Online Encyclopedia

PILGRIM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 604 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

PILGRIM  , a wanderer, traveller, particularly to a

See also:
holy place (see PILGRIMAGE) . The earliest
See also:
English forms are pileg;im or pelegrim, through Fr . Merin (the
See also:
original O . Fr. pelegrin is not found), from
See also:
Lat. peregrinus, a stranger, foreigner, particularly a
See also:
resident alien in Rome (see PRAETOR, and
See also:
ROMAN LAW) . The Lat. pereger, from which peregrinus is formed, meant " from abroad," " travelled through many lands " (per, through, and ager, country) . It was customary for pilgrims to bring back as proof of their pilgrimage to a particular shrine or holy place a badge, usually made of lead or
See also:
pewter, bearing some figure or
See also:
device identifying it with the name or place . These " pilgrim signs " are frequently alluded to in literature—notably in the Canterbury Tales and in Piers Plowman . The
See also:
British Museum and the Musee Cluny in Paris have
See also:
fine collections of them, mainly dredged from the
See also:
Thames and the Seine . The badges were generally worn fastened to the pilgrim's
See also:
hat or cape . Among the best known are those of the cockle or scallop shell of St . James of Compostella in Spain; the " vernicle," a representation of the miraculous head of Christ; the very icon, true image, on St
See also:
Veronica's handkerchief, at Rome, or of the
See also:
Abgar portrait at Genoa, of " a vernicle hadde he sowed on his cappe " (Cant . Tales, " Prol." 685); the
See also:
Amiens badge of the head of John the Baptist on the charger, the
See also:
cathedral claiming the custody of the relic from 1206 (fig .

I); and the

palm branches or
See also:
cross of palm leaf, the badge of the " Palmers " pilgrimage to the Holy
See also:
Land . The most
See also:
common of the English pilgrims' signs are those of the shrine of Thomas Becket at Canterbury, the greatest centre of pilgrimage in England . These take a variety of forms, d,60me0¢ oocz (From Andrews' Church
See also:
Treasury.) (From Andrews' Church Treasury,) the cathedral at Amiens . Canterbury. sometimes a
See also:
simple T, sometimes a bell marked cam pane Thome, the Canterbury bell, most often a figure of the saint, sometimes seated, sometimes
See also:
riding on a horse, and carrying his episcopal cross, and with hand uplifted in benediction (fig . 2) . Some-times the badges took the shape of small ampullae, or vases, as in the case of the badges of the shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham, which were marked with a W and
See also:
crown . See W . Andrews, Church Treasury (1898), article " Pilgrims' Signs," by Rev . G . S . Tyack; and Guide to
See also:
Medieval
See also:
Room, British Museum, p . 69 .

The English " Pilgrims' Way."—From

Winchester, in Hampshire, to Canterbury, in Kent, runs a road or way which can still be traced, now on the
See also:
present made roads, now as a lane, bridle path, or cart track, now only by a
See also:
line of ancient yews, hollies or oaks which once bordered it . To this old track the name of " pilgrims' way " has been given, for along it passed the stream of pilgrims coming through Winchester from the south and west of England and from the continent of
See also:
Europe by way of Southampton to Canterbury Cathedral to view the place of the martyrdom of Thomas Becket, in the north transept, to the relics in the crypt where he was first buried after his
See also:
murder, in 1170, and the shrine in the Trinity
See also:
Chapel which rose above his tomb after the
See also:
translation of the
See also:
body in 1220 . There were two festivals for the pilgrimage, on the 29th of December, the day of the martyrdom, and on the 7th of
See also:
July, the day of the translation . The summer pilgrimage naturally became the most popular . In 1538 the shrine was destroyed and the relics of the saint scattered, but the
See also:
great days of the pilgrimage had then passed . Erasmus gives a vivid picture of the glories of the shrine and of all that was shown to the pilgrims on his visit with Colet to Canterbury in 1514 . The
See also:
principal villages, towns and places near or through which the way passed are as follow: Winchester, Alresvord, Ropley,
See also:
Alton,
See also:
Farnham (here the way follows the present main road), Seale, Puttenham, by the ruined chapel of St Catherine, outside
See also:
Guildford, near where the road crosses the Wey above Shalford,' and by the chapel of St Martha, properly of " the martyr," now restored and used as a church,
See also:
Albury, Shere, Gomshall,
See also:
Dorking (near here the Mole is crossed), along the
See also:
southern slope ofBoxhill to
See also:
Reigate, then through Gatton Park, Merstham, Otford, WVrotham, after which the
See also:
Medway was crossed, Burham, past the megalithic monument Kit's Coty House, and the site of Boxley Abbey, the
See also:
oldest after Waverle.y Abbey of Cistercian houses in England, and famous for its miraculous image of the infant saint Rumbold, and the still more famous winking rood or crucifix . The road passes next by Hollingbourne, Lenham and Charing . At Otford,
See also:
Wrotham and Charing were
See also:
manor-houses or rather palaces of the archbishops of Canterbury; at Hollingbourne was a manor of the priors of
See also:
Christchurch . After 1 Shalford
See also:
Fair, the chapels on the two hills and the Surrey hills are probably the scene of Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress, see E . Renouard James, Notes on the Pilgrim's Way in West Surrey (1871) . Hollingbourne come Westwell, Eastwell, Boughton Aluph, Godmersham, Chilham Castle, and then at Harbledown, where are the remains of the Hospice of St Nicholas, the road joins Watling Street, by which came the main stream of pilgrims from
See also:
London, the North and the Midlands .

This road, although its name of the Pilgrims' Way has for

long confined it to the road by which the pilgrims came to Canterbury from Winchester, follows a far older track . Right back into British and even older times the main direction which commerce and travellers followed across southern and western England to the Straits of Dover and the Continent
See also:
lay from Canterbury along the southern
See also:
chalk slope of the North
See also:
Downs to near Guildford, then by the Hog's Back to Farnham . At this point the oldest track went across Salisbury Plain towards Stonehenge and so on to
See also:
Cornwall . From Farnham westward the only portion of this the oldest track that can now be traced is a small portion that still bears the name of the
See also:
Harrow (i.e. hoary, old) road . It was in early times abandoned for the road from Winchester to which the stream of travel and commerce from the Continent and the south and south-west of England was diverted . The " pilgrims' way " has been traced fully in Mrs Ady's
See also:
book The Pilgrims' Way (1893), and the older track in the fullest detail in Hilaire Belloc's The Old Road (1904) . The
See also:
American " Pilgrim Fathers."—In American
See also:
history the name " Pilgrims " is applied to the earliest settlers of the colony of Plymouth, Massachusetts, and more specifically to the first
See also:
company of emigrants, who sailed in the "
See also:
Mayflower " in 162o . They were from the beginning Separatists from the Church of England; they had established
See also:
Independent (Congregational) churches at Scrooby and Gainsborough early in the 17th century, and some of them had fled to Amsterdam in 16o8 to avoid persecution, and had removed to
See also:
Leiden in the following
See also:
year . They sailed from Delftshaven
See also:
late in July 1620, from Southampton on the 5th of August, from Plymouth on the 6th of September, and late in December 162o founded the colony of Plymouth, Massachusetts . See MASSACHUSETTS; PLYMOUTH, and MAYFLOWER .

End of Article: PILGRIM
[back]
PILE
[next]
PILGRIMAGE (Fr. pelerinage, Lat. peregrinatio)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.