It was apparent that if he wanted the Santiago church to become that great Apostolic see, it had to be at the vanguard of art.
To this end, he patronized continuous exchanges between Compostelan builders and the most advanced constructors of the times. Camino de Santiago (The Way of St. James) had definitely become a torrent of culutral and artistic exchange between Galicia and the rest of Europe.
Diego Gelmírez had achieved all of his goals: the construction of the cathedral was well on its way
and it was a benchmark for European Romanesque art;
And finally, on April 21 1211, Archbishop Pedro Muñiz, in the presence of King Alfonso IX,
consecrated the Romanesque cathedral of Santiago. The visits of Pope John Paul II and later Benedict XVI in the Holy Compostelan year of 2010, surrounded by a fervent multitude of pilgrims from all over the world, through Camino de Santiago ( Way of St. James) are a testimony to the magnificent vitality the Jacobean cult has today.
But notwithstanding all the changes, the works of Peláez and Gelmírez, of Masters Bernardo, Esteban, Mateo, and countless others, still remain unaltered and recognizable. In the spaces within its naves, columns, tribunes, chapels and porticos, the spirit of all those who contributed to its erection is conserved.
Thousands of pilgrims from around the world held each year Camino de Santiago (Way of St. James) to venerate the relics of the Apostle. Camino de Santiago (The Way of St. James) ends in the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela.
Learning Spanish on the Camino de Santiago
Do you need to know Spanish to travel the Camino de Santiago? Will you learn Spanish while walking? That depends on you!
I was expecting to improve my Spanish a lot while spending a month on the Camino de Santiago, but I didn’t realize I was gonna have to get creative.
10 Top Tips for Walking the Camino de Santiago
Having a wealth of Camino experience in our office we have come up with 10 essential tips for walking the Camino de Santiago. Everyone needs a little advice before heading out and these key Camino de Santiago tips will help you have a happier, more stress-free walk along Spain's pilgrimage route.
Download our free guide to the Camino de Santiago -
Take a look at our Camino de Santiago Tours -
Our essential Camino language blog -
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SANTIAGO DE COMPOSTELA, SPAIN: Rainy weekend at Hotel Costa Vella! | Ep. 40
We take a scenic drive along the Spanish coastline, spend the night in Aviles, and end up in a hair-raising off road adventure. When we finally arrive in Santiago de Compestela we are greeting by a delightful hotel and a beautiful town. We explore the highlights and wish we had more time in this historically rich town.
VISITED PLACES:
Sidrería Tierra Astur Avilés Espichas:
Hotel Costa Vella:
Mama Peixe Taberna:
Camino de Santiago:
Catedral de Santiago:
Restaurante, Cafetería La Flor:
Hotel Parador de Santiago de Compestela:
Museum of the Catedral de Santiago:
Botafumeiro de Catedral de Santiago:
Mercado de Abastos de Santiago:
Staircase at Museo del Pueblo Gallego:
Parque de Bonaval:
MUSIC:
Spanish Summer (Hanjo Gabler)
Honey Man (Duffmusiq)
Break - Instrumental Version (G9)
Lusso, Calma E Volutta (Bottega Baltazar)
OUR GEAR:
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ITEMS FEATURED IN THIS EPISODE:
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Baggu (Foldable Grocery Sack):
Thanks! Amy & Eric
Pilgrimages of Europe: Santiago de Compostela, Spain | Documentary Trailers
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Santiago de Compostela was one of the three holy cities of the world during the Middle Ages.
From far and wide pilgrims made their way on foot to the city in northwestern Spain to visit the shrine of the apostle, St. James.
According to the legend, James went to Spain after Christ's crucifixion to preach the gospel. On his return to Jerusalem, he was captured by King Herod and beheaded.
The friends and followers of James put the apostle's body in a boat and pushed it out to sea. After a journey of many months, the body, covered in seashells, washed ashore in Galicia on the western coast of Spain.
The shell later became the symbol of St. James Way. James was buried further inland.
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Sleep like a King in piece of Spain's history in Santiago de Compostela
Sleep like a King in piece of Spain's history in Santiago de Compostela
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Welcome to Santiago de Compostela, the capital of the Galicia region, Northern Spain’s most iconic city. This UNESCO Heritage Site is the final stop on the epic Camino de Santiago pilgrimage trail; its unique atmosphere, history and cobbled streets draw thousands of visitors each year.
Here, you will have the privilege of staying in a historic building in Spain. Probably the oldest hotel in the country, it is now a 5-star hotel and no other can beat its location, just right at the Plaza del Obradoiro overlooking Santiago's stunning Gothic Cathedral. There is even a guided tour inside the hotel for the curious travellers who want to know all the history of this spectacular building.
You will be wrapped in opulent luxury as you cross any of its four-arcaded courtyards. That's the perfect backdrop to round off a incredible gastronomic adventure around Northern Spain.
After a reinvigorating sleep, you will savour a sumptuous breakfast with breath-taking views of Santiago de Compostela's Gothic Cathedral.
You will experience an early morning culinary tour of the central farmers' market where colours and aromas combine to create an intoxicating gastronomic experience. There you will find the most succulent fruit and vegetables, freshest seafood, Galician octopus and the world famous dry-aged Galician Blond Beef. You will brush shoulders with the locals that arrive everyday to buy sparkling-fresh produce to take home.
After a lively morning in the market you will enjoy a more relaxed activity: a guided tour inside Santiago's world famous Gothic Cathedral, the culmination of the Camino de Santiago for hundreds of pilgrims who arrive everyday to hug Apostle Santiago after walking or cycling hundreds of kilometres.
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Craving for more? Check out this video with another amazing experience
The Celtic Music of Santiago de Compostela Spain - Raw Footage
Santiago de Compostela has deep Celtic roots. It's a very spiritual and musical town located on the north west coast of Spain... truly a delight to visit
Hi, I’m Dustin. Lawyer by day. Traveler by week. I love to travel and share my travel experiences. I’ve been all around the world. Subscribe to watch our fun, exciting, and sometimes educational travel adventures!
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Camino de Santiago - Hiking to Santiago de Compostela
Santiago de Compostela commonly known as Santiago is the capital of the autonomous community of Galicia in northwestern Spain.
The city has its origin in the shrine of Saint James the Great, now the city's cathedral, as destination of the Way of St. James, a leading Catholic pilgrimage route originated in the 9th century. In 1985 the city's Old Town was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Adventures in Spain | Madrid, Barcelona, Camino de Santiago ♡
“We live in a wonderful world that is full of beauty, charm and adventure. There is no end to the adventures we can have if only we seek them with our eyes open.” – Jawaharial Nehru
Thank you for watching! So much more to come! Please Like, Share, & Subscribe for more videos! xoxo
Spanish Read Aloud: el camino de santiago
Video game teaches Spanish and takes players down the famous Camino de Santiago
There are many ways to learn a foreign language. Some take classes, while others may choose to immerse themselves in a foreign culture. There's also the popular option of taking online courses from your home computer. .
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On the Spanish / Portuguese Border: Lou & Richie's Spanish Road Trip 5
Freshly squeezed orange juice, a bee sting and a very long walk to do my washing. Yes, just some of our highlights whilst we are on the border between Spain and Portugal.
Shall we cross the border into Portugal or carry on to our intended destination, Tarifa in Southern Spain? Decisions, decisions!!
The Spanish adventure continues!
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A SOLO JOURNEY | SPAIN | WALKING THE CAMINO FRANCES
In April 2017 I walked the Camino de Santiago from France to Santiago Compostela in Spain. The 800 kilometer walk took me 27 days to complete.
I decided to take on this journey after losing my father to multiple myeloma two months earlier. This was truly one of the most challenging and healing experiences of my life.
Penelope' adventures on the Camino de Santiago
Folk dance of Galicia Spain
The Camino (A Documentary by Edward Fleming)
A short documentary about The (El) Camino De Santiago, a pilgrimage across France and Spain.
I walked 100k of the Camino at 14. At age 16, I'm armed with a few cameras and ready to battle out the final stretch to Cape Finisterre.
More films by me (I'm older now!) at
Despite the short time I've had on the trail, I managed to meet a lot of people, discover a lot about myself loose some pounds. Writing this bio at 20, I want to thank everyone who watched this video, it saw a weird milestone in my life I didn't expect to receive in college. One day I will walk the full way and film it, I'm certain of that.
Website:
Email: edwardsound@icloud.com
Personal Youtube:
Music by Josh Kemp Stupid Cupid
Music by DJ Mentos My Squad
Music by DJ Mentos Meditation
Music by Tom Misch Man Like You
Music by Josh Kemp Four Letters
Music by DJ Mentos Growth
youtube.com/watch?v=-ItSDWBEgxE
Music by Tom Misch The Journey
Music by BenjiStacks Lucid
Music by Super Duper Angela
Special thanks to Pilgrim House, Isobel Dugen for walking with me, Gillian Kincaid Dugen for organising our route and supporting the project and Sarah Fleming for having faith in the idea and forcing me to interview people.
Lengthy Synopsis
For over a thousand years, pilgrims have been making their way on foot to the Spanish city of Santiago de Compostela, the resting place of the remains of Saint James. About 2.5 million people a year visit Santiago, over 200,000 of them walking the Camino, a pilgrimage across France and Spain. Traditionally, the Camino de Santiago should begin from the front door of your home. If you happened to live 50 kilometres away from the Cathedral, that was all you walked. If you live in Nottingham, like me, walking from your doorstep would take an inordinate amount of time. But, in fact, plenty of people in Europe do begin from their homes, a few weeks at a time over a number of years. So where did I begin my Camino? In 2013 I walked 116 kilometres from Sarria to Santiago in five days. This Easter, my challenge was to walk 90 kilometres in four days across hills, mountains and rivers from Santiago to Finisterre, The End of the World. Pilgrims from every background are today drawn to the Camino from all over the world. What is common to them all, is that they have left behind all that is familiar to them, in order to wake each day to a new stretch of road.
No two pilgrims are likely to experience or to understand the Camino in exactly the same way. Some will have walked one hundred kilometres, some five hundred, some more than a thousand. It is essential to travel as light as possible, as everything you need is carried on your back whilst walking roughly 20 kilometres each day. As a filmmaker, I had an excessive amount of equipment.
“The Way” is an inspirational film about Tom, a man who decides to walk the Camino after collecting the remains of his adult son, killed in a Pyrenees storm whilst walking the Camino. What Tom doesn’t plan on, is the profound impact the journey will have on his life. In a way, that very film had an impact on my life in that it inspired me to immediately plan to undertake the final aspect of the same journey, knowing that such an adventure would shape me as a human being at an informative stage in my life. There is a well known saying that the Camino begins when you reach the end. What does this mean to me? It is true that days of walking can produce fatigue, loneliness and pain. However, the sense of achievement that you get from completing such a journey is… indescribable. Life is a journey in itself, and I aim walk my life’s journey with the same enthusiastic and gutsy determination as I walked the Camino. Why did I walk the Camino? Well, for that very reason.
All rights reserved © Edward Fleming
Camino de Santiago) Daily Landscape Photos, walking 775 km, 32 days, Spain, 산티아고 순례길 32일 사진 카미노 스페인
Camino de Santiago in Spain: Daily Photos of Pilgrimage walking 775 km, 32 days, 산티아고 순례길 32일 사진, 카미노 데 싼티아고
If you know how much I love you, you’d cry of joy.
Exactly ten years ago, on a summer day, I was walking through the Tibetan Himalayas. I walked with a very painful headache from altitude sickness, along the muddy trails, chitchatting with my Chinese friends in the mountain rain. I remember one day I took off in a car and sped without any direction, suddenly surprised by the unforgettable scenery of a lake and mountains, reflected by the glow of sunset.
It was ten years ago that I was touched to tears by the impression of Dalai Buddhists, who walked hundreds and thousands of kilometers from the door of their house to the Tibetan capital, Lhasa. And ten years later this summer, I am walking to Santiago de Compostela on two clay shoes and it has been over 30 days so far.
(About the Book at Amazon: )
“We have to be brave to say hello and also to say goodbye.
This is one of the things that I learned from Camino de Santiago: because we were heading to the same destination, we could become friends in the same boat. But as time went, we slowly recognized that one day we should say goodbye and go our own way after the pilgrimage. It was difficult to say goodbye to really good friends.
This is a video of photo collection traveled through The way of Saint James, aka, Camino de Santiago, also in the names of Peregrinatio Compostellana, Pilgrimage of Compostela, O Camiño de Santiago leading from Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port to the shrine of the apostle Saint James the Great in the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia in northwestern Spain.
You will need to get a pilgrim's passport (also called credencial) and follow the sign of shells or yellow arrows. You will experience many types of albergue or religious dormitory/bed for all journey. I hope you don't meet any bed bugs that I suffered from in hot summer.
The main and popular routes are Camino Francés (French Way) , Camino Primitivo (Original Way) , Camino Portugué (the Portuguese Way) and Camino del Norte (Northern Way).
Day 0. From Slovakia to Saint Jean in France
Day 1. Drinking raindrops on leaves (to Roncesvalles)
Day 2. Loving spicy noodles (to Zubiri)
Day 3. Are you Japanese? (to Pamplona)
Day 4. I want BBQ(to Puente la Reina)
Day 5. You are fat, really? (to Estella)
Day 6. Race discrimination? (to Los Arcos)
Day 7. Oh, my chili pasta (to Logrono)
Day 8. No energy (to Najera)
Day 9. Should I pay for the entrance to “Chicken” church? (to Santo Domingo de la Calzada)
Day 10. Holy water (to Belorado)
Day 11. My legs are short (to Ages)
Day 12. Tapas with beauties (to Burgos)
Day 13. Wanted to escape from bed bugs (to Hontanas)
Day 14. Two girls with long legs (to Boadilla del Camino)
Day 15. Please, stop complaining (to Carrion de los Condes)
Day 16. My beer belly is gone (to Terradillos de los Templarios)
Day 17. Why so many Korean pilgrims? (to El Burgo Ranero)
Day 18. The best side dish for alcohol (to Mansilla de las Mulas)
Day 19. I forgive you because I like the wind (to Leon)
Day 20. Right knee has a problem (to San Martin del Camino)
Day 21. Because it is a pilgrim road (to Astorga)
Day 22. I want to see the stars (to Foncebadon)
Day 23. It’s the same wind (to Ponferrada)
Day 24. Don’t be lonely (to Villafranca del Bierzo)
Day 25. Any music, please (to O Cebreiro)
Day 26. How could it be? (to Triacastela)
Day 27. I was not lonely (to Sarria)
Day 28. Can we spend more time here? (to Gonzar)
Day 29. Hurt is hurt (to Melide)
Day 30. Friends will meet again (to O Pedrouzo)
Day 31. Why did you bring me here? (to Santiago de Compostela)
Day 32+. “We have to be brave to say hello and also to say goodbye.
Enchanted Journey by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
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Artist:
안녕하세요. 동유럽 사는 콜린 - 최성옥 쌤입니다. 오늘은 2016년에 카미노 여행의 사진첩을 공유합니다. 775 km, 32일이 넘는 스페인 산티아고 순례길, 그 도보 여행 동안의 추억들을 되새겨보고자 합니다.
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