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  1. Sigeric’s Itinerary - Via Francigena. In the year 990, archbishop Sigeric travelled between Rome and Canterbury. Sigeric used this itinerary travelling back from Rome, where he received the Pallium from the Pope. The archbishop described the 79 stages of his itinerary towards Canterbury in a journal. Italy. Lazio. I Urbs, Roma, Borgo Leonino,

  2. Jul 28, 2021 · “The legend of Sigeric: the true story of the Via Francigena” Written by Sabine Rostaing, in collaboration with her husband Nicolas and her son Matthias, who is a playwright, “The legend of Sigeric: the true story of the Via Francigena” puts together historical events and the stages of Sigeric’s Journey, the archbishop of Canterbury ...

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  4. The Via Francigena (‘the way of the Franks’) is an historic 2000-kilometre pilgrim way from Canterbury to Rome. It follows the route described by Sigeric, Archbishop of Canterbury, on his journey back from Rome in AD 990 after receiving his pallium, or cloak of office, from Pope John XV.

  5. www.viefrancigene.org › en › introductionHistory - Via Francigena

    Sigeric’s journal is still considered the most authoritative source, so much so that often we talk about “Via Francigena according to Sigeric’s itinerary”, in order to define a more “philological” version of the path.

  6. Via Francigena. “Cultural Route of the Council of Europe” certified in 1994. In 990 AD, Sigeric, archbishop of Canterbury, travelled to Rome to meet Pope John XV and receive the investiture pallium. Along the way, he recorded the 79 stages of the journey in his diary.

    • The Via Francigena and Sigeric
    • More Complete History
    • Places mentioned in Switzerland

    The so called Lombard Way became the Iter Francorum, or Via Francisca in the Itinerarium sancti Willibaldi of 725. The Via Francigena (VF) is first mentioned in the Actum Clusio, a parchment in the abbey of San Salvatore at Monte Amiata -Tuscany in 876. The itinerary was written down by Sigeric, Archbishop of Canterbury, in 990 on his return from R...

    The VF became the ‘backbone’ of the road system of Western Europe in 58 B.C, when Julius Caesar opened this “Road of the Sun”; the shortest route between the North Sea and Rome. This route partly coincides with the Celtic Tin Route, which connected Cornwall with Switzerland and Marseilles, and with the European network of Roman roads. Following the...

    Antifern-Jougne LVI mansio (Franco-Swiss border)
    Orbe (native city of Empress Adelaide (10th C), fortified in the 13th C by Count Amedée III)
    Lausanne (bishop’s seat of Burgundy 1st kingdom, with residence in castle St-Maire 15th C and most beautiful cathedral in Switzerland 12-13th C)
    Vevey ( St.Martin’s church 11-13th C)
  7. The Via Francigena (Italian: [ˈviːa franˈtʃiːdʒena]) is an ancient road and pilgrimage route running from the cathedral city of Canterbury in England, through France and Switzerland, to Rome and then to Apulia, Italy, where there were ports of embarkation for the Holy Land.

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