European Medieval
Pilgrimage Project - Welcome and Introduction
In a world of limited communication and
faced with the difficulties and dangers of travel, the life of medieval
people was very insular and their world was very small. Undertaking a pilgrimage was one of the rare
occasions that allowed the peoples of medieval Europe to experience
communities different to their own. The word “pilgrim” actually comes from the Latin word “pelegrínus”,
meaning “stranger”. In itself, the word says much about the close, closed nature
of medieval society. A person was born and baptized, married and died
within the shadow of the parish
church. Many would never experience
being anywhere else.
Pilgrimage
was a spontaneous, popular movement. It involved people from many
different classes and from all the nations of today's Europe. The reasons for
undertaking pilgrimage varied from person to person; but the
motive
usually had something to do with sin and a desire to avoid the spiritual
consequences of having committed it. There is evidence of pilgrimages
taking place as early as the 4th century, from Bordeaux to
Jerusalem; but
pilgrimage was most important from the 11th to the 14th
century. During this time, pilgrims travelled to holy sites all over Europe. They visited the places where religious heroes had lived and died, where
miracles had been performed and where physical evidence of both heroes and
miracles (relics) remained. It was
perhaps the first truly European experience.
It may seem strange that so many people would
journey
such great distances, at such great personal risk, for the
sake of conviction. To better appreciate the motivation, we
must have both a clear view of
the power of the medieval
church
but also we must also begin to understand the
mentalité of people so willing to believe the
legends and myths of the time.
This is a project with long-term ambitions.
We have begun by constructing this skeletal website that introduces the
school student to the world of the medieval pilgrim. There are
links
to other 'pilgrimage' websites and eventually there will be a range
of activities.
For now, students across
Europe are invited to explore the pilgrimage traditions of
their own communities and to share their research with a
wider European learning community. Students and teachers may
wish to send us their contributions, or better still, make
their own website to which we can place a link. In time, we
hope that this project might become an empathetic entry
point into medieval life; a virtual journey through the eyes
of the pilgrim. But it will always be an opportunity for
real communication between schools in different parts of
Europe in the 21st century.
Website designed and
maintained by Richard Jones-Nerzic -
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