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Following in Others' FootstepsAncient Paths of Europe
In Norway, one of the most panoramic routes on the Serene Hardangerfjord walk follows not in the footsteps of shepherds or traders but in those of monks. It was after settling near Lofthus in around 1150 that a small fraternity from York cut the 616 huge rock steps leading to the Hardangervidda Plateau. Although the spectacular views of the Hardangerfjord certainly make it worthwhile, it takes some effort to walk up the steps, and as you climb you can't help but empathise with the monks charged with laying them. Once finished, the steps would have been used regularly – the monks grew crops and hunted game on the plateau to supplement the fruit and vegetables that they grew by the fjord side for the monastery near Bergen.
Of course, pilgrims established many important routes right across Europe, one of the most famous of which is the Camino de Santiago, which crosses northern Spain before eventually reaching St James' tomb in the cathedral of Santiago de Compostela. Though none of our walking holidays specifically follows the Camino, you can walk along a short section of the route on the In the Footsteps of Pilgrims walk. On our Lake Lucerne holiday, the walk from Flueli-Ranft (a centre of pilgrimage in its own right as it was here that Switzerland's only saint, Niklaus von Flüe, spent much of his life in the hermitage) follows the Bruderklausweg, an early stage of the Camino for those coming from Switzerland, albeit in the wrong direction from Spain. Just as important – if not more so in fact – are the paths trodden for centuries by people as they went about their normal business, be it farming or trading or both. Our White Towns & Rugged Mountains walk in Andalucia follows several ancient paths and drovers' roads that have linked the villages since they were first built, while in the Cerdagne, in the eastern Pyrenees, you can follow part of a centuries-old transhumance route on the walk from Puigcerda to Villeneuve. Nowadays the cobbled trails of the Canary Islands and the stepped pathways of the Amalfi Coast that criss-cross the terraced mountainsides high above the sea offer thrilling walking, but these were the only means of communication between settlements until less than a century ago and must have been difficult to negotiate when leading a mule loaded with provisions.
Another walking holiday that follows a long-established trade route is the Bologna to Florence walk. Here, in the hills of Emilia Romagna and Tuscany, ancient mule tracks wind through dense beech forests and along broad, grassy ridges. The route is called the Via degli Dei (Route of the Gods) not because it was of religious significance (though Bologna's position made it an almost obligatory stop on any journey to Rome, so the area did see many pilgrims and men of the cloth) but because many of the surrounding mountains and villages are named after deities, for example Monte Venere (Mount Venus), Monte Adone (Mount Adonis) and the village of Monzuno (a contraction of 'Monte Juno'). The sense of journey you experience over the course of the holiday is enhanced by stays in traditional wayside inns that in some cases have provided hospitality to travellers for generations.
At Inntravel we are committed to the principles of responsible tourism. By incorporating ancient paths into our walking holidays wherever we can, we help ensure that they remain open to the public. ![]() |
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