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Castroverde
Coordinates
43.0301°N, 7.3269°W
Elevation
588m
Services Available
About Castroverde
Castroverde sits in the foothills of the Serra do Meira, roughly 25 kilometres north of Lugo, and serves as one of the last meaningful stops before walkers descend toward the Roman walls of that ancient city. The town itself has a quiet agricultural character typical of inland Galicia, with stone farmhouses, small holdings, and the kind of unhurried pace that makes it a natural place to rest before the final approach.
The municipality takes its name from the Castro de Castromaior, one of the most significant Iron Age hillforts in the province of Lugo. The castro sits on a hilltop just outside town and has been the subject of ongoing archaeological excavation, revealing circular stone dwellings and defensive structures that speak to dense pre-Roman settlement in the region. The site is accessible and worth the short detour for anyone with an interest in Galicia's deep prehistory.
The Church of San Miguel de Castroverde is the architectural anchor of the village, a Romanesque structure with later modifications that has served the community for centuries. Like many rural Galician churches, it contains carved stone details that reward a closer look.
For pilgrims and long-distance walkers, Castroverde occupies a practical role. It offers food, accommodation, and supplies at a point where the landscape begins to shift toward the broader Lugo basin. Coming through here, the sense of arrival at one of the Camino Primitivo's great milestones begins to build.
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Castroverde
122 km to Santiago de Compostela
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