This paper investigates whether pilgrims’ accounts of meaningful experiences on the Camino de Santiago reveal systematic place-meaning associations along the route. Drawing on 543 open-ended experience reports from German-speaking Camino pilgrims, we employ qualitative content analysis with a two-level hierarchical coding system that distinguishes place-bound experiences from spatially unbound encounters. The analysis yields a recurrent five-part typology of place-meaning associations: Santiago de Compostela is associated with completion and biographical confirmation; the Cruz de Ferro with ritual release; Finisterre and Muxía with dissolution and openness; churches and chapels with consolation; and natural landscapes with decentring and awe. Cross-tabulations by gender, age, and pilgrimage experience reveal no significant variation in these patterns, while route-level comparison shows that certain place types are exclusively bound to the Camino Francés. The most frequently reported experience category, interpersonal encounters, is by contrast spatially unbound. We evaluate three competing explanations for the observed convergence: emergent place-making through material-ritual affordances, reproduction of circulating pilgrimage scripts, and retrospective narrative convention. The paper proposes the heuristic concept of convergent place-making to describe recurrent place-meaning associations that arise at the intersection of embodied practice, material environments, and cultural repertoires.
Braun et al. (Tue,) studied this question.