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Walking Holidays in the Pyrenees

The Pyrenees

Highlights
  • Cathar country of the Languedoc-Roussillon and the French Pyrenees
  • Classic mountain walking in the Pyrenees National Park
  • UNESCO World Heritage Site of the Cirque du Gavarnie
  • Landscapes that influenced modern artists, such as Dali and Picasso
  • Fantastic seafood restaurants along the Mediterranean coast
  • Unforgettable Pyrenees scenery, mountain peaks, waterfalls and lakes

Walking in the Pyrenees offers a variety of alternate and unforgettable landscapes, culture and history. From the heart of the Pyrenees National Park, with its high mountains and sparkling lakes, to the intriguing history of Cathar country and from quaint Catalan villages to Mediterranean coastal trails. All enjoyable, all for different reasons.

Whichever region of the Pyrenees you choose to walk in, you can be assured that Macs Adventure has picked the best accommodations and walks these areas have to offer, so that you are sure to have an outstanding experience.

Our Walking in the Pyrenees National Park tour takes you to two valleys, both with spectacular mountains views which will take your breath away. The Carcassonne and Cathar Trails itinerary is set in the Ariege Pyrenees and will appeal to those who love history (and mountains views of course). If you prefer coastal walking you should choose the Collioure to Cadaques route which crosses from France into Spain in areas associated with the artists, Dali, Matisse and Picasso, who were inspired by these landscapes. We hope you will be too!

All Photos (12)

Discover The Pyrenees

  • Mystical Montsegur and the Cathars

    The Cathar region of France is fascinating as it has an incredible amount of history, mostly turbulent. As a result of its past, it has an array of Romanesque abbeys, medieval villages and castles. One such village is Montegur, a typical Cathar stronghold back in the 11th century.

    The Cathar Story

    In Medieval times Catharism was the prominent religion in the Languedoc. Unfortunately, it was a religion that was in confrontation with Catholicism, which at the time, was the major belief of the rich and powerful. The Cathar faith is an altogether different interpretation of the gospels and in particular the excess and material life of the bishops and priests. As a result of this conflict more than half a million men, women and children were massacred in what was known as the Albigensian Crusade, a twenty-year war again the Cathars. Once the most civilised area in Europe by the end of the 14th century it as now eradicated. A sad product of misplaced power.

    Montsegur

    This is a typical Cathar village which you visit on our Carcassonne and Cathar Trails tour. In the present it is a quaint village with cobbled streets and a castle sitting atop a local "pog" or mountain. it is hard to imagine that 750 years ago this was the site of one of the last Cathar strongholds. Refusing to renounce their Cathar faith, hundreds of people marched to the castle and met their end there. However, there is something in the air here, an atmosphere of a past that is almost tangible

    Mystical Montsegur and the Cathars
  • Languages of the Pyrenees

    Most people will know that the primary languages of the Pyrenees are Spanish and French since these mountains form a natural border between these two countries. However, there are several other languages spoken here too including, Catalan, Basque, Aragonese and Occitan!

    Basque

    The Basque language is the most fascinating as it does not belong to any of the European language families but is what is known as an "isolated language" or "lonely language". In other words, its history and origins remain a secret. Another such language is Korean, but there are around 100 isolate languages in the word currently. It is spoken on the Atlantic Coast and in adjacent mountain valleys. During Franco's dictatorship in Spain, it as forbidden but it is now once again the official language of the Basque region.

    Catalan

    The official regional language of Catalan, which stretches to the south of Tarragona, all the way north to the French/Spanish border and into the Pyrenees and Andorra. It’s a Romance language, some believe it’s a dialect of Spanish evolved from the vulgar Latin that was spoken by the Romans who colonised the Tarragona area.

    Aragonese

    Also a Romance language and one that originated in the Middle Ages. It is only spoken by fewer than 10,000 people in the province of Huesca. Although it was once spoken by all of the people in Aragon, expecting that if royalty, for example Catherine of Aragon who spoke Spanish, Latin, French and Greek, the more "educated" languages of the time.

    Occitan

    A romance language but a dialect of Catalan, still spoken in certain areas of southern France and amazingly even in some Occitan valleys in Italy and Spain's Val D'Aran. Over a hundred years ago the French central government banned it from being taught in schools, but it continues as it is intrinsically linked to the traditions and legends of these areas, particularly farming and when referring to animals and plants.

    Languages of the Pyrenees
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