Celtic Britain, especially Wales, is unusually well-served by the extent to which landscape monuments of medieval and modern religion have been catalogued and recorded. Significant recorded data-sets for pilgrimage include early and medieval inscribed stones, holy wells, and saints’ dedications. Influential geographical studies have created both explicit and implicit routes of connection between many of these. These data-sets and narratives have played, and continue to play, substantial roles in development of interpretations and routes created for religious tourism. This presentation, reflecting on a number of case-studies of trails and sites, will (mostly) resist the historian’s instinctive interest in deconstruction on points of authenti...
This is the story of a tradition. One adorned by landscapes, sculpted by men and nature, and lived b...
The sacred sites of Glastonbury in Somerset, England have long been places of pilgrimage, connected ...
This paper reflects our abiding interest in our origins and of those religious and pilgrimage spaces...
Pilgrimage is often seen as a physical journey to a sacred destination fixed by custom, destination-...
This volume provides a theoretically- and empirically-grounded study of the significance of landscap...
Theoretical perspectives on landscape and bodily engagement with place inform an approach to the med...
© 2016 The Author(s). Published by Taylor & Francis. Perigrinatio, the Latin term for pilgrimage w...
The religious houses of medieval Wales, along with the Norman and native Welsh castles, form an imp...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version.Long regarded as a medi...
During the medieval period, Bardsey Island (Ynys Enlli) became a prominent and unique pilgrimage des...
As Roman Catholics gained confidence in twentieth-century Scotland, they revived pre-Reformation shr...
This paper considers the modern phenomenon of pilgrim walking along routes in the west of Ireland co...
This thesis seeks to give an overview of the practice and manifestations of pilgrimage in medieval E...
Recent years have seen a significant growth within the field of pilgrimage studies. Mainly the purvi...
Pilgrimage to established ceremonial centres is widespread in many cultures past and present. Such c...
This is the story of a tradition. One adorned by landscapes, sculpted by men and nature, and lived b...
The sacred sites of Glastonbury in Somerset, England have long been places of pilgrimage, connected ...
This paper reflects our abiding interest in our origins and of those religious and pilgrimage spaces...
Pilgrimage is often seen as a physical journey to a sacred destination fixed by custom, destination-...
This volume provides a theoretically- and empirically-grounded study of the significance of landscap...
Theoretical perspectives on landscape and bodily engagement with place inform an approach to the med...
© 2016 The Author(s). Published by Taylor & Francis. Perigrinatio, the Latin term for pilgrimage w...
The religious houses of medieval Wales, along with the Norman and native Welsh castles, form an imp...
The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version.Long regarded as a medi...
During the medieval period, Bardsey Island (Ynys Enlli) became a prominent and unique pilgrimage des...
As Roman Catholics gained confidence in twentieth-century Scotland, they revived pre-Reformation shr...
This paper considers the modern phenomenon of pilgrim walking along routes in the west of Ireland co...
This thesis seeks to give an overview of the practice and manifestations of pilgrimage in medieval E...
Recent years have seen a significant growth within the field of pilgrimage studies. Mainly the purvi...
Pilgrimage to established ceremonial centres is widespread in many cultures past and present. Such c...
This is the story of a tradition. One adorned by landscapes, sculpted by men and nature, and lived b...
The sacred sites of Glastonbury in Somerset, England have long been places of pilgrimage, connected ...
This paper reflects our abiding interest in our origins and of those religious and pilgrimage spaces...