In the middle ages the most popular shrine in England was Thomas a Becket at Canterbury. Other important places were Walsingham in Norfolk, St Winifreds Well' Lindisfarne, Bromhold and St Albans
=one of the main routes in Britain was to Thomas Becket's shrine in Canterbury!!!!!==ya ya=
Yes, there were pilgrimages within medieval Britain. The most famous was to the shrine of Thomas Becket in Canterbury. The Canterbury Tales, by Geoffrey Chaucer, is about a group making this pilgrimage.The link below has brief information about five or six pilgrim sites in Britain.
Canterbury was a pilgrimage destination in England. There were also pilgrimage routes leading across France into Spain to the pilgrimage sites of Montserrat and Compostela.
pilgrimages are very important depending on how religious you are, some are arrogant and ignorant about them yet others believe strongly for they believe it is of a big significance for them and their religion.
i cant
no i cant answer it
The rutes of orthodoxy was founded by god
they can eat grey fish called rutes
A pilgrimage was a trip to a shrine for the purpose of worship. There were shrines all over Europe, and there could be pilgrimages to all these shrines. Some were historically very important, and others were not. Among the most important destinations for Christians were Jerusalem, Rome, Santiago de Compostela, and Canterbury. Muslims had pilgrimages as well. The most important Muslim destinations were not European, however, but in the Middle East. There is a link to an article on Christian Pilgrimage below, and it has lists of the most important destinations.
The life of the people on the pilgrimages can be defined as religious. People went on the pilgrimages in order to pray.
Some do you find in pokeballs around in rutes. but moste of them do you find in the underground
People still go on pilgrimages, such as Hindus and the Muslims.