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Way of St Andrews





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The Way of St Andrews (Spanish: El Camino de San Andreas, French: Chemin de Saint-Andrews, German: der Weg von Saint Andrews, Italian: il cammino di Saint Andrews) is a Christian pilgrimagetoSt Andrews CathedralinFife, on the east coast of Scotland, UK, where the relics of the apostle, Saint Andrew, were once kept. A group started a revival in 2012 introducing new routes.

Map of Scotland with pilgrim ways May 4, 2020

Historic pilgrimage to St Andrews

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A gloss in the Annals of Ulster indicates that sometime in the mid-sixth century, Cainnech of Aghaboe built a small cell at Cennrigmonaid, an old name for St. Andrews.[1] A church was likely founded around the beginning of the 8th century, probably by Óengus I mac Fergusa. Túathalán (died c. 747) was an 8th-century abbot of Kinrimund monastery. He is known only from his obituary in the Annals of Ulster.[2] Túathalán is the first cleric associated with a church establishment there. Archaeological excavations have shown that from as early as the eighth century, a ferry crossing to Earlsferry, near ElieinFife was in existence, serving pilgrims on their way to the shrine of Saint Andrew.[3]

Around 877, Causantín mac Cináeda built a new church for the CuldeesatKilrymont.[4]

By the early twelfth century, the town of St Andrews was struggling to cope with the increasing numbers.

 
Prayers before open air mass during New Dawn celebrations

At this stage the king, Alexander I of Scotland, recognized the need for a larger church and a system to manage the flow of visiting pilgrims, and gave royal encouragement and funds to Robert, the newly elected bishop. Soon started the building of a great new cathedral complex approached by four main streets from the west, probably an accidental imitation of the shape of the scallop shell, the universal badge of pilgrimage.[citation needed] This cathedral, dominated by the tower to St Rule, became one of the largest buildings in Europe.

Alexander's successor, King David I of Scotland, continued to back the rebuilding of St Andrews and, furthermore, promised royal protection to pilgrims.  Numbers steadily increased, mainly from two routes. From the south-east, pilgrims arrived mainly from the continent at North Berwick where they took the ferry to the south coast of Fife arriving at Earlsferry. They travelled the last 15 miles on foot to St Andrews along a track the width of "a donkey with two panniers". From the south, pilgrims arrived at modern South Queensferry and were ferried across the Firth of Forth before proceeding to St Andrews, a journey of around fifty miles.

Pilgrimage began to fall off as wars wracked Scotland and, even more so, with the coming of the Scottish Reformation. In 1559, the Protestant reformer John Knox preached a sermon in St Andrews, urging the pillage and destruction of the cathedral. The relics were removed to safety, but the interior of the cathedral was sacked, and the building was abandoned, to be replaced by a parish church, ending the tradition of pilgrimage. The cathedral was allowed to fall into ruin, and much of its stone was removed for use elsewhere in the proceeding years.[5]

Revival of the pilgrimage tradition

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The Way of St Andrews has seen renewed interest, with a recent revival campaign led by lay volunteers from the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St Andrews and Edinburgh.[6][7]

 
View from St Andrews pier, looking west towards the ruined cathedral

St Margaret's Way, named after the Margaret of Denmark, Queen of Scotland, was blessed and inaugurated in July 2012 during High Mass in Edinburgh's Roman Catholic Metropolitan Cathedral, and, afterwards, the pilgrims congregated round Eduardo Paolozzi's sculpture, "The Big Foot", an allegory for pilgrimage. There were about fifty pilgrims. The pilgrimage finished at St Andrews with an open-air procession and High Mass in the ruins of the cathedral and was covered by the BBC with interviews given by a cardinal and a Presbyterian minister.

Routes

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References

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  • ^ Odden, Per Einar. "Den hellige Túathalán av Cennrígmonaid (d. ~747)", Den katolske kirke, 19 August 2013
  • ^ Hall, Derek and Bowler, David. "North Berwick, East Lothian: its archaeology revisited", Proc Soc Antiq Scot, 127 (1997), 659-675
  • ^ Raymond Lamont-Brown, St Andrews: City by the Northern Sea (Edinburgh: Berlinn, 2006), 9.
  • ^ "St Andrews Cathedral History". Historic Scotland. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  • ^ "Following an ancient pilgrim route to St Andrews". BBC News. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  • ^ "Supporters hope revived 'Way of St Andrews' will attract tourists". The Scotsman. Retrieved 15 May 2020.
  • ^ "St Margaret's Way". The Way of St. Andrews Pilgrimage. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  • ^ GmbH, Bikemap. "Route: St Margaret's Loop (To Dunfermline)". Bikemap. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  • ^ GmbH, Bikemap. "Route: St Margaret's Elbow- via Crail and Fife Ness to St Andrews". Bikemap. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  • ^ GmbH, Bikemap. "Route: St Andrews Circuit". Bikemap. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  • ^ "St Duthac's Way". The Way of St. Andrews Pilgrimage. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  • ^ GmbH, Bikemap. "Route: Edinburgh (East route) to Rosslyn Chapel". Bikemap. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  • ^ "St Columba's Way". The Way of St. Andrews Pilgrimage. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  • ^ "St Ninian's Way: Carlisle to St Andrews". The Way of St. Andrews Pilgrimage. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  • ^ "St Wilfrid's Way". The Way of St. Andrews Pilgrimage. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  • ^ "The Ladywell Way". The Way of St. Andrews Pilgrimage. Retrieved 25 January 2021.
  • Bibliography

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    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Way_of_St_Andrews&oldid=1106914312"
     



    Last edited on 27 August 2022, at 04:03  





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