Santiago de Compostela, vers une redéfinition patrimoniale du chemin de pèlerinage

Despite fall of religious inclination in Occident, billions of pilgrims and tourists still go on the Pilgrimage of Camino de Santiago every year. The need to create an European identity, leaning on common patrimonial elements in the different nations, illustrates a policy of self-identification in w...

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Main Author: Nathalie Cerezales
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Conserveries Mémorielles 2013-07-01
Series:Conserveries Mémorielles
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/cm/1656
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author Nathalie Cerezales
author_facet Nathalie Cerezales
author_sort Nathalie Cerezales
collection DOAJ
description Despite fall of religious inclination in Occident, billions of pilgrims and tourists still go on the Pilgrimage of Camino de Santiago every year. The need to create an European identity, leaning on common patrimonial elements in the different nations, illustrates a policy of self-identification in which the Pilgrimage becomes one of its symbols. This identity, linked to the interests of several institutions like the Catholic Church or civil associations, helps the project born from this patrimonial definition and so create new touristic, sports, cultural or green strategies which represent alternative forms of regional development. The renewed pilgrimage gives a new meaning without excluding the Saint’s role but including itself in a ancient structure, which makes it one of the main goals to achieve.
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institution Kabale University
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spelling doaj-art-4b1bc405235e4ed3a35488e13eb8a2f22025-02-05T16:16:43ZdeuConserveries MémoriellesConserveries Mémorielles1718-55562013-07-01Santiago de Compostela, vers une redéfinition patrimoniale du chemin de pèlerinageNathalie CerezalesDespite fall of religious inclination in Occident, billions of pilgrims and tourists still go on the Pilgrimage of Camino de Santiago every year. The need to create an European identity, leaning on common patrimonial elements in the different nations, illustrates a policy of self-identification in which the Pilgrimage becomes one of its symbols. This identity, linked to the interests of several institutions like the Catholic Church or civil associations, helps the project born from this patrimonial definition and so create new touristic, sports, cultural or green strategies which represent alternative forms of regional development. The renewed pilgrimage gives a new meaning without excluding the Saint’s role but including itself in a ancient structure, which makes it one of the main goals to achieve.https://journals.openedition.org/cm/1656FranceCatholic ChurchPilgrimageWay of Saint JamesEuropeChristianity
spellingShingle Nathalie Cerezales
Santiago de Compostela, vers une redéfinition patrimoniale du chemin de pèlerinage
Conserveries Mémorielles
France
Catholic Church
Pilgrimage
Way of Saint James
Europe
Christianity
title Santiago de Compostela, vers une redéfinition patrimoniale du chemin de pèlerinage
title_full Santiago de Compostela, vers une redéfinition patrimoniale du chemin de pèlerinage
title_fullStr Santiago de Compostela, vers une redéfinition patrimoniale du chemin de pèlerinage
title_full_unstemmed Santiago de Compostela, vers une redéfinition patrimoniale du chemin de pèlerinage
title_short Santiago de Compostela, vers une redéfinition patrimoniale du chemin de pèlerinage
title_sort santiago de compostela vers une redefinition patrimoniale du chemin de pelerinage
topic France
Catholic Church
Pilgrimage
Way of Saint James
Europe
Christianity
url https://journals.openedition.org/cm/1656
work_keys_str_mv AT nathaliecerezales santiagodecompostelaversuneredefinitionpatrimonialeduchemindepelerinage