Showing posts with label Spain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spain. Show all posts

Sunday, 7 November 2010

A Sight To Behold

One of the joys I had of travelling - at least in the days when the actual process of getting from here to there was more pleasurable and relaxed - was visiting some of the great cathedrals of the world. The Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in Spain was one such, and yesterday the Pope celebrated Mass outside it.

The faithful believe that the cathedral holds the relics of the martyred St. James the Great. According to tradition, the tomb of St. James was discovered in 814 by a Galician bishop who was said to have been guided to the spot by a star and who brought the relics back to Compostela. They eventually became the major focus of pilgrimage, the Way of St. James, and pilgrims wore a scallop shell to identify themselves. Even today, in excess of 100,000 pilgrims are drawn from around the world to the saint’s shrine in the cathedral’s crypt.

Construction of the cathedral, which replaced a chapel and two churches, was commenced in 1075 when it became an episcopal see, being raised to the status of an archiepiscopal see in 1100. Between the 16th and 18th centuries the cathedral was much embellished and expanded. The cathedral is, as one might expect of a place of pilgrimage, splendid in its ornamentation, and one of the greatest joys of visiting it is to witness the swinging of the ‘Botafumeiro’, a giant thurible, being swung from one end of the nave to the other. Constructed in 1851 and weighing 80 kg and measuring 1.6 metres in height, this is the largest censer in the world.

On important religious holidays - and sometimes when commissioned by tourists and others - the botafumeiro is filled with 40 kilos of charcoal and incense and swung backwards and forwards by eight red-robed ‘tiraboleiros’ dispensing clouds of incense around the church.

Higher and higher the thurible is swung, occasionally bursting into flames because of its downward speed. The tiraboleiros are extremely adept in handling the heavy thurible and will sometimes terrify the onlookers below by swinging it just above their heads.

As with the cathedral itself, the swinging of the botafumeiro is certainly a sight to behold, though I don’t know if His Holiness was given the opportunity to see the latter yesterday.
.

Friday, 5 March 2010

Freak Waves

.
It is rare to hear of deaths at sea and cruising has to be one of the safest forms of travel in the world. I except from this, of course, the Titanic and some of the less well-managed ferries in third-world countries.

So it is a tragedy that the recent accident to the Louis Majesty led to two passengers being killed and fourteen being slightly injured when three freak walls of water, more than ten metres in height, hit the ship on Wednesday. The waves stove in the windows at the front of the ship and also flooded a number of cabins.

The Louis Cruise Lines vessel of 40,876 tons tons, formerly the Norwegian Majesty and fairly recently refitted, was carrying 1,350 passengers and 580 crew off the coast of northeast Spain when the accident occurred. A Spanish oceanographer said that large waves were common in the Mediterranean but ones of the size that struck Louis Majesty occurred only once or twice a year.

Having been in the shipping industry all my life I can attest that freak waves are very rare. Nonetheless, they do occur and I can think readily of two such incidents in which, fortunately, no lives were lost or people seriously injured.

Despite the accident to Louis Majesty, cruising in my opinion is the safest and most comfortable way to see the world. It can be a totally relaxing and enjoyable holiday and no-one should be put off by this unfortunate accident.
.

Tuesday, 5 January 2010

What A Hoot!

.
An unknown hacker has hijacked the EU Presidency website and replaced the image of Spain’s Prime Minister with that of bumbling Mr Bean with the message, ‘Hi There!’

It seems that Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero bears an uncanny resemblance to Rowan Atkinson as Mr Bean, a resemblance that is a long-standing joke in Spain.

I don’t know anything about hacking into other people's websites, but I wonder what characters would replace those of Brown, Cameron and Clegg?

It would be fun to see.
.