Celtic Galicia
70 images Created 15 May 2015
Santiago de Compostela is the Camino de Santiago last stop for millions of tourists and pilgrims, but few explore the Galicia, a Spain’s Ireland where the landscape is often a puzzled mix of rain and sudden fog and the wind swelling the rias, the fjords, gives back to the Atlantic his rough face, as in the days of the legendary Celtic king Breogan. According to an ancient Irish manuscript the king built a high tower from where his sons Ith and Bile saw a land so green, Ireland, that decided to go there. An intricate Irish saga along the Celtic Atlantic looking more a road than a liquid border, but this forgotten history surface on unexpected places like Sabucedo, a village where the Celtic feeling with the horses revive every July. The Rapa das Bestas, the Taming of the Beasts, is a homemade rodeo declared in 2007 a Festival of International Tourist Interest. The “aloitadores”, the fighters, gather the “garranos”, the last wild horses of Europe who live free on the mountains, shave and brand them in a “curro”, an enclosed corral, using only their skill and body. For anthropologists the Rapa das Bestas is the survival of ancestral rituals celebrating the man's power over nature, for animal lovers is a barbaric ritual, for the “aloitadores” is the soul of Sabucedo. At the southern border of Galicia the cathedral-fortress of Tui towers the river Minho, dominated by the “castro” of Santa Tecla, a scenic fortified Celtic village perched on the mountain. In the backcountry the old Jewish houses of the ghetto of Ribadavia reflect in the Avia river, not far from the Ribeira Sacra, the "Sacred River", a narrow gorge like a water snake. The Celts and Santiago share the mountain village of O Cebreiro, the Celts left the “pallozas”, round huts with thatched roofs, the saint the oldest church of the Camino de Santiago, Santa Maria la Real. Menhir stones materialize near A Coruña, at least metaphorically because the “Menhires por la Paz”, the Menhirs for the Peace, were erected in 2001 to commemorate the falangist massacres of the Civil War. Further south Castro of Barona, the most spectacular and least known Celtic village of Galicia, reign over a promontory overlooking the sea.