Bullfighting is the most traditional of Spanish Fiestas. The Spanish
people consider them art forms which are intimately linked with their
country’s history, art and culture. Pressure groups attempt to lobby
against bullfighting yet the King of Spain himself has allegedly stated
that the day the EU bans bullfighting is the day Spain leaves the EU.
Bullfighting can be traced back to ancient days. They were popular spectacles in ancient Rome, but it was in the Iberian Peninsula that these contests were fully developed by the Moors from North Africa who overran Andalucia in AD 711. Bullfighting developed into a ritualistic occasion observed in connection with feast days, on which the conquering Moors, mounted on highly trained horses, confronted and killed the bulls.
Whilst bullfighting maintains strong support in its heartlands of Madrid, Andalucia and Extremadura it has been banned in Catalonia.
Bullfighting can be traced back to ancient days. They were popular spectacles in ancient Rome, but it was in the Iberian Peninsula that these contests were fully developed by the Moors from North Africa who overran Andalucia in AD 711. Bullfighting developed into a ritualistic occasion observed in connection with feast days, on which the conquering Moors, mounted on highly trained horses, confronted and killed the bulls.
Whilst bullfighting maintains strong support in its heartlands of Madrid, Andalucia and Extremadura it has been banned in Catalonia.
- Bullfighting Arena
- Madrid Bullring
Seville Bullring
Ronda Bullring.
Bullfighting Tickets
- SOME FACTS BULLFIGHTING.
- Historic FightBullfighting has existed in some form for thousands of years. A depiction of male and female acrobats fighting a bull can be seen in wall paintings in Knossos, Crete, dating back to 2000BC. In Spain, the Moors refined the rough bullfighting of the conquered Visigoths into a spectacle performed on feast days, when Moors on horseback would kill the bulls. Modern-day bullfighting, in which matadors fight a bull on foot, was pioneered in 1726 by Francisco Romero.
Not All the bulls killed
Some bulls, if they have displayed particularly brave and exemplary behavior in the ring, can be indultado, or pardoned. The crowd uses white handkerchiefs to persuade the president of the bullring to let the bull live, and in rare circumstances the bull is allowed to return to the ranch where it was raised and live out the rest of its natural days in peace.The biggest Spanish bullring is in Madrid
e Las Ventas bullring in Madrid is the biggest in Spain, but not the world; that accolade goes to the Plaza de Toros Mexico, in Mexico City. Las Ventas holds bullfights and is also home to a bullfighting museum, where you can trace the history of the tradition. If you’d like to visit but don’t think you would like to watch a bullfight, look out for the regular food markets and concerts held in the bullring.Bullfighting is banned in some areas of Spain
Bullfighting is extremely controversial in Spain and is by no means loved by everyone. In 1991, the Canary Islands was the first Spanish region to ban bullfighting, followed by Catalonia in 2012. In 2016, the Spanish government overturned Catalonia’s ban, but several cities in the region, including Barcelona, have declared themselves “anti-bullfighting cities.”Support for the tradition is at an all time low
A 2016 poll showed that the majority of Spaniards have no interest in bullfighting and that support is decreasing rapidly, especially among younger generations. The poll, conducted by IPSOS Mori, found that 93 percent of 16–24-year-olds do not support bullfighting, which begs the question: how much longer will the tradition survive as older generations who supported it pass on?Spain has bullfighting schools for children
There are 15 bullfighting schools in Spain, which start teaching wannabe matadors at as young as14 years old. The trainee bullfighters begin practicing on fake bulls, and then graduate to bull calves before they are allowed anywhere near the adult males. In 2015, the Spanish conservative government—which is a strong supporter of bullfighting—announced that it plans to make courses in bullfighting available as optional subjects for state school pupils.Female bullfighters.
While bullfighting is strongly associated with masculinity and machismo, there are actually some female bullfighters, and have been since the early 20th century. Chilean-born Conchita Cintrón is one of the most famous female bullfighters, and ignored bans on women fighting in the ring to kill over 750 bulls during her illustrious career that spanned the 1940s, ’50s and ’60s. One of the most famous modern-day female bullfighters is Cristina Sánchez, who took part in her first Madrid bullfight in 1993 and became a symbol of a new breed of female bullfighters during the 1990s. The female bullfighter was immortalized in Pedro Almodóvar’s Oscar-winning 2002 film, Talk to Her.
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