
My first pilgrimage to Santiago
Description
Book Introduction
What information is essential for walking the Camino de Santiago?
When I first decided to walk the Camino de Santiago
Guidebook for Pilgrims
It contains essential information centered around the questions asked in each lecture.
I was at a loss as to how to get to Spain and start the Camino de Santiago.
It starts with that curiosity.
Contains only the information on the Camino de Santiago that pilgrims who are thinking of walking for the first time want.
If you are planning to walk the Camino de Santiago for the first time, it is important to walk the Camino de Santiago, but it is even more important to know how to get there.
I walked for a long time, but I also gathered and supplemented the necessary information through long lectures on the Camino de Santiago.
The author, who has walked the Camino de Santiago for a long time, was curious about what kind of information pilgrims who were about to set out for the first time would want, so he gathered information by continuously talking with them.
And it contained that information.
In Camino de Santiago, Camino means 'way', de means 'of', and Santiago is the Spanish name for Jacob, one of the 12 disciples of Jesus.
Jacob (Santiago), a disciple of Jesus, was executed around 44 AD.
His followers put his remains on a stone boat and set it adrift, and it is said that the boat arrived in Galicia, a region in northwestern Spain.
Santiago de Compostela, the destination of the Camino de Santiago, is located in the Galicia region, and Santiago's remains are buried in the city's cathedral.
The route began around 950 AD when Europeans began making pilgrimages to Santiago.
The path created when this pilgrimage began is the 'Camino de Santiago'.
This route, which has a history of nearly 1,000 years and was forgotten for a while, became more widely known to the world when Pope John Paul II visited Santiago de Compostela in 1982 and Paulo Coelho published the novel “The Pilgrim” in 1987.
The Camino de Santiago pilgrimage route, which was closed in 2020 due to the coronavirus, reopened in the fall of 2021 and is attracting pilgrims from all over the world who have been waiting for the pilgrimage.
This is a guidebook for first-time pilgrims on the Camino de Santiago, created by walking the Camino in the fall of 2021, using the latest information.
When I first decided to walk the Camino de Santiago
Guidebook for Pilgrims
It contains essential information centered around the questions asked in each lecture.
I was at a loss as to how to get to Spain and start the Camino de Santiago.
It starts with that curiosity.
Contains only the information on the Camino de Santiago that pilgrims who are thinking of walking for the first time want.
If you are planning to walk the Camino de Santiago for the first time, it is important to walk the Camino de Santiago, but it is even more important to know how to get there.
I walked for a long time, but I also gathered and supplemented the necessary information through long lectures on the Camino de Santiago.
The author, who has walked the Camino de Santiago for a long time, was curious about what kind of information pilgrims who were about to set out for the first time would want, so he gathered information by continuously talking with them.
And it contained that information.
In Camino de Santiago, Camino means 'way', de means 'of', and Santiago is the Spanish name for Jacob, one of the 12 disciples of Jesus.
Jacob (Santiago), a disciple of Jesus, was executed around 44 AD.
His followers put his remains on a stone boat and set it adrift, and it is said that the boat arrived in Galicia, a region in northwestern Spain.
Santiago de Compostela, the destination of the Camino de Santiago, is located in the Galicia region, and Santiago's remains are buried in the city's cathedral.
The route began around 950 AD when Europeans began making pilgrimages to Santiago.
The path created when this pilgrimage began is the 'Camino de Santiago'.
This route, which has a history of nearly 1,000 years and was forgotten for a while, became more widely known to the world when Pope John Paul II visited Santiago de Compostela in 1982 and Paulo Coelho published the novel “The Pilgrim” in 1987.
The Camino de Santiago pilgrimage route, which was closed in 2020 due to the coronavirus, reopened in the fall of 2021 and is attracting pilgrims from all over the world who have been waiting for the pilgrimage.
This is a guidebook for first-time pilgrims on the Camino de Santiago, created by walking the Camino in the fall of 2021, using the latest information.
index
Santiago Janus
The Four Seasons of the Camino de Santiago
How to Plan Your Camino de Santiago
Intro
Things to see while walking the Camino de Santiago
Teaching for the Camino de Santiago
They say you walk the French Way on the Camino de Santiago. Where is the French Way?
When is the best time of year to walk?
How long would it take to walk about 800km?
Is it dangerous or easy to get lost while walking the Camino de Santiago?
What should I prepare?
What is the most problematic physical abnormality when walking?
What should I do if I get a blister on my foot?
How do you eat?
Are there any special terms you hear on the Camino de Santiago?
Where do pilgrims stay?
Why walk the Camino de Santiago?
A quick sketch of the Camino de Santiago
BEST SPANISH FOOD / Spanish Food Especially Loved by Koreans
How to Plan a Spain & Camino de Santiago Itinerary / Recommended Itinerary
Currency exchange / SIM card
Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port, the first village encountered on the Camino de Santiago pilgrimage route
Camino de Santiago IN
33-day schedule
Day 1 | Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port → Roncesvalles
Day 2 | Roncesvalles → Subiri
Day 3 | Subiri → Pamplona
Day 4 | Pamplona → Puente la Reina
Day 5 | Puente la Reina → Estella
Day 6 | Estella → Los Arcos
Day 7 | Los Arcos → Logroño
Day 8 | Logroño → Najera
Day 9 | Najera → Santo Domingo de Calzada
Day 10 | Santo Domingo de Calzada → Belorado
Day 11 | Belorado → Ajes
Day 12 | Ajes → Burgos
Day 13 | Burgos → Ornios
Day 14 | Ornios → Castro Harris
Day 15 | Castro Harris → Fromista
Day 16 | Fromista → Carrion de los Condes
Day 17 | Carrión de los Condes → Terradillos de los Templarios
Day 18 | Terradillos de los Templaríos → El Burgo Ranero
Day 19 | El Burgo Ranero → Mansilla de las Mulas
Day 20 | Mansilla de las Mulas → León
Day 21 | León → Villar de Masaripe
Day 22 | Villar de Masaripe → Astorga
Day 23 | Astorga → Poncebadon
Day 24 | Poncebadon → Ponferrada
Day 25 | Ponferrada → Villafranca del Bierzo
Day 26 | Villafranca del Bierzo → Osebreiro
Day 27 | Osebreiro → Triacastela
Day 28 | Triacastella → Sarria
Day 29 | Sarria → Portomarin
Day 30 | Portomarin → Palas de Rei
Day 31 | Palas de Rei → Arzúa
Day 32 | Arzua → O Pedrozo
Day 33 | O Pedroso → Santiago de Compostela
The Four Seasons of the Camino de Santiago
How to Plan Your Camino de Santiago
Intro
Things to see while walking the Camino de Santiago
Teaching for the Camino de Santiago
They say you walk the French Way on the Camino de Santiago. Where is the French Way?
When is the best time of year to walk?
How long would it take to walk about 800km?
Is it dangerous or easy to get lost while walking the Camino de Santiago?
What should I prepare?
What is the most problematic physical abnormality when walking?
What should I do if I get a blister on my foot?
How do you eat?
Are there any special terms you hear on the Camino de Santiago?
Where do pilgrims stay?
Why walk the Camino de Santiago?
A quick sketch of the Camino de Santiago
BEST SPANISH FOOD / Spanish Food Especially Loved by Koreans
How to Plan a Spain & Camino de Santiago Itinerary / Recommended Itinerary
Currency exchange / SIM card
Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port, the first village encountered on the Camino de Santiago pilgrimage route
Camino de Santiago IN
33-day schedule
Day 1 | Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port → Roncesvalles
Day 2 | Roncesvalles → Subiri
Day 3 | Subiri → Pamplona
Day 4 | Pamplona → Puente la Reina
Day 5 | Puente la Reina → Estella
Day 6 | Estella → Los Arcos
Day 7 | Los Arcos → Logroño
Day 8 | Logroño → Najera
Day 9 | Najera → Santo Domingo de Calzada
Day 10 | Santo Domingo de Calzada → Belorado
Day 11 | Belorado → Ajes
Day 12 | Ajes → Burgos
Day 13 | Burgos → Ornios
Day 14 | Ornios → Castro Harris
Day 15 | Castro Harris → Fromista
Day 16 | Fromista → Carrion de los Condes
Day 17 | Carrión de los Condes → Terradillos de los Templarios
Day 18 | Terradillos de los Templaríos → El Burgo Ranero
Day 19 | El Burgo Ranero → Mansilla de las Mulas
Day 20 | Mansilla de las Mulas → León
Day 21 | León → Villar de Masaripe
Day 22 | Villar de Masaripe → Astorga
Day 23 | Astorga → Poncebadon
Day 24 | Poncebadon → Ponferrada
Day 25 | Ponferrada → Villafranca del Bierzo
Day 26 | Villafranca del Bierzo → Osebreiro
Day 27 | Osebreiro → Triacastela
Day 28 | Triacastella → Sarria
Day 29 | Sarria → Portomarin
Day 30 | Portomarin → Palas de Rei
Day 31 | Palas de Rei → Arzúa
Day 32 | Arzua → O Pedrozo
Day 33 | O Pedroso → Santiago de Compostela
Publisher's Review
Noelia, René, Alfredo, Javier, Angel, Emmanuel, Francesco, Paolo Cardone
We spared no effort in creating it by sharing various information and talking with each other while walking the Camino de Santiago together.
When I desperately needed a break from my repetitive daily life, I suddenly set out on the Camino de Santiago, wondering when else I would be able to travel. We met and helped each other create a new guidebook.
It took a long time for everyone to get the book.
The allure of the Camino de Santiago led me to acquire the book.
What I learned on the Camino de Santiago
The author concluded that anyone who lives this way until the end of their life has achieved success.
Travel is not only an encounter with space, but also an encounter with new emotions.
Moreover, the Camino de Santiago is not a path to be walked in competition.
Sometimes pilgrims boast that they walked faster than others.
He just walked, but I wonder if he tried to learn about life by talking to anyone.
Whether you walk fast or slow depends on each person's physical strength and the weather conditions while you are walking.
We just need to get to Santiago de Compostela.
Upon arrival, everyone receives a pilgrim completion certificate.
There is nothing written on the completion certificate.
Because there is no need to write it down.
The joy and excitement you feel when you receive a certificate of completion is the charm of the Camino de Santiago pilgrimage.
The reality of today's world is that there is nowhere else where you can easily experience the joy of interacting with and helping pilgrims from all over the world.
Especially on the Camino de Santiago, which opened for the first time in two years in 2021, I happily walked the arduous Camino de Santiago every day, meeting and talking with people from all over the world, and learning from them.
They completely changed me.
The photographer Paolo Cardone started it all off, René impressed us further and Noelia finished it off.
Besides these, Alfredo, Javier, Angel, Emmanuel, and Francesco are names I will never forget in my life.
Embark on a pilgrimage to Santiago with the hashtag series!
The Camino de Santiago has now become synonymous with the path sought after all over the world.
The Camino de Santiago pilgrimage route reopened in 2021, after being closed for a year in 2022 due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Every year, many people come to walk this path.
It is a place where you can walk without any preconceived notions, help each other, and find yourself through conversation.
When walking, the distance you walk varies depending on your physical strength, but after a certain period of time, you will have a set of walking companions, and through more conversations with them, you will be able to learn about the world around you and learn the driving force behind life.
What I learned on the Camino de Santiago
The author concluded that anyone who lives this way until the end of their life has achieved success.
Travel is not only an encounter with space, but also an encounter with new emotions.
Moreover, the Camino de Santiago is not a path to be walked in competition.
Sometimes pilgrims boast that they walked faster than others.
He just walked, but I wonder if he tried to learn about life by talking to anyone.
Whether you walk fast or slow depends on each person's physical strength and the weather conditions while you are walking.
We just need to get to Santiago de Compostela.
Upon arrival, everyone receives a pilgrim completion certificate.
There is nothing written on the completion certificate.
Because there is no need to write it down.
The joy and excitement you feel when you receive a certificate of completion is the charm of the Camino de Santiago pilgrimage.
The reality of today's world is that there is nowhere else where you can easily experience the joy of interacting with and helping pilgrims from all over the world.
Especially on the Camino de Santiago, which opened for the first time in two years in 2021, I happily walked the arduous Camino de Santiago every day, meeting and talking with people from all over the world, and learning from them.
They completely changed me.
The photographer Paolo Cardone started it all off, René impressed us further and Noelia finished it off.
Besides these, Alfredo, Javier, Angel, Emmanuel, and Francesco are names I will never forget in my life.
We spared no effort in creating it by sharing various information and talking with each other while walking the Camino de Santiago together.
When I desperately needed a break from my repetitive daily life, I suddenly set out on the Camino de Santiago, wondering when else I would be able to travel. We met and helped each other create a new guidebook.
It took a long time for everyone to get the book.
The allure of the Camino de Santiago led me to acquire the book.
What I learned on the Camino de Santiago
The author concluded that anyone who lives this way until the end of their life has achieved success.
Travel is not only an encounter with space, but also an encounter with new emotions.
Moreover, the Camino de Santiago is not a path to be walked in competition.
Sometimes pilgrims boast that they walked faster than others.
He just walked, but I wonder if he tried to learn about life by talking to anyone.
Whether you walk fast or slow depends on each person's physical strength and the weather conditions while you are walking.
We just need to get to Santiago de Compostela.
Upon arrival, everyone receives a pilgrim completion certificate.
There is nothing written on the completion certificate.
Because there is no need to write it down.
The joy and excitement you feel when you receive a certificate of completion is the charm of the Camino de Santiago pilgrimage.
The reality of today's world is that there is nowhere else where you can easily experience the joy of interacting with and helping pilgrims from all over the world.
Especially on the Camino de Santiago, which opened for the first time in two years in 2021, I happily walked the arduous Camino de Santiago every day, meeting and talking with people from all over the world, and learning from them.
They completely changed me.
The photographer Paolo Cardone started it all off, René impressed us further and Noelia finished it off.
Besides these, Alfredo, Javier, Angel, Emmanuel, and Francesco are names I will never forget in my life.
Embark on a pilgrimage to Santiago with the hashtag series!
The Camino de Santiago has now become synonymous with the path sought after all over the world.
The Camino de Santiago pilgrimage route reopened in 2021, after being closed for a year in 2022 due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Every year, many people come to walk this path.
It is a place where you can walk without any preconceived notions, help each other, and find yourself through conversation.
When walking, the distance you walk varies depending on your physical strength, but after a certain period of time, you will have a set of walking companions, and through more conversations with them, you will be able to learn about the world around you and learn the driving force behind life.
What I learned on the Camino de Santiago
The author concluded that anyone who lives this way until the end of their life has achieved success.
Travel is not only an encounter with space, but also an encounter with new emotions.
Moreover, the Camino de Santiago is not a path to be walked in competition.
Sometimes pilgrims boast that they walked faster than others.
He just walked, but I wonder if he tried to learn about life by talking to anyone.
Whether you walk fast or slow depends on each person's physical strength and the weather conditions while you are walking.
We just need to get to Santiago de Compostela.
Upon arrival, everyone receives a pilgrim completion certificate.
There is nothing written on the completion certificate.
Because there is no need to write it down.
The joy and excitement you feel when you receive a certificate of completion is the charm of the Camino de Santiago pilgrimage.
The reality of today's world is that there is nowhere else where you can easily experience the joy of interacting with and helping pilgrims from all over the world.
Especially on the Camino de Santiago, which opened for the first time in two years in 2021, I happily walked the arduous Camino de Santiago every day, meeting and talking with people from all over the world, and learning from them.
They completely changed me.
The photographer Paolo Cardone started it all off, René impressed us further and Noelia finished it off.
Besides these, Alfredo, Javier, Angel, Emmanuel, and Francesco are names I will never forget in my life.
GOODS SPECIFICS
- Date of issue: November 27, 2025
- Page count, weight, size: 352 pages | 136*197*30mm
- ISBN13: 9791174580870
- ISBN10: 1174580879
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