
Basilica of the Immaculate Conception, Lourdes
Overview: Not strictly Basque country, but part of the nearby Bigorre region, the town of Lourdes is situated in the Hautes-Pyrénées and has been one of the great Roman Catholic pilgrimages since the Virgin Mary allegedly revealed herself to a shepherd girl, Bernadette Soubirous, in 1858. Over five million pilgrims visit the town each year, particularly in August, from the Catholic nobility to the poverty-stricken sick and ailing. Pilgrims are sometimes offended by the commercialisation of the shrine (there is a very good trade in candles and Lourdes water) but miracle cures have been documented by the church so it can be assumed this exploitation does not affect the healing properties of the spring in which the afflicted bathe in a grotto. The Virgin is said to have appeared 18 times at the Grotto of Massabielle and mass takes place here every day. The town itself is ancient, and includes several sights of interest. The Fortified Castle was successively a military fortress, a state prison and, in the 16th and 17th centuries, the residence of the counts of Bigorre. There are wonderful panoramic views of the town and the sanctuary from high on the fortifications. Since 1921 the castle has housed the Musée Pyrénéen, which exhibits the art, traditions and history of the Pyrénées. There are some interesting churches in this religious town. The Upper Basilica of the Immaculate Conception was built in 1854; the inside is as impressive as the magnificent exterior. The oval Basilica of Pius X is one of the world's largest churches, its enormous underground chamber can hold as many as 20,000 people. International masses are conducted in six languages, including English, every Wednesday and Sunday at 3.30pm from April to October. The Musée Ste-Bernadette is nearby, as is the house where Bernadette was born which, along with the home of her parents, has become a shrine.
Activities
Walking in the Pyrénées: The wild mountains of the Pyrénées stretch for 250
miles (402km) from the Atlantic to the Mediterranean and have for
many centuries formed a natural frontier: physical, climatic and
linguistic, between France and Spain. Second only to the Alps among
the great mountain ranges of Western Europe, the
Pyrénées are much less frequented, and still offer an
exciting combination of knife-edged summits, small glaciers,
forested valleys, mountain tarns and little-trodden summer passes.
Splendid trails lead to the magnificent cirques and lake-spangled
basins of France's Pyrénées National Park. Over on
the Spanish side paths lead through the spectacular canyons of the
Ordesa-Monte Perdido National Park, one of Europe's oldest. In
1997, the United Nations inscribed a portion of the French and
Spanish Pyrénées near the French village of Gavarnie
and the Spanish village of Torla on its list of World Heritage
Sites. Here, nature over the eons has carved three stupendous
glacial cirques including the renowned Cirque de Gavarnie and a
3,000ft (914m) deep canyon called Ordesa - Spain's 'Grand
Canyon.'
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