Santiago de Compostela, Spain, Medjugorje, Bosnia-Herzegovina
YOUR TRIP INCLUDES: Round-trip air from New York (special Add-on Airfares from all US gateways) Airport Taxes, Security Fees & Fuel Surcharges Included 10 nights at 4 star Hotels, & Quaint Inns as follows: (or similar)
4 nights: A modern home/hotel with private baths, Medjugorje, Bosnia-Herzegovina
1 night: Hotel AC Ciudad de Pamplona , Pamplona, Spain
1 night: Santo Domingo de Silos Hotel, Santo Domingo de Silos, Spain
1 night: AC San Antonio, Leon, Spain
1 night: Hotel AC Ponferrada, Astorga/Ponferrada
2 nights: San Francisco Hotel Monumento, Santiago de Compostela, Spain Breakfast & Dinner Daily Drinks with dinner
Meetings with visionaries (pending availability) Half board accommodation Sightseeing and admissions fees as per itinerary Transportation by air-conditioned motor coach Local guide in Puente la Riena, Leon, Villafranca del Bierzo & Santiago de Compostela Hotel taxes and service charges
Not Included: Lunches not specified, Travel Insurance optional at $99-$225, (www.206tours.com/insurance). Cancel for Any Reason Protection @ $199 (www.206tours.com/cancellationprotection). Tips to your guide & driver (Euro € 6-8 per day). Items of a personal nature. *"Land Only*" does not include airfare or airport transfers.
Sample Day-by-Day Itinerary: Day 1: Depart USA Board your overnight transatlantic flights from your home town. Meals are served on board.
Day 2: Arrive Medjugorje After an early morning arrival in Frankfurt (Munich or Vienna) you will connect flights to Dubrovnik (Split or Sarajevo). Upon arrival, you'll be greeted by a tour guide and/or driver who will then take you on the 2 1/2 hour drive by private coach to the village of Medjugorje. Guide will be with your throughout your stay. Once there, you'll meet your fellow pilgrims and your spiritual leader and be introduced to your host family in whose comfortable yet modest house (inn) you will be staying for the next seven nights.
Day 3 to 5: Medjugorje
Experience the beauty and peace of this simple village. During your stay in Medjugorje you will have the opportunity to share faith with pilgrims from all over the world. Our local guide will accompany us throughout your stay.
Here are some of the activities you'll be sharing with our fellow pilgrims: Each morning at 10am we assemble at St James Church for the English-language Mass (Feast days and Sundays English Mass is at Noon). Follow the path up Apparition Hill where the visionaries first encountered Our Lady. Touch and pray before the cross that commemorates the spot where Mary first appeared to the visionaries.
Each evening at 5pm or 6pm daylight savings time, we will join the villagers and pilgrims to pray the rosary. The apparition takes place at 5:40pm or 6:40 daylight savings time, and then stay on for Croatian Mass. Don't miss on Tuesdays and Saturdays Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament and on Fridays Veneration of the Cross in the Church. Each evening during Croatian Mass, there is the Blessing of the Sick and blessing of the items you have with you.
Our guide will arrange meetings with the visionaries at their own homes provided that they are in Medjugorje during your trip, and pending their availability. We will have the opportunity to climb Krizevac Mountain, where in 1933 the villagers built a 30' high cross on the anniversary of Jesus' crucifixion. Visit and pray at "Blue Cross", which is a place of great healings and graces- a very special place at the base of Apparition Hill.
* This part of your trip in Medjugorje is meant to provide you with time for a personal retreat. As such, your time in Medjugorje is not designed to be a “tour”, but rather to provide you with time to pray, reflect, and explore on your own as you feel called. On arrival, you will have an orientation tour after which a representative of 206 Tours will be available should you have any questions or requests, however, you will not have a guide with you through out your stay. Daily Mass in English, as well as English confessions are available at St. James Church. During your stay in Medjugorje you will have full discretion over how your time is spent, in order to have the fullest spiritual experience possible. If you would prefer our traditional pilgrimage/tour of Medjugorje, we would recommend you consider our Tour #1 (www.206tours.com/tour1) which provides a tour escort and spiritual leader through out your stay.
Day 6: Medjugorje - Pamplona We leave Medjugorje for Pamplona. The city is famous worldwide for the San Fermin Festival in which the running of the bulls is one of the main attractions. From the 11th century, the pilgrimages to Santiago de Compostela contributed a lot to revive the commercial and cultural exchanges with Christian Europe beyond the Pyrenees. The most important religious building is the fourteenth century Gothic Cathedral, with an outstanding cloister and a neoclassical façade. There are another two main Gothic churches in the old city: Saint Senin and Saint Nicholas, both built during the thirteenth century. Also we will be able to find Saint Ignatius of Loyola basilica in the place where he was injured in the battle during whose subsequent convalescence he decided to convert to God. Dinner and overnight in Pamplona.
Day 7: Pamplona - Puente la Reina - Santo Domingo de la Calzada - Santo Domingo de Silos After breakfast in the hotel we will depart Pamplona. In our journey we will visit two of the most important cities related to El Camino: Puente la Reina and Santo Domingo de la Calzada. Puente la Reina means literally the "bridge of the Queen" and was built by doña Mayor de Navarra in the 11th century to help the pilgrims to cross over the river Arga. In this medieval city we will be able to visit the Church of the Crucifix built by the members of the Order of the Temple and the Church of Santiago which contains one of the finest multicolored sculptures representing the Apostle Santiago that can be found along the Santiago Route. Santo Domingo de la Calzada is situated on the banks of the Oja River and its name refers to its founder: Saint Dominic de la Calzada who built a bridge, hospital and hostel here for pilgrims. There are many miracles related to Saint Dominic but he most famous one concerns that of the rooster and the chicken. The story goes that in the 14th century, a German 18-year old named Hugonell, from Xanten, goes on pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela with his parents. A Spanish girl at the hostel where they were staying makes sexual advances toward Hugonell; Hugonell denies her advances. Angry at this, the girl hides a silver cup in the German’s bag and then informs the authorities that the youth had taken it. Hugonell is sentenced to the gallows, in accordance with the laws of Alfonso X of Castile. The parents sadly decide to examine their son’s body, still hanging on the gallows, but suddenly hear his voice - he tells them that Saint Dominic has saved his life. His parents quickly make their way to Santiago de Compostela to see the magistrate. The magistrate, who is at the time eating dinner, remarks: “Your son is as alive as this rooster and chicken that I was feasting on before you interrupted me.” And in that moment, the two birds jump from the plate and begin to sing and crow happily. Dinner and overnight in Santo Domingo de Silos.
Day 8: Santo Domingo de Silos - Leon Breakfast in the hotel. In the morning we will do an excursion to Santo Domingo de Silos. We will visit the Benedictine abbey of Santo Domingo de Silos, one of Spain’s greatest Christian monuments. Its main feature is a great double-storey XI Century Romanesque cloister, whose beautiful sculptural decoration is in many ways unique. After the visit we will be able to listen to the Gregorian chants by the monks of the monastery. The monks are considered one of the two or three best choirs in the World. Dinner and overnight in Leon.
Day 9: Leon -Astorga/Ponferrada After breakfast in the hotel we will meet with a local guide. Leon amasses some of Spain’s most important historic-artistic monuments, like its Cathedral, a Gothic gem and a masterpiece of the Gothic architecture with the best collection of stained-glass windows in Europe (only after Chartres). Next to the Cathedral, there is the Roman Saint Isidoro Basilica (eleventh and twelfth century), where Saint Isidoro of Seville tomb is kept; and the Saint Marcus Monastery, with its fantastic front in Plateresque style bedecked with shells (the symbol of the pilgrim). After the visit we'll continue our journey. Depending on the available hotels we will stay in Astorga or in Ponferrada. The historical and religious city of Astorga, called Astúrica by the Romans, once had 25 hospitals. On it the French and the Plata Routes to Santiago converge. The extraordinary Gothic Cathedral, from the 15 C presides over the town. The Episcopal Palace or Gaudí Palace houses the Museo de los Caminos, which displays pieces from all churches related to the Route to Santiago. The city of Ponferrada, with Prehistoric and Roman antecedents, had two accesses in the middle Ages. One was via the Roman bridge spanning the Boeza river, sunk in the 18 C; the other was via the path of the Gallegos and then, crossing the river by the Medieval bridge of Mascarón. At the end of the 11 C, the Bishop of Astorga, Osmundo, commissioned the building of a new bridge, "la Pons Ferrata", a pass with iron banisters which gave name to the city. Later on, between the 11 and 14 C, the Castle of the Knights Templar was built. At the end of the 15 C, the Catholic Monarchs commissioned the construction of the Hospital de la Reina, next to the fortress. In this monumental town also stand the Basilica of Nuestra Señora de la Encina, from the 16 C (built to commemorate the apparition of the Virgin in a grove of Holm oaks) and the Baroque church of San Andres, from the 17 C, which is home to an outstanding retable from the 13 C, "The Christ of the Wonders". Overnight in Astorga or Ponferrada.
Day 10: Astorga/Ponferrada - Villafranca del Bierzo - O Cebrerio - Santiago de Compostela After breakfast at our hotel we will depart for Santiago de Compostela. In our way we will visit Villafranca del Bierzo, a town founded in the 11 C, where the Cluny Order had an important representation. We can enjoy the Collegiate Church of Santa María, built between the 13 and 16 C; the churches of Santiago (12 C) and San Nicolas, as well as the Agua Street, full of palaces and emblazoned houses. The Castle-Palace of the Marquisate is worthy of being visited. Later we will enter Galicia by Lugo, not far from Santiago. The first village in the region of Lugo along the Route is Cebreiro, with an altitude of 1,300 meters. A group of "pallozas" can be seen (Pre-Romanesque circular houses with straw roofs) and a beautiful Pre-Romanesque temple, from the 9-10 C, containing a Chalice, the Paten of "Santo Milagro" (Holy Miracle) and a precious Romanesque carving of Santa Maria la Real. In the evening we will arrive to Santiago de Compostela. In the beginning of the 9C the sepulcher of Santiago el Mayor (James the Greater), evangelist in Spain, was discovered. Pelayo, a hermit who lived in the former diocese of Iria Flavia, had a "divine revelation" in the deep of the forest. He sees "altar lights" and hears "angels singing". The parishioners of San Félix de Solobio, at the foot of the forest, announced the event. The Bishop Teodomiro went in the forest, found the mausoleum and identified it as the Apostle Santiago’s tomb. At a time when Europe needed to be united, the Route to Santiago was the first element that made it possible. The find of the sepulcher of the first Apostle Martyr became an unquestionable symbol, compatible with the diverse conceptions of the Christian people. Dinner and overnight in Santiago de Compostela.
Day 11: Santiago de Compostela Breakfast in the hotel. We'll set out in the cool morning air to join the walking pilgrims at the Monte del Gozo (Mount Joy) from which the spires of the Cathedral are first visible. We will walk the last couple of miles of El Camino. Very soon, we will arrive at the Cathedral, the destination we have been yearning to reach for a long time. After arrival in the Cathedral square and give thanks to God for taking care of us during our pilgrimage, we will visit and attend the International Pilgrim Mass at the Cathedral of St. James, one of the finest examples of architecture in all of Europe. Access to the Doorway of Glory is via the Obradoiro façade. Once in its interior, we will be carried away by the emotions produced by the sight of so many extraordinary valuable works of art. Tradition invites us to perform some rites: The most important and meaningful one is the hug to the Saint, go under the main altar and visit the crypt where the relics of St. James are preserved. Later on, the pagan rite of the bumps. It consists in reaching for a branch on the mullion, below the figure of the Sitting Apostle and, later making three wishes. On the other side of the column, there is another statue believed to impart wisdom and talents to whoever bumps his head against it. In the afternoon we will visit the city of Santiago: Obradoiro Square, Fonseca Palace, Gelmirez Palace, Franco Street, etc. Dinner and overnight in Santiago de Compostela.
Day 12: Departure from Santiago de Compostela Breakfast in the hotel. In the morning we will say hasta luego (see you soon or good bye) to our new friends. We transfer to Santiago Airport for your departure and/or additional tours that are available.