• Procession to Point Chaligne

    Traditional celebrations

Procession to Point Chaligne

Resorts: Gignod

Chaligne Alps (1930 m)

Friday 16 August 2024

Contacts

The procession began as a way of giving thanks by those who survived the seventeenth-century plague the decimated the Valdostane population. The custom seems to have begun in 1630, when the plague left the Municipality of Gignod for good.
The Chaligne procession, which is also known as the Fourclaz procession, includes two processions which are distinctively separate and which share the celebration of the mass on the summit, at 2,608 m). In fact, the community of believers in Gignod, and those in the hamlets of Aosta and Excenex meet in the so-called “Plan des Débats” to reach Point Chaligne together.
The custom of processing upwards to Chaligne probably existed as early as 1630, which seems to indicate certain elements that characterise the ritual: the blessing of water contained in a bell and the procedure of partly drinking it and then using it to bless the followers and surrounding land, makes one think of a preferred rite to call the rain.

Program

  • 4.00 Start from the Church of Sant'Ilario
  • 8.30  Arrival at Plan du Débat
  • 10.30 Mass in Punta Chaligne (2608 m)
  • 13.30 Lunch at the Chaligne pasture (below the refuge) served by the Proloco
  • 17.00 Arrival at the chapel of Buthier for the closing ceremony 

Lunch by appointment by 14/08/24: at the bar La Gabella (loc. Plan du Chateau) and the bar Papagrand (loc. Variney)

For further information: +39 329 4822369 Rosildo, +39 339 7441461 Aldo, +39 320 3138964 Elisa

See also

The paths of the spirit
Punta Chaligne - processione

Buthier - Punta Chaligne

Gignod

From the state road for Gran San Bernardo, take the road that leads to Buthier and leave the car in the square at Buthier Gorrey (1350 m). Take route 2A which soon comes to Clemencey, where the trail joins routes 3 and 3A. Continue up until you reach …

Note - this information is not directly connected to the Cammino Balteo path but it is part of the Aosta Valley tourist offer.