Pilgrim
- For albums named Pilgrim, see Pilgrim (album).
A
pilgrim is one who undertakes a religious
pilgrimage, literally 'far afield'. This is traditionally a visit to a place of some religious significance; often a considerable distance is traveled. Examples include a
Muslim visiting
Mecca, or a
Christian or
Jew visiting
Jerusalem.
Some of the oldest destinations for pilgrimages are in India. On the sacred river
Ganges lies
Benares, the holy city of
Brahminism.
Buddhism offers four sites of pilgrimage: the Buddha's birthplace at Kapilavastu, the site where he first preached at Gaya, where the highest insight dawned on him at Benares, and where he achieved
Nirvana at Kusinagara.
In
Israel and
Judah the visitation of certain ancient cult-centers was repressed in the
7th century BCE, when the worship was restricted to
Jahweh at the temple in Jersusalem. In
Syria, the shrine of
Astarte at the headwater spring of the river Adonis survived until it was destroyed by order of
Emperor Constantine in the 4th century CE.
In mainland
Greece, a stream of individuals made their way to
Delphi or the oracle of
Zeus at
Dodona, and once every four years, at the period of the Olympic games, the temple of Zeus at Olympia formed the goal of swarms of pilgrims from every part of the Hellenic world. When
Alexander the Great reached Egypt, he put his whole vast enterprise on hold, while he made his way with a small band deep into the Libyan desert, to consult the oracle of Ammun. During the imperium of his Ptolemaic heirs, the shrine of
Isis at Philae received many votive inscriptions from Greeks on behalf of their kindred far away at home.
No religion has laid greater stress on the duty of a pilgrimage than Islam in the
Hajj (
q.v.).
In the
Middle Ages, even as early as the 4th century CE, Christian pilgrimage was regarded as a sacred obligation and a trial of one's faith, since travel was dangerous, expensive and time-consuming. The anonymous "Pilgrim of Bordeaux" has left an itinerary of a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 333 A.D.. Empress Helena's discovery of the
True Cross outside Jerusalem was the result of a pilgrimage. The
Seven Sleepers of Ephesus attracted pilgrims, who left their graffiti in the catacomb.
In the West, Saint
Martin of Tours and Martial of
Limoges inspired building projects and an industry catering to pilgrims' requirements, including, in Martial's case, elaborately faked pious documentation (see
Adhemar of Chabannes). The
shrine of
Santiago de Compostela in
Spain lay at the end of a long connected string of pilgrims' sites, as did the city of
Rome.
Popular destinations for pilgrimage in
England included
Bury St. Edmunds and
Thomas Beckett's shrine at
Canterbury, the destination of
Chaucer's 14th century pilgrims in the
Canterbury Tales.
Pilgrims contributed an important element to long-distance trade before the modern era, and brought prosperity to successful pilgrimage sites, an economic phenomenon unequalled until the tourist trade of the 20th century. Encouraging pilgrims was a motivation for assembling (and sometimes fabricating)
relics and for writing
hagiographies of local saints, filled with inspiring accounts of miracle cures.
Lourdes and other modern pilgrimage sites keep this spirit alive.
Over the centuries the terms 'pilgrim' and 'pilgrimage' have come to have a somewhat devalued meaning, and are nowadays often applied in a
secular context. For example, fans of
Elvis Presley may choose to visit his home,
Graceland, in
Memphis, Tennessee. Similarly one may refer to a cultural center such as Venice as a "tourists' Mecca".
The
Pilgrims were a group of
English '
Separatists', religious dissidents who exiled themselves first in the
Netherlands, then sailed for
Massachusetts, in the hope of setting up a colony where they could enjoy religious freedom. In this context, the term 'pilgrim' (first used of them in 1799) means only that they travelled a long way in order to practise their religion.
Compare:
Hajj
Category:Pilgrimages Category:People\n