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For centuries, pilgrimage was one of the greatest adventures.
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Epic journeys around the country.
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You're going the wrong way! This is the Pilgrims' Way to Canterbury.
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And across the world!
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I'll be retracing the steps of our ancestors.
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HE GROANS
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This is the spot where...Jesus is said to have been born.
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Exploring the hidden...
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- KNOCKING
- Some people might think this is quite macabre.
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..and the darker side of pilgrimage.
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What this gives a sense of is the scale of prostitution.
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And discovering why so many modern pilgrims are taking to the road.
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- ALL CHANT
- Come on, now, that was incredible!
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My journey takes me from the north of England to Canterbury,
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then through France into northern Spain,
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across the Alps to Italy and on to the Eternal City.
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Rome!
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I travel East into Turkey, across the Mediterranean,
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into the Holy Land, and on to my final destination...Jerusalem.
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It's a gob-smacker. It's a breath-taker-awayer.
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My starting point was the beautiful and wild coast of Northumberland.
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From here I would head south on a 400-mile journey
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learning about the history of pilgrimage
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and visiting spectacular sights along the way.
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So how do we define a pilgrimage?
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One of the best definitions I've seen
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is that it's a journey away from home
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in search of spiritual well-being.
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And it's part of every major faith.
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I'm...not a religious person, although I wish I was.
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I was brought up as a Methodist, but that faith lapsed long ago.
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I think the main reason I'm doing this is because I'm a traveller.
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I'm fascinated by how our ancestors travelled
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and what inspires people today to go on pilgrimage.
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It seemed right to begin my journey at one of the earliest sights
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of Christian pilgrimage in Britain, the mystical island of Lindisfarne.
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Just look at the sea out here!
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It's like molten silver.
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The island is three miles off the coast.
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I followed a line of posts that mark out the pilgrims' crossing
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which emerged from the North Sea twice a day at low tide.
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HE SIGHS
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It's a bit muddy...but then every journey needs a bit of jeopardy.
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It helps you to feel alive.
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Oh, goodness!
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Look, you can just make out the top of somebody's welly...
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which didn't quite make it.
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The sensible thing, of course, is to go round.
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Ahh!
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HE LAUGHS
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Well, at least I kept my boots on!
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Medieval Britons were told that journeys of endurance, suffering and sacrifice
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to a holy site could help them to find a place in heaven.
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Back then, pilgrimage was an integral part of their lives.
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Look at all these...cars! I'm blown away by this.
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One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine.
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Clearly there are easier ways of getting to Holy Island,
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but...not as much fun as walking.
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Some of the country's first pioneering Christians
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went to Holy Island during the Dark Ages more than 1,300 years ago.
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Now more than half a million visitors make the crossing every year,
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drawn largely by history and wild nature.
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It is absolutely beautiful here.
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In coming here, I am travelling in the footsteps
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of two monks turned saints called Aidan and Cuthbert,
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who respectively founded and then ran a monastery here.
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They became legends. They helped to spread Christianity throughout Britain...
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and their story stills draws pilgrims to the island now.
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Aidan arrived here in the year 635.
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Choosing this dramatic but windswept haven in the North Sea
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as a place for prayer and a base from which to convert the pagan mainland.
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I'm sure the...remoteness of this island
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will have helped the monks to lead a life of contemplation.
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Part of the reason they chose the island
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was because, actually, it's very connected.
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In early medieval times, people will have travelled by sea because it was easier
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and it was safer than travelling by land or on foot or on horseback.
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So rather than being isolated, this island was actually a transport hub.
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It was one of Aidan's followers, Cuthbert,
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whose saintly deeds on Holy Island really captured the imagination of Dark Age Britons.
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Tales about him spread around the country
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and pilgrims were soon arriving here, hoping for miracles and healing.
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Cuthbert's now regarded as the patron saint of the north.
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GULL SCREECHES
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Oh, it's beautiful!
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It's just got that simple wildness.
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Reverend Graham Booth came here as a pilgrim 11 years ago.
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He now runs a retreat on the island.
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What do you think were the elements of Cuthbert's life
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that would have been interesting and, I suppose, inspiring really
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to our ancestors more than 1,000 years ago?
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You can see this water and you know what it's like here,
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- it's pretty chilly.
- Hmm. Even on a sunny day?
- Even on a sunny day.
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To go and stand in that and to pray takes a level of devotion that most people don't have,
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and that becomes something that people look up to.
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There's a story associated with him
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about the night when he spent a lot of time praying up to his chest in the water,
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and came back up the beach and it was witnessed
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that some otters came and warmed and dried his feet.
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- Otter foot-warmers!
- Otter foot-warmers, yes.
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I wanted to understand pilgrimage.
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I wasn't trying to be a pilgrim, but I was still keen to get any hints and advice from Graham
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about how a modern pilgrim should be travelling.
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For me, there's a clear sense that the exterior, the landscape,
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is something that helps us to begin to identify what our inner landscape is actually like
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and what that tells us.
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So should I be looking for my inner landscape on this journey?
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Well, perhaps you should.
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- I'd love to know if I've got one.
- Well, I'm sure you have got one.
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During medieval times, huge numbers of Britons went on pilgrimage.
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Some local, some long distance.
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In the UK now, religious pilgrimage is no longer the mass movement it once was,
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but people are still drawn to Lindisfarne,
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whether for religious reasons or just for its sheer beauty.
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People were coming here as visitors and pilgrims 1,300 years ago!
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It is an astonishing sweep of human history.
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And I suppose being here now I feel like another tiny link in the chain
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that connects me back with distant ancestors.
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Perhaps that's part of what draws us to places like this,
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to have a connection with the past, be part of something meaningful.
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I think it certainly does for me.
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Lindisfarne was one of the first,
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but by the 1300s there were shrines to saints across the entire country.
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I was heading south to visit the star attraction of the time,
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the shrine of St Thomas Becket at Canterbury in Kent.
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Becket was the archbishop whose murder by Henry II's knights,
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because he refused to submit to the King,
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captured the imagination of the Christian world.
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Canterbury became THE major British pilgrimage site.
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Up to an astonishing 200,000 medieval pilgrims
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would travel there each year.
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That's almost one in ten of a national population
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of just two and a half million.
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Pilgrimage...got Britain on the move.
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I still try and get a nice cuppa in of an afternoon
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wherever I am on my travels.
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Perfect! A refreshing brew...to keep the weary pilgrim on the road.
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There would have been many reasons why our ancestors went on pilgrimage.
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Some of them would have been devoted Christians, of course,
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they would have been pious.
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Others would have gone more for reasons of punishment
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or for penance for their sins.
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Some would have been hoping for a better life or for healing.
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And then there would have been some, I'm sure,
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who would have gone because it was a chance for adventure.
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Remember, they were tied often to the land,
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and pilgrimage could have been their one opportunity in life
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to see what was over the hill.
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The pilgrimage journeys of medieval Britons
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could vary from a trip to a shrine in the next parish
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to a long trek across the country and even beyond into foreign lands.
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The offerings pilgrims took with them
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financed some of our most treasured religious buildings.
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The legacy of their journeys
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are the network of holy sites peppered throughout the country.
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Any medieval pilgrim heading south from Holy Island in the North East
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would have the option of stopping at dozens of shrines along the way.
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They could have gone to the cathedral at Durham,
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that great statement of Norman power.
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They could have visited the city of York,
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the second holiest in the country.
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But they wouldn't have wanted to miss the building I headed to next
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in the city of Lincoln.
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CHURCH BELLS CHIME
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700 years ago, Lincoln was one of the largest cities in Britain.
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It was also a major centre of pilgrimage
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with travellers coming from across the land
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to visit one of the great wonders of the age.
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HE GASPS
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It's...spectacular!
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Just imagine the holy shock a medieval pilgrim would have felt
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arriving here for the first time
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and seeing a building of this...size!
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Of this scale!
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From the early 1300s right up until the Tudor period,
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this was the tallest building on the planet.
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HE GASPS
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It does take the veneration of the Almighty
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to inspire and to justify the creation of this building.
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There's a depth and a meaning
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that is completely lacking...from modern life.
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Through patterns and codes the architecture of the cathedral
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reveals a pathway through life and into heaven.
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The building itself spoke to our ancestors
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in a language they could understand.
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John Campbell, the dean's verger,
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was on hand to translate the building for me as a modern visitor.
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You're on a journey, you've been walking a long way,
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and those medieval pilgrims
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might have thought the journey was at an end, but they were just starting,
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because the journey from that end of the cathedral to the east end of the cathedral is a journey through life.
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We're in the nave of the cathedral, comes from the Latin "navus",
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the navy has its ships that take you on a journey,
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we have the navus ship, the vessel,
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to take you on a journey from this world.
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When you looked up at the cathedral there was a lot of symbolism.
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Look at the ribs of the vaults going up there.
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Turn it upside down and you've got the hull of a ship,
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the vessel to help you on that journey through life.
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And then gave you a foretaste of heaven even more so
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as you go further east...in what I call the God spots,
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some people call it the church within a church.
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- Can we see the God spots?
- Let's go to the God spot.
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Because this is what we're about here, we're walking through the body and through this pilgrimage
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and here we're coming to the outstretched arms of the cross.
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Christ opening his arms to welcome people in
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and inviting them to go further and to give them a foretaste of heaven.
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Now you get heavily carved areas.
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You get richness, you get fragments of medieval paint,
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blue, red and maybe even gold.
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Most medieval pilgrims arriving here and seeing this for the first time
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would never have seen a sight like this.
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Beautifully painted, vivid, dramatic colours,
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drawing you in, it's advertising almost,
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"If you're good enough, come through."
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- It's almost saying the best is yet to come.
- Yeah.
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So here's the church within a church.
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All of a sudden it becomes ecclesiastical, it becomes ordered.
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This is the brains, this is the intellect,
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this is where the preaching and the teaching
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has gone on for years and years and years.
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We're now going to go to the mystery, into the unknown,
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into heaven itself.
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You're arriving at that new Jerusalem.
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This is that which lies beyond.
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And when you look up here, you can see a lot of clear glass to let light in.
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Medieval pilgrims arriving here in the 1300s
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would have sought salvation and healing at the shrine of St Hugh,
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a former Bishop of Lincoln.
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In life, he oversaw the building of the cathedral.
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In death, he was held responsible for miracles.
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Although if you wanted his blessings,
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it helped if you gave generously to his church.
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For my family and friends and...and for travellers.
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Pilgrims of all types.
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The desperation and donations of pilgrims
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once helped to make this cathedral rich.
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Lincoln still draws in the visitors but not the crowds of the past,
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and most today seem to marvel more at the architecture
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than at the message it once conveyed.
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With church attendance on the slide and donations from pilgrims falling,
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I wonder what the future holds for these monumental buildings.
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The cathedral is already on the English Heritage At Risk list.
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What's really surprised me about coming to the cathedral
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is just how few people there are here.
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They get thousands of visitors, of course they do,
247
00:16:41,440 --> 00:16:45,760
but they don't get tens of thousands like other attractions in the country,
248
00:16:45,760 --> 00:16:49,360
who would provide the money to keep the place going,
249
00:16:51,200 --> 00:16:54,400
It's a crying shame. This is...this is Britain.
250
00:16:54,400 --> 00:16:56,680
Britain rendered into stone.
251
00:16:56,680 --> 00:17:00,640
Our passion, our history, our beliefs!
252
00:17:03,320 --> 00:17:08,760
This for me is also...one of the finest buildings in the world.
253
00:17:16,320 --> 00:17:18,800
I feel like I'm learning a lot about pilgrimage,
254
00:17:18,800 --> 00:17:21,240
but I'm not meeting many pilgrims.
255
00:17:21,240 --> 00:17:25,080
And there's an event at a remote village in Norfolk
256
00:17:25,080 --> 00:17:26,720
that I really want to get to,
257
00:17:26,720 --> 00:17:29,160
so I've hired a car and I'm heading there.
258
00:17:29,160 --> 00:17:32,200
I've just got time for one stop along the way.
259
00:17:32,200 --> 00:17:34,480
My fascination with pilgrimage
260
00:17:34,480 --> 00:17:37,440
isn't just about what past travellers believed,
261
00:17:37,440 --> 00:17:40,360
but also how they travelled and what they ate.
262
00:17:40,360 --> 00:17:43,160
Ohh! Caroline? I stopped off at a transport cafe
263
00:17:43,160 --> 00:17:46,200
to meet medieval food historian Caroline Yeldham.
264
00:17:46,200 --> 00:17:48,040
Simon Reeve. Hello.
265
00:17:49,560 --> 00:17:55,280
As a medieval pilgrim, it wouldn't have been uncommon for strangers to take me in and feed me.
266
00:17:55,280 --> 00:17:58,160
Monasteries considered it their Christian duty
267
00:17:58,160 --> 00:17:59,800
to offer at least a meal.
268
00:17:59,800 --> 00:18:05,160
And there were a growing number of inns springing up along highways feeding merchants and pilgrims.
269
00:18:05,160 --> 00:18:10,000
Now to me, that looks...like there's a certain medieval quality to it,
270
00:18:10,000 --> 00:18:12,280
big hunks of meat there.
271
00:18:12,280 --> 00:18:16,800
Is this the sort of thing that would have been eaten in the medieval times?
272
00:18:16,800 --> 00:18:20,800
If you're of the right social status or in the right household,
273
00:18:20,800 --> 00:18:23,040
on days when you're allowed to eat meat,
274
00:18:23,040 --> 00:18:26,520
which excludes Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays.
275
00:18:26,520 --> 00:18:31,280
And at Lent and Advent and Pentecost there are dietary limitations as well.
276
00:18:31,280 --> 00:18:34,320
- And as a pilgrim?
- You should be eating fish.
277
00:18:34,320 --> 00:18:39,880
There is a Latin pun between carne, which means meat, and carnality.
278
00:18:39,880 --> 00:18:42,040
And they discouraged anybody
279
00:18:42,040 --> 00:18:48,080
who was dedicated in a religious way particularly from eating...from eating meat.
280
00:18:48,080 --> 00:18:51,440
Because it was in some way associated with or seen
281
00:18:51,440 --> 00:18:53,360
as an encouragement to sin.
282
00:18:53,360 --> 00:18:58,080
- Absolutely.
- In other meaty, fleshy ways, shall we say?
283
00:18:58,080 --> 00:19:01,480
Whereas fish, which are watery in nature,
284
00:19:01,480 --> 00:19:04,440
are much less likely to entice you to sin.
285
00:19:04,440 --> 00:19:06,680
- They do look good though.
- SHE LAUGHS
286
00:19:06,680 --> 00:19:09,240
That's part of the point, you're resisting temptation,
287
00:19:09,240 --> 00:19:10,800
it's good for your soul.
288
00:19:10,800 --> 00:19:14,480
Caroline had graciously agreed to cook me up a taste of the past.
289
00:19:20,280 --> 00:19:24,400
We travel further and we travel faster now,
290
00:19:24,400 --> 00:19:30,920
but...it's lost some of its allure, I feel, and certainly romance as we've speeded up.
291
00:19:32,560 --> 00:19:34,920
There was a time when cars pottered along slowly,
292
00:19:34,920 --> 00:19:38,880
and obviously a time before that when horses cantered,
293
00:19:38,880 --> 00:19:43,600
and people would...they would take in the journey.
294
00:19:44,600 --> 00:19:47,440
Perhaps that's part of the pilgrimage for me
295
00:19:47,440 --> 00:19:54,560
is just a chance and an opportunity to just take it a bit slower and reflect a bit more.
296
00:19:56,840 --> 00:19:58,800
And, of course, then eat.
297
00:19:58,800 --> 00:20:00,880
Ohh!
298
00:20:00,880 --> 00:20:03,400
- That's a full tray.
- SHE LAUGHS
299
00:20:03,400 --> 00:20:05,400
Thank you so much.
300
00:20:05,400 --> 00:20:06,920
What have we got?
301
00:20:06,920 --> 00:20:09,520
We have a vegetable potage,
302
00:20:09,520 --> 00:20:14,800
some fried perch served with a green sauce...and apple fritters.
303
00:20:14,800 --> 00:20:17,040
- Apple fritters?!
- Yes.
304
00:20:17,040 --> 00:20:18,760
Oh, fantastic! Pud.
305
00:20:18,760 --> 00:20:20,480
So we start with the potage.
306
00:20:20,480 --> 00:20:25,560
The potage is made from broad beans and mixed herbs and vegetables.
307
00:20:25,560 --> 00:20:28,200
- Leeks and carrots and onions.
- OK.
308
00:20:33,080 --> 00:20:35,520
- It's very good!
- Thank you.
309
00:20:35,520 --> 00:20:39,040
Medieval food has quite a bad reputation, I think.
310
00:20:39,040 --> 00:20:41,840
- You don't...
- It does and it's completely undeserved.
311
00:20:41,840 --> 00:20:45,000
I think the dishes are delicious and healthy
312
00:20:45,000 --> 00:20:47,440
and more people should try them.
313
00:20:47,440 --> 00:20:50,720
I think I'm just hungry, I'm just greedy.
314
00:20:50,720 --> 00:20:52,640
SHE LAUGHS
315
00:20:52,640 --> 00:20:57,080
Many medieval workers consumed up to 5,000 calories per day.
316
00:20:57,080 --> 00:21:00,040
that's almost twice our recommended intake.
317
00:21:01,080 --> 00:21:04,440
But experts think the low-fat vegetable rich medieval diet
318
00:21:04,440 --> 00:21:07,920
was often better for the heart than modern starchy diets.
319
00:21:07,920 --> 00:21:09,520
OK.
320
00:21:10,800 --> 00:21:13,040
It's delicious!
321
00:21:13,040 --> 00:21:16,480
Apple fritters, when does the recipe for these come from?
322
00:21:16,480 --> 00:21:19,000
It's late 14th century.
323
00:21:19,000 --> 00:21:21,800
All that time. Is this sugar?
324
00:21:21,800 --> 00:21:23,560
There is a little sugar on there.
325
00:21:23,560 --> 00:21:25,680
Probably ought to have used honey for a pilgrim,
326
00:21:25,680 --> 00:21:27,600
but I thought I'd treat you.
327
00:21:27,600 --> 00:21:29,280
HE LAUGHS
328
00:21:30,680 --> 00:21:33,480
Thank you. That was absolutely delicious.
329
00:21:33,480 --> 00:21:36,760
A real joy to eat and fantastic to learn about.
330
00:21:36,760 --> 00:21:38,640
I'm just hoping I can sneak this away.
331
00:21:42,840 --> 00:21:45,680
Well, that was fascinating and I loved the food.
332
00:21:45,680 --> 00:21:47,640
Now on to Walsingham.
333
00:21:49,400 --> 00:21:53,640
Some religious sites around the world attract millions of pilgrims.
334
00:21:53,640 --> 00:21:56,120
I was heading to a small Norfolk town
335
00:21:56,120 --> 00:21:58,160
which is one of the few places in Britain
336
00:21:58,160 --> 00:22:00,920
where pilgrims still go in large numbers,
337
00:22:00,920 --> 00:22:03,440
some 300,000 every year.
338
00:22:05,320 --> 00:22:07,760
These pilgrims are part of a tradition
339
00:22:07,760 --> 00:22:10,680
dating back almost 1,000 years.
340
00:22:10,680 --> 00:22:14,680
A shrine was established here by a Saxon noblewoman.
341
00:22:14,680 --> 00:22:17,560
In the year 1061, she had a vision.
342
00:22:17,560 --> 00:22:21,160
The Virgin Mary asked her to build a replica of the house in Nazareth
343
00:22:21,160 --> 00:22:25,920
- where the Angel Gabriel announced she would give birth to Jesus.
- ALL SING
344
00:22:25,920 --> 00:22:28,320
By Tudor times, hundreds of thousands of Britons
345
00:22:28,320 --> 00:22:31,040
were trekking here from across the country.
346
00:22:31,040 --> 00:22:33,640
- So you come here regularly every year?
- Every year.
347
00:22:33,640 --> 00:22:36,800
- Gives us a chance to catch up.
- We catch up with people.
348
00:22:36,800 --> 00:22:38,760
Is it an opportunity also for you
349
00:22:38,760 --> 00:22:42,640
- to recharge your spiritual batteries?
- Recharge, yeah.
350
00:22:42,640 --> 00:22:44,560
- Yes. Yeah.
- Ever so.
351
00:22:44,560 --> 00:22:46,400
- Can I slot in with you?
- Yes.
352
00:22:46,400 --> 00:22:50,200
- Why are you here today, can we ask?
- This is my first time.
353
00:22:50,200 --> 00:22:53,320
- First time? Is it going OK so far?
- Yep, lovely.
354
00:22:53,320 --> 00:22:56,760
- There are worse ways to spend a bank holiday, aren't there?
- That's it, yeah.
355
00:22:56,760 --> 00:22:59,440
ALL SING
356
00:22:59,440 --> 00:23:01,200
In the places I've visited so far,
357
00:23:01,200 --> 00:23:06,200
I've often felt that many of the people there were visitors and tourists rather than pilgrims,
358
00:23:06,200 --> 00:23:14,120
but here now, this feels as close as I've really got to an encounter with genuine real pilgrims.
359
00:23:14,120 --> 00:23:18,760
- ALL SING
- But for centuries, pilgrimage was a rare sight here.
360
00:23:18,760 --> 00:23:20,880
500 years ago, Henry VIII
361
00:23:20,880 --> 00:23:23,600
split the Church of England from Catholicism
362
00:23:23,600 --> 00:23:26,640
and turned the country into a Protestant nation.
363
00:23:26,640 --> 00:23:29,360
It was the time of the Reformation.
364
00:23:29,360 --> 00:23:33,840
Shrines, the idolatry of saints, and many pilgrimages like this,
365
00:23:33,840 --> 00:23:37,200
all seen as rituals of the Catholic church, were banned.
366
00:23:37,200 --> 00:23:39,920
And some Protestants think they should be today.
367
00:23:41,480 --> 00:23:44,040
"The invocation of saints..."
368
00:23:44,040 --> 00:23:47,480
"..is vainly invented... Repugnant to the word of God."
369
00:23:47,480 --> 00:23:49,760
And you're protesting that the Church of England,
370
00:23:49,760 --> 00:23:52,240
the Anglicans here are behaving like Catholics.
371
00:23:52,240 --> 00:23:57,200
They are. We want them to return to what their church professes to believe.
372
00:23:57,200 --> 00:23:59,480
Have you ever had a situation when you've been here
373
00:23:59,480 --> 00:24:03,360
when people who've been on the march have actually said, "No, you're right,
374
00:24:03,360 --> 00:24:06,800
"I'm going to cross the barrier, as it were, and not do this again?"
375
00:24:06,800 --> 00:24:10,200
We know people who have come out of it. And...
376
00:24:10,200 --> 00:24:12,800
Come out of it? You make it sound like a cult.
377
00:24:12,800 --> 00:24:17,400
Well, it is a cult. It's occult. It is occult.
378
00:24:17,400 --> 00:24:20,360
The biggest occult system in this world is the Church of Rome,
379
00:24:20,360 --> 00:24:22,440
because they actually worship the dead.
380
00:24:23,600 --> 00:24:26,840
Even at the height of its popularity before the Reformation,
381
00:24:26,840 --> 00:24:30,400
Walsingham and other pilgrimage sites had their critics.
382
00:24:31,520 --> 00:24:36,440
Visitors to shrines were often sold holy souvenirs of dubious origin.
383
00:24:36,440 --> 00:24:39,480
Walsingham was once branded Falsingham.
384
00:24:41,080 --> 00:24:44,120
There was a period where there were claims that salesmen
385
00:24:44,120 --> 00:24:46,800
were lining up on the side of the road
386
00:24:46,800 --> 00:24:50,400
to sell the Virgin Mary's breast milk!
387
00:24:53,720 --> 00:24:57,640
Corruption and the exploitation of the beliefs of ordinary pilgrims
388
00:24:57,640 --> 00:25:00,600
encouraged Henry's dramatic break from Rome
389
00:25:00,600 --> 00:25:02,640
and his assault on the old Church.
390
00:25:04,320 --> 00:25:06,560
This is really powerful.
391
00:25:06,560 --> 00:25:10,800
These bits of stone have come from buildings from cathedrals
392
00:25:10,800 --> 00:25:14,280
from churches that were attacked
393
00:25:14,280 --> 00:25:18,800
and in many cases destroyed during the Reformation.
394
00:25:18,800 --> 00:25:21,840
So we've got...from Chester here,
395
00:25:21,840 --> 00:25:24,320
some of them have got writing on them,
396
00:25:24,320 --> 00:25:26,680
from Beeston, Rosedale, Lincoln.
397
00:25:26,680 --> 00:25:29,080
It's a graphic illustration
398
00:25:29,080 --> 00:25:33,720
of just how damaging and destructive the Reformation was
399
00:25:33,720 --> 00:25:38,880
to the religious infrastructure of Britain.
400
00:25:38,880 --> 00:25:43,440
Also, of course, it represents the destruction of shrines
401
00:25:43,440 --> 00:25:48,920
and thus the end of the golden age of pilgrimage in Britain.
402
00:25:51,000 --> 00:25:54,720
Catholics built a new shrine in Walsingham in 1897.
403
00:25:54,720 --> 00:25:58,880
And a new Church of England shrine was constructed in 1922.
404
00:25:58,880 --> 00:26:03,040
So after such a long time, what sparked a revival in pilgrimage?
405
00:26:04,560 --> 00:26:06,600
I met up with Bishop Lindsay Urwin,
406
00:26:06,600 --> 00:26:10,360
who took me to see the restyled Anglican shrine.
407
00:26:10,360 --> 00:26:12,680
One of the things I love about this house
408
00:26:12,680 --> 00:26:17,280
is the sort of the darkness of it and the walls, because that's all caused by the smoke of candles.
409
00:26:17,280 --> 00:26:22,040
You receive hundreds of thousands of pilgrims here every year,
410
00:26:22,040 --> 00:26:27,280
is that evidence of a revival of interest in pilgrimage?
411
00:26:27,280 --> 00:26:30,680
I think it's interesting that in a society
412
00:26:30,680 --> 00:26:33,760
that probably doesn't quite know where it's going...
413
00:26:35,200 --> 00:26:37,760
..the notion of people making pilgrimages,
414
00:26:37,760 --> 00:26:43,040
of making intentional journeys...is sort of resurfacing.
415
00:26:43,040 --> 00:26:46,240
The crucial element there is the notion of the journey.
416
00:26:46,240 --> 00:26:49,800
Looking, seeking a destination, finding one here,
417
00:26:49,800 --> 00:26:54,560
of finding purpose and meaning in life as a result?
418
00:26:54,560 --> 00:26:59,400
When people come on a pilgrimage to a holy place, it's a staging post.
419
00:26:59,400 --> 00:27:01,120
People come to the holy house
420
00:27:01,120 --> 00:27:04,120
and it's the end of this particular pilgrimage journey,
421
00:27:04,120 --> 00:27:07,920
but it's only to be a reminder to them of the great hope
422
00:27:07,920 --> 00:27:13,960
that actually at life's end...there is a resting place.
423
00:27:13,960 --> 00:27:16,400
There is more.
424
00:27:16,400 --> 00:27:19,040
- Life is a pilgrimage.
- Life is a pilgrimage.
425
00:27:21,240 --> 00:27:25,360
The decline of pilgrimage was a real loss for many ordinary Britons.
426
00:27:27,360 --> 00:27:32,160
Not only did many believe in the power of shrines to absolve sins and provide healing,
427
00:27:32,160 --> 00:27:36,400
but pilgrimage was a chance to have a real adventure.
428
00:27:36,400 --> 00:27:40,640
And for some it was an excuse to do a little sinning away from home.
429
00:27:42,280 --> 00:27:45,840
And where better to do that than in the country's capital city.
430
00:27:48,880 --> 00:27:53,160
Medieval London was the gateway for pilgrims heading to Canterbury.
431
00:27:53,160 --> 00:27:56,240
A place that provoked fear and promised excitement.
432
00:27:58,120 --> 00:28:03,080
Can you imagine the wide-eyed astonishment of a medieval traveller
433
00:28:03,080 --> 00:28:05,760
arriving in London for the first time?
434
00:28:05,760 --> 00:28:09,080
It wouldn't have been a big city then by comparison with today, of course,
435
00:28:09,080 --> 00:28:12,080
but in the Middle Ages it would have felt like a mega-city.
436
00:28:13,880 --> 00:28:16,400
Arriving here 700 years ago,
437
00:28:16,400 --> 00:28:19,840
I would have entered a walled city built north of the Thames.
438
00:28:19,840 --> 00:28:24,480
40,000 residents were joined by merchants, pilgrims and travellers.
439
00:28:26,320 --> 00:28:28,880
The gates of the city were locked at night,
440
00:28:28,880 --> 00:28:30,960
so anyone wanting an early start to Canterbury
441
00:28:30,960 --> 00:28:32,720
would have crossed London Bridge
442
00:28:32,720 --> 00:28:36,880
to spend an evening surrounded by danger and temptation.
443
00:28:36,880 --> 00:28:39,040
For more than 1,000 years,
444
00:28:39,040 --> 00:28:43,720
this area over here, the area around Southwark and Borough,
445
00:28:43,720 --> 00:28:48,440
has had a reputation for being a bit edgy, shall we say?
446
00:28:48,440 --> 00:28:50,880
Actually, that's probably putting it rather politely,
447
00:28:50,880 --> 00:28:53,840
in medieval times it was positively sleazy!
448
00:28:55,080 --> 00:28:59,080
South of the river was where London dumped many of its unwanted.
449
00:28:59,080 --> 00:29:02,760
It was a home to pickpockets, tricksters and highway robbers.
450
00:29:02,760 --> 00:29:05,880
Not an ideal place for pious pilgrims,
451
00:29:05,880 --> 00:29:08,520
but an eye-opener for the more adventurous.
452
00:29:08,520 --> 00:29:11,360
This was an area of inns and ale houses
453
00:29:11,360 --> 00:29:15,240
and, by the early 1500s, around 18 brothels.
454
00:29:17,560 --> 00:29:20,080
Ironically, rent from the brothels
455
00:29:20,080 --> 00:29:24,480
was paid to the landowner, who was the Bishop of Winchester!
456
00:29:24,480 --> 00:29:28,440
Prostitutes around here actually became known as Winchester geese.
457
00:29:30,240 --> 00:29:33,080
Today, Southwark is up and coming,
458
00:29:33,080 --> 00:29:34,720
but I was looking for a spot
459
00:29:34,720 --> 00:29:38,160
that offers a glimpse of the area's murkier past.
460
00:29:38,160 --> 00:29:39,880
And this is it.
461
00:29:42,880 --> 00:29:44,880
It's quite eerie at night.
462
00:29:48,960 --> 00:29:54,240
There are thought to be up to 15,000 people buried in here.
463
00:29:56,480 --> 00:30:00,640
Among them are countless prostitutes and illegitimate children
464
00:30:00,640 --> 00:30:05,000
who the Church didn't want buried on consecrated ground.
465
00:30:05,000 --> 00:30:10,400
It's now a hugely valuable piece of real estate in the centre of London,
466
00:30:10,400 --> 00:30:15,520
but local people, when they found out about it, have gathered together
467
00:30:15,520 --> 00:30:19,800
and turned it into something of a shrine to try and stop it from being
468
00:30:19,800 --> 00:30:24,800
developed without consideration given to the long-term residents.
469
00:30:25,800 --> 00:30:28,280
It's really moving, actually.
470
00:30:31,040 --> 00:30:35,240
I think what this wall and the graveyard gives a sense of
471
00:30:35,240 --> 00:30:38,000
is the scale of prostitution that was under way
472
00:30:38,000 --> 00:30:42,080
on this side of the Thames as travellers would have crossed from London.
473
00:30:42,080 --> 00:30:45,400
It wasn't just a couple of girls on the corner, this was an industry.
474
00:30:45,400 --> 00:30:47,720
And it was there to tempt pilgrims, of course,
475
00:30:47,720 --> 00:30:49,160
but I suspect it was also there
476
00:30:49,160 --> 00:30:51,840
partly because that's what some of the pilgrims wanted.
477
00:30:51,840 --> 00:30:54,880
They didn't just come for reasons of piety,
478
00:30:54,880 --> 00:30:57,960
they came because they were away from their communities
479
00:30:57,960 --> 00:31:00,240
and it was an opportunity to sin.
480
00:31:02,480 --> 00:31:06,080
Pilgrims would have left their communities with pious intentions,
481
00:31:06,080 --> 00:31:10,040
but been sucked into the world of vice after running out of money.
482
00:31:10,040 --> 00:31:13,880
There was a medieval saying about pilgrimage for women,
483
00:31:13,880 --> 00:31:16,400
"Go a pilgrim, return a whore."
484
00:31:21,720 --> 00:31:23,160
The precise number of pilgrims
485
00:31:23,160 --> 00:31:27,680
who passed through London on their way to St Thomas Becket's shrine is uncertain,
486
00:31:27,680 --> 00:31:31,800
but strong evidence that Southwark was once a gateway to and from Canterbury
487
00:31:31,800 --> 00:31:34,480
is being found along the banks of the Thames.
488
00:31:35,960 --> 00:31:38,520
Archaeologists have dug up an extraordinary range
489
00:31:38,520 --> 00:31:41,760
of pilgrim badges dating back over 500 years.
490
00:31:43,240 --> 00:31:46,320
These badges were sold to pilgrims at shrines.
491
00:31:46,320 --> 00:31:49,080
A nice little earner for the Church.
492
00:31:49,080 --> 00:31:52,600
Mary Olgeeter is a curator from the Museum of London.
493
00:31:52,600 --> 00:31:55,840
They're probably my favourite objects in the museum's collection.
494
00:31:55,840 --> 00:31:57,920
- Really?
- I find them incredibly evocative.
495
00:31:57,920 --> 00:32:02,520
And you just sort of think about the people's very fervent beliefs at the time
496
00:32:02,520 --> 00:32:04,600
- kind of embodied in these objects.
- Hm.
497
00:32:04,600 --> 00:32:09,200
These are touch relics, cos they have been physically touched
498
00:32:09,200 --> 00:32:12,440
against a saint's shrine or their remains.
499
00:32:12,440 --> 00:32:16,360
So a pilgrim will have got their badge or their souvenir,
500
00:32:16,360 --> 00:32:17,640
I suppose,
501
00:32:17,640 --> 00:32:21,520
from a shrine or somewhere and will have just pressed it
502
00:32:21,520 --> 00:32:26,280
against the bones of a saintly... a saintly relic.
503
00:32:26,280 --> 00:32:27,640
Yes. Yeah.
504
00:32:27,640 --> 00:32:31,400
So these aren't really a kind of "I Heart New York" kind of souvenir.
505
00:32:31,400 --> 00:32:34,160
HE LAUGHS This is proper religious stuff.
506
00:32:34,160 --> 00:32:36,440
So, St Thomas Becket.
507
00:32:36,440 --> 00:32:40,000
It would have had a pin on the back. You can't really see it,
508
00:32:40,000 --> 00:32:43,200
that's the top of the pin, so that has snapped off.
509
00:32:43,200 --> 00:32:46,800
So that would be attached to your cloak or your hat.
510
00:32:46,800 --> 00:32:50,440
And why would people have pinned it to their clothing?
511
00:32:50,440 --> 00:32:54,000
Was it really just to say, "Look where I've been?"
512
00:32:54,000 --> 00:32:55,800
It's look where I've been, you know,
513
00:32:55,800 --> 00:33:00,000
if you've had time off work and you can prove to your boss or your spouse
514
00:33:00,000 --> 00:33:01,200
when you've got home,
515
00:33:01,200 --> 00:33:03,960
"Look, I did go and do that important pious act."
516
00:33:03,960 --> 00:33:09,160
By touching them, you can sort of have some of the saint's virtue
517
00:33:09,160 --> 00:33:13,080
and you can be cured of illnesses and things like that.
518
00:33:13,080 --> 00:33:17,280
It is...astonishing to think of the meaning, the power,
519
00:33:17,280 --> 00:33:21,360
- that's imbued in these relatively simple souvenirs.
- Hmm.
520
00:33:21,360 --> 00:33:26,800
- What's this one here?
- This depicts the martyrdom of Thomas Becket.
521
00:33:26,800 --> 00:33:28,520
- And this was a badge?!
- Yes.
522
00:33:28,520 --> 00:33:30,840
Look at the...the work involved in this!
523
00:33:30,840 --> 00:33:34,080
I know and they're so delicate. It's amazing that they have survived.
524
00:33:34,080 --> 00:33:37,160
These are the four knights who went to attack Thomas Becket.
525
00:33:37,160 --> 00:33:39,000
This is the murder scene, isn't it?
526
00:33:39,000 --> 00:33:40,160
The murder scene, yeah.
527
00:33:40,160 --> 00:33:42,840
One of their heads is missing but there are four people here.
528
00:33:42,840 --> 00:33:44,120
And there's poor Becket,
529
00:33:44,120 --> 00:33:48,280
who's fallen to his knees in front of the altar having been struck.
530
00:33:48,280 --> 00:33:54,280
It says "Thomas MA," meaning martyr...at the bottom.
531
00:33:57,240 --> 00:34:02,200
Shrines around Britain had enormous power of course,
532
00:34:02,200 --> 00:34:04,760
but I hadn't realised before now
533
00:34:04,760 --> 00:34:08,040
just how mobile that power could become.
534
00:34:08,040 --> 00:34:12,520
The badges were a real connection with the holiest of holies
535
00:34:12,520 --> 00:34:17,080
that a pilgrim could take back to their village in any part of the country.
536
00:34:17,080 --> 00:34:22,800
I think there wouldn't have been any part of Britain that couldn't have felt, through those badges,
537
00:34:22,800 --> 00:34:25,680
a connection with a relic or a saint.
538
00:34:30,960 --> 00:34:35,040
Medieval pilgrims would have followed...well-worn tracks.
539
00:34:35,040 --> 00:34:37,560
They would have asked directions.
540
00:34:37,560 --> 00:34:40,880
And that's what would have taken them from community to community,
541
00:34:40,880 --> 00:34:42,200
village to village.
542
00:34:42,200 --> 00:34:45,280
Now, of course, we've all got smartphones.
543
00:34:46,960 --> 00:34:51,600
What is great about this, of course, it means I don't have to ask anyone where I'm going,
544
00:34:51,600 --> 00:34:53,960
a very un-male thing to do.
545
00:34:55,440 --> 00:34:57,160
It's this way.
546
00:34:57,160 --> 00:34:58,560
Careful now.
547
00:34:59,560 --> 00:35:01,720
Heading out of London from Southwark,
548
00:35:01,720 --> 00:35:05,880
I was following in the footsteps of some of our most famous pilgrims.
549
00:35:05,880 --> 00:35:11,280
Their tales were told in one of the first and greatest works of literature in the English language.
550
00:35:11,280 --> 00:35:13,440
Here we are.
551
00:35:13,440 --> 00:35:17,640
"Geoffrey Chaucer, 1342 to 1400.
552
00:35:17,640 --> 00:35:19,400
"England's greatest medieval poet
553
00:35:19,400 --> 00:35:21,680
"and author of the Canterbury Tales. The Tabard Inn.
554
00:35:21,680 --> 00:35:25,360
"Site from which Chaucer's pilgrims set off in April 1386."
555
00:35:25,360 --> 00:35:28,960
Whan that Aprill with his shoures soote,
556
00:35:28,960 --> 00:35:32,680
the droughte of March hath perced to the roote...
557
00:35:32,680 --> 00:35:37,960
Henry Eliot takes groups of Chaucer enthusiasts on the 65-mile trek
558
00:35:37,960 --> 00:35:41,880
along the same route used by the fictional pilgrims in the Canterbury Tales.
559
00:35:41,880 --> 00:35:45,440
..that slepen al the nyght with open ye,
560
00:35:45,440 --> 00:35:48,440
so priketh hem nature in hir corages.
561
00:35:48,440 --> 00:35:51,800
Thanne longen folk to goon on pilgrimages.
562
00:35:51,800 --> 00:35:55,360
Fantastic! Excellent. With the prologue from the Canterbury Tales
563
00:35:55,360 --> 00:35:57,840
whetting our appetite for pilgrimage,
564
00:35:57,840 --> 00:36:00,960
I set off with Henry and his merry band on the journey out of London.
565
00:36:03,720 --> 00:36:07,160
We're treading in the exact footsteps of medieval pilgrims.
566
00:36:07,160 --> 00:36:10,280
I find that really exciting, even though so much has changed today.
567
00:36:10,280 --> 00:36:15,360
This... Borough High Street, the buildings may have changed but this route is the same.
568
00:36:16,960 --> 00:36:22,480
We were using roads that once formed Watling Street, the Roman road used by Chaucer's pilgrims.
569
00:36:22,480 --> 00:36:26,000
It runs all the way to Canterbury and onwards to Dover.
570
00:36:28,760 --> 00:36:31,720
What does Chaucer tell us about...
571
00:36:31,720 --> 00:36:35,640
Or teach us, in fact, about the medieval time and particularly pilgrimage?
572
00:36:35,640 --> 00:36:37,760
Sure. Well, I suppose the main thing
573
00:36:37,760 --> 00:36:41,440
is how many different types of people were going on pilgrimage.
574
00:36:41,440 --> 00:36:44,200
Everyone from the knights down to the ploughman.
575
00:36:44,200 --> 00:36:45,520
Pilgrimage was a situation
576
00:36:45,520 --> 00:36:48,120
in which people from every level of society could meet.
577
00:36:48,120 --> 00:36:50,240
Would come together and that was quite rare.
578
00:36:50,240 --> 00:36:55,240
In Chaucer's time, much of the route between London and Canterbury was through thick forest.
579
00:36:55,240 --> 00:36:59,280
Pilgrims from all classes stuck together, carried weapons
580
00:36:59,280 --> 00:37:00,680
and kept to the road.
581
00:37:00,680 --> 00:37:02,680
We're just approaching the place
582
00:37:02,680 --> 00:37:05,920
where Chaucer's pilgrims stopped for their first tale.
583
00:37:05,920 --> 00:37:07,880
Are we?! This crossroad?
584
00:37:07,880 --> 00:37:10,800
Chaucer described it as "the watering of St Thomas."
585
00:37:10,800 --> 00:37:15,200
- Right.
- Which was a little stream with a holy well attached to it,
586
00:37:15,200 --> 00:37:18,560
dedicated to St Thomas Becket, which was just here.
587
00:37:21,720 --> 00:37:24,720
Hear now, the Knight's Tale for friends.
588
00:37:24,720 --> 00:37:29,040
- The chivalry of this tale will make you cheer.
- ALL CHEER
589
00:37:29,040 --> 00:37:32,280
- The bravery of this tale will make you gasp.
- ALL GASP
590
00:37:32,280 --> 00:37:35,320
- And the sorrow of this tale will make you weep.
- ALL SOB
591
00:37:35,320 --> 00:37:39,720
And because it is a knight's tale, friends, it is apt that it begins upon the battlefield.
592
00:37:39,720 --> 00:37:45,800
So this is the tale of two princes locked in a tower together who crave the love of a fair maiden.
593
00:37:45,800 --> 00:37:51,280
Step forward, Arcite. The other prince of royal blood, Palamon!
594
00:37:51,280 --> 00:37:56,360
- Ah!
- Palamon.
- Called upon. Called upon.
- Pious, wise,
595
00:37:56,360 --> 00:38:00,080
thoughtful, brooding, aloof. Perhaps slightly less handsome than Arcite.
596
00:38:00,080 --> 00:38:04,080
It's completely mad! We're on a crossroad on the Old Kent Road.
597
00:38:04,080 --> 00:38:09,760
Palamon cannot believe that Arcite has also fallen in love with Emily and he beats his chest.
598
00:38:09,760 --> 00:38:11,760
Beats his chest.
599
00:38:11,760 --> 00:38:14,120
- Howls at the moon.
- HE HOWLS
600
00:38:14,120 --> 00:38:16,720
- LAUGHTER
- Shoves gravel down his...
601
00:38:16,720 --> 00:38:18,840
I'll see how far you're going to go with this. No.
602
00:38:18,840 --> 00:38:21,280
And the two set immediately to fighting!
603
00:38:21,280 --> 00:38:24,560
So step forward. Step forward before me now and brace your...
604
00:38:24,560 --> 00:38:27,560
It's certainly a novel take on The Knight's Tale.
605
00:38:27,560 --> 00:38:28,720
I was loving it.
606
00:38:28,720 --> 00:38:30,680
And as they say in these things - Allez!
607
00:38:30,680 --> 00:38:35,760
Arcite puts his back...with all his force and pushes Palamon down!
608
00:38:35,760 --> 00:38:38,160
Down! Down to the ground!
609
00:38:38,160 --> 00:38:40,880
Yes! Arcite wins!
610
00:38:40,880 --> 00:38:45,320
That was fantastic. There you go, on a crossroads in the middle of South East London.
611
00:38:45,320 --> 00:38:49,320
What a ludicrous location, but absolutely fantastic.
612
00:38:49,320 --> 00:38:52,040
- Bonkers but brilliant, eh?
- That's it. Yeah.
613
00:38:52,040 --> 00:38:53,800
- All the best.
- ALL: Wah!
614
00:38:53,800 --> 00:38:56,160
Before setting out on this journey,
615
00:38:56,160 --> 00:38:59,240
I thought pilgrimage was something that had to be suffered.
616
00:38:59,240 --> 00:39:01,400
A penance for sins.
617
00:39:01,400 --> 00:39:04,160
Leaving London, following Chaucer's route,
618
00:39:04,160 --> 00:39:08,080
I was beginning to see that for most travellers, past and present,
619
00:39:08,080 --> 00:39:11,480
pilgrimage can be both pious and fun.
620
00:39:14,920 --> 00:39:18,760
I've reached a real landmark on the journey.
621
00:39:18,760 --> 00:39:21,920
The delights...of the M25!
622
00:39:24,480 --> 00:39:28,800
I'm going to wait here and meet a bloke who should be turning up.
623
00:39:28,800 --> 00:39:31,280
A man who does pilgrimage the hard way.
624
00:39:34,600 --> 00:39:36,920
It's definitely him.
625
00:39:36,920 --> 00:39:39,800
For the last 26 years, careworker Lindsay Hammond
626
00:39:39,800 --> 00:39:43,640
has spent much of his spare time on a very unique kind of pilgrimage.
627
00:39:44,720 --> 00:39:47,040
You...must definitely be Lindsay.
628
00:39:47,040 --> 00:39:49,080
I am, Simon. HE CHUCKLES
629
00:39:49,080 --> 00:39:50,680
Goodness me, Lindsay!
630
00:39:51,800 --> 00:39:54,240
How far have you carried that?
631
00:39:54,240 --> 00:39:57,640
Well, I think it's about 5,000-plus miles now.
632
00:39:57,640 --> 00:40:02,440
- Why?
- Erm...I've received a lot from Jesus, you know,
633
00:40:02,440 --> 00:40:05,520
I've received a new life, received forgiveness of sins, you know,
634
00:40:05,520 --> 00:40:08,480
so I want to give it away. That's why I carry it,
635
00:40:08,480 --> 00:40:10,280
I want to give away what I've received.
636
00:40:10,280 --> 00:40:13,280
And what's the longest journey you've done with the cross?
637
00:40:13,280 --> 00:40:17,000
Well, the longest one was... Berlin to Moscow.
638
00:40:17,000 --> 00:40:20,600
CAR HORN That was...that was three months.
639
00:40:20,600 --> 00:40:23,960
- Three months of walking with the cross?
- Yeah.
640
00:40:23,960 --> 00:40:26,360
- With your kit?
- With my kit, yes.
641
00:40:26,360 --> 00:40:30,440
Lindsay, do you think you're what's commonly known as...
642
00:40:30,440 --> 00:40:32,440
a little bit of a nutter?
643
00:40:32,440 --> 00:40:34,960
Yeah. HE LAUGHS
644
00:40:34,960 --> 00:40:37,680
Yeah, I do, I think in some ways.
645
00:40:37,680 --> 00:40:42,320
This is a large piece of timber to be lugging around, isn't it?
646
00:40:42,320 --> 00:40:44,840
- I mean, even with the wheel on the back.
- The wheel.
647
00:40:44,840 --> 00:40:48,520
Everybody wants to make a big thing and say Jesus didn't have a wheel on his cross.
648
00:40:48,520 --> 00:40:50,840
- Is that what they say to you?
- I could be a millionaire
649
00:40:50,840 --> 00:40:53,760
if I had a pound for every time somebody said that.
650
00:40:56,480 --> 00:41:01,400
- Are you a pilgrim or are you a preacher?
- Both. Both, really.
651
00:41:01,400 --> 00:41:06,880
I want to spend hours and hours and hours on the road with Jesus, that's what a pilgrim does, you know.
652
00:41:06,880 --> 00:41:10,240
I want to travel from place to place doing it, that's what a pilgrim does.
653
00:41:12,120 --> 00:41:15,960
The cross seems to break down barriers, they seem to trust me very quickly.
654
00:41:15,960 --> 00:41:19,880
Er...and maybe my humour helps, you know.
655
00:41:19,880 --> 00:41:23,400
- But the...
- It's your cheeky grin.
- It's the cheeky grin, yeah.
656
00:41:23,400 --> 00:41:25,960
- Spreading the word.
- Spreading the word.
657
00:41:25,960 --> 00:41:27,360
Because we're living in a time
658
00:41:27,360 --> 00:41:30,040
where so few people are doing what you're doing,
659
00:41:30,040 --> 00:41:33,720
is it sort of...? Hm. Now this is interesting.
660
00:41:33,720 --> 00:41:37,200
- So...?
- Where are you off to? Canterbury?
661
00:41:37,200 --> 00:41:41,240
Eventually. He's carrying his cross around Britain, around the world.
662
00:41:41,240 --> 00:41:43,440
That's it. Well done.
663
00:41:43,440 --> 00:41:47,520
What do you think when you look at him and you see him carrying the cross?
664
00:41:47,520 --> 00:41:50,320
Christ.
665
00:41:50,320 --> 00:41:53,960
- That's a good response.
- It all comes back to you.
- Isn't that brilliant?
666
00:41:53,960 --> 00:41:57,200
- That's great.
- Does it worry you that he might start talking to you about...?
667
00:41:57,200 --> 00:42:00,880
No, no, no. I'm a Catholic. I'll talk to him if he wants to talk to me.
668
00:42:00,880 --> 00:42:04,000
- Is there anything you need? Any water? I'm
- fine, mate. Thanks.
669
00:42:04,000 --> 00:42:07,560
That's lovely of you. Thank you. We appreciate that offer, kind sir.
670
00:42:07,560 --> 00:42:09,160
No, that's all right.
671
00:42:09,160 --> 00:42:11,160
I can't share the faith yet,
672
00:42:11,160 --> 00:42:14,160
but I'm fascinated to know how much the cross weighs.
673
00:42:14,160 --> 00:42:16,840
- Can I try it on the shoulders?
- Of course you can.
674
00:42:16,840 --> 00:42:19,520
That's 25K but it's OK.
675
00:42:21,400 --> 00:42:24,320
It's OK to do... Well, let's see.
676
00:42:24,320 --> 00:42:27,320
I can imagine this will be OK for a short distance. Can we walk on?
677
00:42:27,320 --> 00:42:28,920
Yeah.
678
00:42:28,920 --> 00:42:31,480
- Across the road?
- Whoa, whoa. No. No, no, no.
679
00:42:31,480 --> 00:42:33,240
- Reverse?
- Yeah.
680
00:42:33,240 --> 00:42:34,920
Cross reversing.
681
00:42:34,920 --> 00:42:37,880
Maybe not when the articulated lorry's going past.
682
00:42:37,880 --> 00:42:40,480
You see...amateur driver there.
683
00:42:40,480 --> 00:42:43,600
- I'll stop them. I'll stop the traffic for you.
- Safe to go out?
684
00:42:43,600 --> 00:42:45,160
Yeah, come on then.
685
00:42:50,120 --> 00:42:53,480
- It's already hurting my bony shoulder.
- LINDSAY LAUGHS
686
00:42:53,480 --> 00:42:55,800
- So just pop up.
- Yeah, there you go.
687
00:42:55,800 --> 00:42:59,680
I think your level of faith, Lindsay, frightens me a bit,
688
00:42:59,680 --> 00:43:03,920
intimidates me, but I also... I'm also a bit jealous of you.
689
00:43:05,440 --> 00:43:07,720
I don't really believe in much any more.
690
00:43:09,160 --> 00:43:11,840
I don't feel worthy of carrying the cross.
691
00:43:11,840 --> 00:43:15,120
I think it should be returned to the...the rightful owner.
692
00:43:15,120 --> 00:43:17,400
It's back on the shoulder. Over to you, sir.
693
00:43:17,400 --> 00:43:20,240
- LINDSAY LAUGHS
- I wish you...
694
00:43:20,240 --> 00:43:22,480
This isn't light, I tell you.
695
00:43:24,480 --> 00:43:28,280
- I wish you all the very best on your travels.
- Simon, thanks, mate.
696
00:43:28,280 --> 00:43:30,880
You're doing it in a way I can barely imagine.
697
00:43:30,880 --> 00:43:32,840
Good luck on the road, Lindsay.
698
00:43:38,320 --> 00:43:43,480
Before all this TV travel started for me, I used to write books
699
00:43:43,480 --> 00:43:46,960
and investigate terrorism. It made me very cynical,
700
00:43:46,960 --> 00:43:50,920
and it made me somewhat frightened of people who believe too strongly
701
00:43:50,920 --> 00:43:52,480
in anything.
702
00:43:52,480 --> 00:43:54,400
Lindsay is one of those people,
703
00:43:54,400 --> 00:43:56,880
but you spend a little bit of time with him
704
00:43:56,880 --> 00:44:00,480
and you realise he's a lovely, lovely bloke.
705
00:44:00,480 --> 00:44:03,800
And even just now as we were leaving and vans are going past,
706
00:44:03,800 --> 00:44:05,360
I felt quite protective of him.
707
00:44:05,360 --> 00:44:09,800
I didn't want anyone to lean out of the window and shout "nutter" or anything worse.
708
00:44:11,280 --> 00:44:13,840
He's doing pilgrimage the hard way.
709
00:44:22,680 --> 00:44:25,440
I've come slightly off track...
710
00:44:25,440 --> 00:44:28,920
because this is the M2 up here.
711
00:44:28,920 --> 00:44:34,160
This is the old Roman road that Chaucer's pilgrims were supposed to have taken, but I've come down here,
712
00:44:34,160 --> 00:44:37,800
because I want to get onto this pathway, Pilgrims' Way.
713
00:44:39,360 --> 00:44:43,280
It's Britain's most famous pilgrimage trail.
714
00:44:43,280 --> 00:44:44,840
The 120-mile track
715
00:44:44,840 --> 00:44:49,520
once bustled with thousands of medieval travellers heading to and from Canterbury.
716
00:44:49,520 --> 00:44:54,080
Many enjoying a welcome break from the difficult life of a feudal peasant.
717
00:44:56,080 --> 00:44:58,840
This really opens up now.
718
00:44:58,840 --> 00:45:02,200
The track itself follows this low chalk ridge.
719
00:45:02,200 --> 00:45:07,080
It runs all the way from Winchester, past Canterbury and on to Dover.
720
00:45:07,080 --> 00:45:08,680
The history of Pilgrims' Way
721
00:45:08,680 --> 00:45:11,200
has been documented by author Derek Bright.
722
00:45:12,960 --> 00:45:14,760
It would be used for trade.
723
00:45:14,760 --> 00:45:18,720
It would have been used by people coming in to the country.
724
00:45:18,720 --> 00:45:23,640
Probably going back to after the last Ice Age receded.
725
00:45:23,640 --> 00:45:29,400
- So this was a track for people long before Christianity came to this island.
- Sure.
726
00:45:29,400 --> 00:45:33,560
This wasn't just a pilgrims' way, this is a peasants' way and a travellers' way
727
00:45:33,560 --> 00:45:36,440
going back several thousand years.
728
00:45:38,800 --> 00:45:41,960
More travellers on the way. Hello. Good morning to you.
729
00:45:41,960 --> 00:45:45,280
You're going the wrong way. This is the Pilgrims' Way to Canterbury.
730
00:45:45,280 --> 00:45:48,880
- It's this way! Oh, you've been?
- THEY LAUGH
731
00:45:48,880 --> 00:45:50,440
Returning home.
732
00:45:51,600 --> 00:45:54,160
Tens of thousands of medieval pilgrims
733
00:45:54,160 --> 00:45:57,000
walked and rode to Canterbury each year.
734
00:45:57,000 --> 00:45:58,440
Treasures from their adventures
735
00:45:58,440 --> 00:46:00,720
have been unearthed all along Pilgrims' Way.
736
00:46:01,760 --> 00:46:05,160
- So what is this?
- This is an ampulla.
737
00:46:05,160 --> 00:46:08,800
If you feel it, Simon, it's made of lead, so it's fairly heavy.
738
00:46:08,800 --> 00:46:10,480
Feel the...feel the weight.
739
00:46:10,480 --> 00:46:13,240
What's the thinking? What would this have stored?
740
00:46:13,240 --> 00:46:16,000
A little bit of holy water of some type or...?
741
00:46:16,000 --> 00:46:18,600
It may have holy oil or holy water,
742
00:46:18,600 --> 00:46:23,600
- but at Canterbury it would have been filled with the blood of Becket.
- Hm.
743
00:46:23,600 --> 00:46:27,040
Because we know from reports from the monks
744
00:46:27,040 --> 00:46:29,840
that were there at the time of his death,
745
00:46:29,840 --> 00:46:32,800
that one was asked to actually shovel up
746
00:46:32,800 --> 00:46:35,120
the brains and the blood of Becket.
747
00:46:35,120 --> 00:46:38,200
They stored the blood in a lead cistern
748
00:46:38,200 --> 00:46:42,520
- and topped this up every day with red ochre and water.
- Hm.
749
00:46:42,520 --> 00:46:48,080
And for 200 years they were giving it to pilgrims...or maybe they were selling it to pilgrims.
750
00:46:48,080 --> 00:46:50,560
More than that, though, because it would have carried
751
00:46:50,560 --> 00:46:54,120
something that people believed was powerful, that had a healing ability.
752
00:46:54,120 --> 00:46:57,120
Very much so, yeah. And also for Canterbury
753
00:46:57,120 --> 00:47:00,280
a never-ending source of blood which they could top up every day.
754
00:47:03,400 --> 00:47:07,160
Medieval pilgrims needed places to eat and rest on their journey.
755
00:47:08,880 --> 00:47:12,160
In the valleys below Pilgrims' Way were the inns and monasteries
756
00:47:12,160 --> 00:47:14,320
that would have accommodated them overnight.
757
00:47:16,760 --> 00:47:19,960
I headed to Aylesford just 30 miles from Canterbury.
758
00:47:24,000 --> 00:47:26,360
- I am Brendan.
- Brendan. Brother Brendan?
759
00:47:26,360 --> 00:47:29,720
Just Brendan. We have a large guest house. It's not The Ritz.
760
00:47:29,720 --> 00:47:32,480
I'd come to stay at a Catholic priory
761
00:47:32,480 --> 00:47:35,920
which was taking in weary pilgrims more than 700 years ago.
762
00:47:35,920 --> 00:47:37,160
Thank you.
763
00:47:37,160 --> 00:47:39,440
And continues to do so today.
764
00:47:39,440 --> 00:47:42,880
- Oh, my goodness!
- So it's very simple.
765
00:47:42,880 --> 00:47:46,200
People pay huge sums for this sort of experience.
766
00:47:46,200 --> 00:47:48,800
You shouldn't be marketing this as simple,
767
00:47:48,800 --> 00:47:53,000
you should be marketing this as a journey back in time.
768
00:47:53,000 --> 00:47:54,720
- Well...
- Look!
769
00:47:54,720 --> 00:47:58,720
Once you've finished your journey, you can come back and give us some real concrete advice.
770
00:47:58,720 --> 00:48:00,880
- BOTH LAUGH
- What, help with marketing?
771
00:48:00,880 --> 00:48:04,520
- That's it.
- I don't know about that. I'm just going to look at the view this side.
772
00:48:04,520 --> 00:48:08,280
Oh, I should have mentioned, there's a simple toilet and shower.
773
00:48:08,280 --> 00:48:11,920
Brendan is one of eight Catholic Carmelite friars
774
00:48:11,920 --> 00:48:15,800
who look after the 200,000 visitors who come here every year.
775
00:48:15,800 --> 00:48:19,440
OK. Good evening, gentlemen. Thank you for letting us come in.
776
00:48:19,440 --> 00:48:21,840
- Simon Reeve.
- I've seen you on the TV.
777
00:48:21,840 --> 00:48:24,320
You've seen me on the TV. All right, may I join you?
778
00:48:24,320 --> 00:48:26,880
- You may.
- Thank you very much indeed.
779
00:48:27,920 --> 00:48:32,200
Apart from deep philosophical, spiritual questions,
780
00:48:32,200 --> 00:48:34,440
what else do you discuss around the table at dinner?
781
00:48:34,440 --> 00:48:37,880
It varies from opera to football,
782
00:48:37,880 --> 00:48:42,880
- especially we know if Arsenal or Celtic have done badly.
- HE LAUGHS
783
00:48:42,880 --> 00:48:45,720
What, by the looks on people's faces?
784
00:48:45,720 --> 00:48:48,920
Yes. Arsenal are playing at this very moment.
785
00:48:48,920 --> 00:48:51,720
No greater sacrifice could he make.
786
00:48:51,720 --> 00:48:54,880
- THEY LAUGH
- I'll watch the highlights later on.
787
00:48:54,880 --> 00:48:56,520
THEY LAUGH
788
00:48:58,080 --> 00:49:03,760
After dinner, Brendan agreed to give me a rare glimpse of one of the priory's treasured relics.
789
00:49:07,160 --> 00:49:12,840
We call it a reliquary, because it houses the relic of St Simon Stock.
790
00:49:12,840 --> 00:49:19,400
Generally, a relic is a piece of something belonging to St Simon Stock or a piece of him?
791
00:49:19,400 --> 00:49:23,960
In this case, we have his cranium, so...
792
00:49:23,960 --> 00:49:26,880
- Really?
- ..if we would like to, we can look inside.
793
00:49:26,880 --> 00:49:30,200
This doesn't normally happen, but I've arranged for Father David
794
00:49:30,200 --> 00:49:34,760
to come along and open up the reliquary for us, if you'd like?
795
00:49:34,760 --> 00:49:37,360
Yes, please. Thank you.
796
00:49:37,360 --> 00:49:41,640
St Simon Stock was a prior at Aylesford 700 years ago.
797
00:49:41,640 --> 00:49:44,840
He's said to have seen a vision of the Virgin Mary.
798
00:49:47,560 --> 00:49:50,600
And there it is. Quite a large part of the skull.
799
00:49:50,600 --> 00:49:53,320
The whole of the top half of the skull.
800
00:49:53,320 --> 00:49:56,960
Is this the holiest...relic that you have?
801
00:49:56,960 --> 00:50:00,040
We have a whole collection of various bits and pieces,
802
00:50:00,040 --> 00:50:03,360
but none as large and spectacular as this.
803
00:50:03,360 --> 00:50:07,800
Does it still have a place in Britain in the 21st century?
804
00:50:07,800 --> 00:50:10,600
All religious traditions have relics, Buddhists and things.
805
00:50:10,600 --> 00:50:13,280
First of all, simply as a memento.
806
00:50:13,280 --> 00:50:15,680
And yet many people watching this
807
00:50:15,680 --> 00:50:19,160
might think of a souvenir or a memory of somebody you treasure
808
00:50:19,160 --> 00:50:25,000
- as being an item of their possession rather than part of their skull.
- Yes.
809
00:50:25,000 --> 00:50:29,160
- Erm...
- Some people might think this is quite macabre.
810
00:50:30,360 --> 00:50:33,080
Oh. I hadn't thought of it like that.
811
00:50:33,080 --> 00:50:36,120
Every Catholic church has relics in it.
812
00:50:36,120 --> 00:50:40,520
By definition, a permanent altar has to be contain
813
00:50:40,520 --> 00:50:42,000
fragments of two saints.
814
00:50:42,000 --> 00:50:45,880
Does it have some sort of supernatural power?
815
00:50:45,880 --> 00:50:49,640
The relic actually has no power whatsoever.
816
00:50:49,640 --> 00:50:54,240
The power comes from the faith of the believer...and the love of God.
817
00:50:54,240 --> 00:50:57,040
But surely the reason so many pilgrims
818
00:50:57,040 --> 00:50:59,200
go on long, arduous journeys,
819
00:50:59,200 --> 00:51:03,240
and have done for hundreds of years, is because they want healing,
820
00:51:03,240 --> 00:51:05,440
spiritual healing or physical healing,
821
00:51:05,440 --> 00:51:11,880
that does suggest that the people, the masses, think of them as having an immense power.
822
00:51:11,880 --> 00:51:17,760
There will always be those who will give to external objects
823
00:51:17,760 --> 00:51:20,000
powers that they don't have,
824
00:51:20,000 --> 00:51:23,480
whether it be religious objects or other objects.
825
00:51:23,480 --> 00:51:26,840
The relic itself, it just gives us a way, if you like,
826
00:51:26,840 --> 00:51:32,520
of connecting the faith of the believer with the faith of St Simon Stock...with the love of God.
827
00:51:36,880 --> 00:51:40,280
Relics still play an important role in the Catholic faith.
828
00:51:40,280 --> 00:51:43,840
They remain a potent draw for worshippers and pilgrims alike.
829
00:51:45,800 --> 00:51:48,160
It's a faith I struggle to understand
830
00:51:48,160 --> 00:51:50,000
and certainly not one I possess.
831
00:51:50,000 --> 00:51:54,000
For me, as a traveller, wherever I am, whenever I go,
832
00:51:54,000 --> 00:51:57,600
I of course get lonely, I take my own little shrine with me.
833
00:51:59,320 --> 00:52:01,680
And I think these...
834
00:52:01,680 --> 00:52:05,920
these two still provide me with my purpose and meaning,
835
00:52:05,920 --> 00:52:08,480
my wife and my son.
836
00:52:08,480 --> 00:52:11,640
Anyway, it's been a long day and we've got a long one tomorrow.
837
00:52:11,640 --> 00:52:15,080
And a big day tomorrow, we're off to Canterbury.
838
00:52:19,160 --> 00:52:22,240
And so, like millions of pilgrims before me,
839
00:52:22,240 --> 00:52:25,680
I finally arrived at Britain's holiest city.
840
00:52:25,680 --> 00:52:27,640
Before visiting the cathedral,
841
00:52:27,640 --> 00:52:29,960
I dropped in at the East Bridge Hospital,
842
00:52:29,960 --> 00:52:32,800
a 12th-century shelter for medieval pilgrims
843
00:52:32,800 --> 00:52:36,000
who couldn't afford the city's more expensive inns.
844
00:52:36,000 --> 00:52:41,600
So...there were wealthy pilgrims and there were poor pilgrims
845
00:52:41,600 --> 00:52:45,240
and this is where many of them would have slept.
846
00:52:45,240 --> 00:52:49,320
Very simple...but a refuge nonetheless.
847
00:52:50,680 --> 00:52:53,280
There's a special atmosphere here.
848
00:52:53,280 --> 00:52:57,760
One that comes from a building that's hardly changed in 800 years.
849
00:52:57,760 --> 00:53:02,040
Up two flights of stairs is a small chapel where pilgrims could pray.
850
00:53:05,400 --> 00:53:08,920
I really do feel... in some strange way
851
00:53:08,920 --> 00:53:14,400
a sense of the hundreds of thousands of pilgrims and prayers
852
00:53:14,400 --> 00:53:16,600
that have passed through here.
853
00:53:18,680 --> 00:53:20,960
Maybe I'm tuning in to them.
854
00:53:20,960 --> 00:53:25,080
The chapel still draws pilgrims today.
855
00:53:25,080 --> 00:53:28,640
Their hopes and despairs are captured in a simple prayer book.
856
00:53:28,640 --> 00:53:32,040
One of the first ones I read, it's...
857
00:53:34,440 --> 00:53:38,680
..almost unbelievably powerful.
858
00:53:38,680 --> 00:53:42,280
It says the name of a baby..."that she will not need an operation."
859
00:53:42,280 --> 00:53:44,160
HE SIGHS
860
00:53:45,840 --> 00:53:50,400
There's a world of... pain and horror.
861
00:53:50,400 --> 00:53:53,280
My goodness! They're all like it.
862
00:53:53,280 --> 00:53:55,040
There's another one from America.
863
00:53:55,040 --> 00:53:57,640
Please pray for somebody on death row in Ohio.
864
00:53:59,480 --> 00:54:02,920
I'm not a person of faith, as I keep saying...
865
00:54:02,920 --> 00:54:06,400
and I can of course understand why there are people who stand up now
866
00:54:06,400 --> 00:54:11,800
and say there is no place for faith in the 21st century,
867
00:54:11,800 --> 00:54:16,120
in a society of science and learning,
868
00:54:16,120 --> 00:54:21,800
but it can be such a magnificent and marvellous support
869
00:54:21,800 --> 00:54:24,400
in difficult times.
870
00:54:24,400 --> 00:54:27,200
And how dare anyone take that away from people?
871
00:54:32,600 --> 00:54:35,480
The thing that I've learnt that's most surprised me
872
00:54:35,480 --> 00:54:40,560
is that pilgrimage didn't have to be an onerous and painful task
873
00:54:40,560 --> 00:54:41,880
for our ancestors.
874
00:54:41,880 --> 00:54:46,880
It could be a journey of adventure, of celebration and of wonder.
875
00:54:46,880 --> 00:54:50,520
And that, quite frankly, is what all the best journeys should be.
876
00:55:02,640 --> 00:55:05,880
Well, I do feel something of the expectation, I think,
877
00:55:05,880 --> 00:55:12,760
that a pilgrim would have felt as they arrived here finally at the end of a long journey.
878
00:55:12,760 --> 00:55:16,200
Quite probably tired, perhaps even exhausted,
879
00:55:16,200 --> 00:55:22,520
possibly unwell...and really ready to experience something quite holy.
880
00:55:24,400 --> 00:55:26,520
It's certainly an extraordinary building.
881
00:55:35,040 --> 00:55:38,160
It was at Canterbury just over 1,400 years ago
882
00:55:38,160 --> 00:55:41,160
that Saint Augustine, a monk sent from Rome,
883
00:55:41,160 --> 00:55:44,640
set up a monastery to convert the locals to Christianity.
884
00:55:46,640 --> 00:55:51,840
Since then, Canterbury's always been at the centre of Christian beliefs in Britain,
885
00:55:51,840 --> 00:55:55,880
but it was the murder of Archbishop Thomas Becket here in 1170,
886
00:55:55,880 --> 00:55:58,960
after he stood up to King Henry II,
887
00:55:58,960 --> 00:56:04,160
that transformed this cathedral into the greatest destination for pilgrims in the land.
888
00:56:07,080 --> 00:56:11,160
Well, it's very graphic. This is the site of the murder.
889
00:56:11,160 --> 00:56:13,400
And you can see here on the floor
890
00:56:13,400 --> 00:56:15,640
"Thomas" in blood red.
891
00:56:20,280 --> 00:56:23,160
Being here, I was reminded of the story of pilgrims
892
00:56:23,160 --> 00:56:27,000
wanting to take away Becket's blood, believing it could heal them.
893
00:56:31,640 --> 00:56:33,680
These are so graphic.
894
00:56:35,840 --> 00:56:38,840
The wailing of the desperate and the dying
895
00:56:38,840 --> 00:56:42,080
often rang through medieval cathedrals.
896
00:56:42,080 --> 00:56:45,720
We're so fortunate to have the miracles of modern medicine,
897
00:56:45,720 --> 00:56:51,040
when all our ancestors could do was drag themselves to shrines and pray and hope.
898
00:56:56,440 --> 00:56:58,360
And here we are.
899
00:56:58,360 --> 00:57:02,600
This is the spot where the shrine to Thomas Becket stood
900
00:57:02,600 --> 00:57:05,200
that would have marked the end of the pilgrimage
901
00:57:05,200 --> 00:57:09,200
for hundreds of thousands of people over hundreds of years.
902
00:57:09,200 --> 00:57:11,440
By all accounts it was a shrine
903
00:57:11,440 --> 00:57:14,440
of almost heavenly beauty encrusted in jewels.
904
00:57:14,440 --> 00:57:18,280
It would have been an extraordinary end to their journey.
905
00:57:20,600 --> 00:57:23,840
The shrine was destroyed during Henry VIII's Reformation,
906
00:57:23,840 --> 00:57:26,280
along with Becket's body.
907
00:57:26,280 --> 00:57:31,320
Becket was declared a traitor and stripped of his sainthood.
908
00:57:31,320 --> 00:57:37,760
Now all that remains is this candle burning on the ground and lettering on the floor that reads,
909
00:57:37,760 --> 00:57:40,160
"The shrine of Thomas Becket,
910
00:57:40,160 --> 00:57:42,040
"Archbishop and Martyr,
911
00:57:42,040 --> 00:57:46,720
"stood here from 1220 until 1538."
912
00:57:46,720 --> 00:57:51,680
Now that date marks the end of the golden age of pilgrimage in Britain.
913
00:57:53,080 --> 00:57:54,840
It's never been the same since.
914
00:57:59,320 --> 00:58:03,680
But on the next leg of my journey, I'll be travelling through Catholic Europe,
915
00:58:03,680 --> 00:58:08,920
visiting pilgrimage sites which are booming thanks to 21st-century pilgrims.
916
00:58:08,920 --> 00:58:10,600
ALL CHANT
917
00:58:10,600 --> 00:58:16,000
I'll be joining the hardy souls trekking across beautiful northern Spain to the city of Santiago
918
00:58:16,000 --> 00:58:19,200
before I follow our ancestors into the Alps
919
00:58:19,200 --> 00:58:22,800
and travel through Italy to the Eternal City.
920
00:58:22,800 --> 00:58:24,640
Rome!
921
00:58:24,640 --> 00:58:29,000
- APPLAUSE
- It's still a magnet for millions of visitors every year.
922
00:58:32,680 --> 00:58:35,720
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