Via Francigena
Dublin Core
Title
Via Francigena
Subject
Intangible Heritage
Description
Via Francigena is a historic pilgrim’s route from Canterbury to Rome. First travelled by Sigeric the Serious, Archbishop of Canterbury in the year 990, this historic pilgrimage route is now travelled by around 50,000 hikers yearly. The route begins at Canterbury cathedral, traveling to Dover and across the English Channel. The route continues through France into Switzerland, crossing the alps at the Great St Bernard Pass. After crossing the Italian border, the route continues down the eastern side of Italy and finishes at Rome. The route is mostly footpaths and rough trails, with substantial elevation change in some stages. This difficult terrain promotes SDG 3: good health and wellbeing. Walking is a far more environmentally responsible mode of transport than air travel, car or train, so as well as benefiting pilgrims traveling on the route, promoting walking tourism (which the Via Francigena is an example of) can help contribute to SDG 13: climate action.
Creator
Sigeric the Serious
Source
is51102025
Date
circa 990
Contributor
hs277@st-andrews.ac.uk
Language
English
Type
Intangible
Identifier
1267
Date Submitted
18/03/2025
References
https://our-wanderlust.com/2022/05/via-francigena-the-beginning/#:~:text=The%202%2C000%2Dkilometre%20way%20was,our%20journey%20at%20Canterbury%20Cathedral, https://www.viefrancigene.org/en/the-path/, https://www.viefrancigene.org/en/the-via-francigena-and-sustainable-development-goals/
Extent
cm x cm x cm
Medium
https://www.viefrancigene.org/en/
Spatial Coverage
current,51.279633229215925,1.0828120708220015;
Europeana
Object
https://www.viefrancigene.org/en/
Europeana Type
TEXT
Intangible Item Type Metadata
Prim Media
3010
Citation
Sigeric the Serious, “Via Francigena,” STAGE, accessed December 13, 2025, https://stage.openvirtualworlds.org/omeka/items/show/3015.
Embed
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