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Long before the Camino was formalised as a Catholic pilgrimage to Santiago, this Atlantic‑coast outpost functioned as a destination where Druids and Romans came to pray to their gods at what they saw as Land’s End. Pilgrims who reached this edge of the world tasted the sea’s salty air and carried scallop shells back home, and that legacy lives on in the shell markings that still guide travellers along the Camino today. - Dana Cape