San Fermín
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The festival of San Fermín is a deeply-rooted celebration held annually from 7 July to 14 July in the city of Pamplona (Navarre), in northern Spain. While its most famous event is the encierro, the running of the bulls, the week-long celebration involves many other traditional and folkloric events. It is known locally as Sanfermines and is held in honor of Saint Fermin, the patron saint of Pamplona and Navarre as a whole. Its events were central to the plot of The Sun Also Rises, by Ernest Hemingway. It has become probably the most internationally renowned fiesta in Spain.
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[edit] Origins
San Fermin began in the medieval period as a commercial fair and secular fiesta, using for that the dates of religious festivals and using dates of festivals much older such as those of the Basques and Romans. Beginning in the 13th century people concluded certain commercial affairs after the Night of San Juan, between the 23rd and 24th of June, coinciding with the beginning of winter. This festival followed that of San Pedro; and soon after came the festival of Santiago, just a month later.
Because at these commercial festivals cattle merchants came into town with their animals, eventually corridas came to be organized as a part of the tradition. Thus was born, sometime probably at the end of the sixteenth century, the genuine first Sanfermines.
When certain relics of the saint were brought back to Pamplona in 1196, the city decided to mark the occasion with an annual event. Over the centuries, the saint's festival, the ancient annual fair, the running of the bulls and the subsequent bullfights have all melded together.
Archives document the bull runnings only as far back as the late fourteenth century, but even if one does not know that the bull is a sacred animal in the Mediterranean world, or is unaware of the bull-dancers in Minoan frescoes, an unprejudiced outsider still may detect the remnants of an ancient pre-Christian ritual. At Pamplona, Saint Fermin – who was actually martyred at Amiens – is now sometimes said to have met his end by being dragged through the streets of Pamplona by bulls, a fate also attributed to his mentor, Saint Saturnin of Toulouse. Up to the 15th century, the festival was held on Saint Fermin's feast day, 25 September. The Pamplona fiesta was transferred to July in 1591.
[edit] The running of the bulls
The Encierro involves running in front of bulls down an 825-metre (0.51 mile) stretch of cobbled streets of a section of the old town of Pamplona. The biggest day is 7 July, when thousands of people accompany the effigy of Saint Fermin along the streets of Pamplona, along with dancers and street entertainers, such as carnival giants.
[edit] Preparation
Each morning's event starts at 8 a.m. Competitors are clad in white, with a red handkerchief (the pañuelo) tied about their necks, and a red sash (the faja) tied around their waist. The runners gather in an area at the beginning of the route called Cuesta de Santo Domingo, where they sing three times an ode before a statue of San Fermin placed in a niche in a wall there:
- A San Fermín pedimos, por ser nuestro patrón, nos guíe en el encierro, dándonos su bendición. ("We ask San Fermín, as our Patron, to guide us through the Bull Run, giving us his blessing.")
Anyone who survives a close encounter with a bull is said to have been protected by San Fermin's cloak.
[edit] The Actual Run
The encierro begins with the letting off of two rockets, the cohetes. One firecracker announces the release of the bulls from their corral, and a second firecracker signals that the last bull has left the corral.
The event is dangerous. Since 1924, 15 people have been killed (the most recent, a 22-year-old American in 1995 and a local man from Navarra who died in 2004 several months subsequent to the run after falling into a coma), and over 200 have been seriously injured. Most injuries nowadays, however, are caused by the stampede of participants seeking to run away from the powerful bulls. The organizers release multi-lingual guides (with safety tips) to running the event: it is strongly recommended that these be read beforehand.
It must be said that in more recent years, beginning with the publication of Ernest Hemingway's 1926 novel The Sun Also Rises about the event, a large percentage of runners are tourists. Many tourists have made the event much more dangerous due to their lack of the experience and skill needed to run safely in the Encierro. Local people, as well as visitors from certain areas of Spain have had more opportunity to practice in other encierros, bull and cow fests, which used to be held in a wider space than in the historic center of Pamplona.
Stray bulls become extremely agitated (they are herd animals who do not like to be separated from the pack), and so the organisers arrange for a "second wave" of calmer and older steers to run through the streets after the "first wave," in order to collect any stragglers. The shops and residences along the course are boarded up to prevent damage by either bull or human during the race. One particular stretch of the course, called Mercaderes, is particularly notorious for injuries: on rainy days the bulls cannot turn well on the cobblestones, and often collide into the wall; tear marks from the sharpened horns against the pulp wood barriers give an indication as to the events of days before. While locals are always keen to avoid this corner, it is not uncommon to see tourists getting trampled and seriously injured there.
The course concludes at Pamplona's Plaza de Toros, and the bulls are herded inside the Corralillos to participate in the afternoon's Corrida.
The participants of the Encierro are left in the stadium, and smaller bulls (with wrapped horns) are released into the arena and toss the participants, to the general amusement of the crowd. Once all of the bulls have entered the stadium, a third rocket is released while a fourth firecracker indicates that the bulls are in their bullpens and the run has concluded.
[edit] Connected activities
During the days, the town has a carnival with rides and ferris wheels, as well as an abundance of sangria sold by bars and restaurants.
At night, the town erupts into an enormous party. The Comparsa de Gigantes (Company of Giants) parade the streets— enormous puppets accompanied by brass bands. The streets are filled with drunken revellers, and the thousands of tourists find themselves asleep in parks.. The city hall is offered by the town as a storage facility for backpackers' gear.
After nine days of partying, the people of Pamplona meet in the Plaza Consistorial at midnight on 14 July, singing the traditional mournful notes of the "Pobre de Mí" ('Poor Me'), in a magical, candlelit ending. Nowadays on the 15th of the month, after the fiesta is over, some diehards assemble once more at 7 a.m. and run one last time— against the local bus, whose service along the route of the course starts again on this morning.
[edit] External links
- Unofficial website on San Fermin and on encierro
- Official guide to the fiesta of San Fermin.
- The best of SanFermin...Pinchos, Bulls and fiesta
- Gallery of Fiesta de San Fermin
- A map of the encierro injuries using Google Maps. In English, Spanish and Basque.
- San Fermin website and on encierro
- Images from the 2006 San Fermin festival in Pamplona
- Mobile game based on the San Fermin fiesta.