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Log 33 - "La Corrida de Toros" - Our First Bullfight
 
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In this log we are going to introduce you to a different form of
the bullfight. Our last encounter with bulls was back in the streets of the
Portuguese Azores (Log25) in the summer of 2004. The
spectacle of bullfighting has existed in one form or another since ancient days, as far
back as 2000 BC according to one cave painting. Bullfights were popular spectacles in
ancient Rome, but it was in the Iberian Peninsula (today's Spain) that these contests were
fully developed. The Moors from North Africa who overran Andalucía in 711 AD changed
bullfighting significantly from the brutish, formless spectacle practiced by the conquered
Visigoths to a ritualistic occasion observed in connection with feast days, on which the
conquering Moors, mounted on highly trained horses, confronted and killed the bulls.
Seville's bullring, la Plaza de Toros de la Real Maestranza, is supposed to be
one of the most elegant in Spain and one of the oldest, with initial construction
beginning in 1758. It was here and at a nearby place called Ronda, that
bullfighting on foot (instead of horseback) began in the 18th century. |
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The bullfighting season typically starts around Easter and runs to about
October. A month or so prior to the season opener and our first event, we
went to visit the bullring and its museum to learn a bit more about the spectacle and its
traditions. Many outsiders think of the contest between bull and man as one-sided. They
fail to appreciate the danger embodied by a corrida bull. A typical bull bred for the
corrida (bullfight) is a jet-black, 460-kg (1000-lb) engine of awesome speed and strength,
with long, dagger-sharp horns. It wears a blue shirt with ... |
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In the museum, this display in particular caught our attention. The
matador in the picture was killed by an extremely crafty bull. So unusually
intuitive was the bull and so grievous was the mother of the matador over her loss that
afterwards she insisted that the bull's mother be killed so that never again could a bull,
as evil as the one that killed her son, be born and enter the bullring again. |
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As bullfighting developed, the men on foot, who by their capework aided the horsemen in
positioning the bulls, began to draw more attention from the crowd, and the modern corrida
began to take form. Today the bullfight is much the same as it has been since about 1726,
when Francisco Romero of Ronda, Spain, introduced the estoque (the sword) and the
muleta (the small, more easily wielded worsted cape used in the last part of the
fight). |
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6:12pm Sunday, March 27, 2005 - La Corrida de Toros Bullfighting
today is big business and rewarding for the successful few matadors who make it to the
top. Many are multimillionaires, but have paid for their fame with many severe horn
wounds; others have paid with their lives. Bullfighters generally expect to receive at
least one goring a season. A star matador will fight as many as 100 corridas a year, and
can make the equivalent of about U$25,000 per corrida. Before on-site medical
treatment facilities, a gored matador stood a very high chance of bleeding to death before
receiving any proper aid. |
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6:28pm - Well, we are settling into our seats waiting for the
show to begin. When Chris went to buy the tickets a week earlier, in addition to
section levels, he also had the choice of sun, partial shade, or shade. Spain gets
hot in the summer and Seville can get as hot as 50 Celsius! But being March, we
opted for affordable. Our tickets for this star-filled event were about $C 35 a
piece - the best in the house were nearly $ 300! And 'no', there was no
TicketMaster, no booking by telephone, nor internet or anything else. Chris stood in
line outside the bullring on the correct day at the correct hour in all of its
tradition-steeped honor, an experience in itself. |
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6:31pm - Back to the event. Six bulls, to be killed by
three matadors, are usually required for one afternoon's corrida, and each encounter lasts
about 15 minutes. At the appointed time, the three matadors dressed ornately in silk
jackets and monteras (bicorne hats), each followed by their assistants, the banderilleros
and the picadors, march into the ring to the accompaniment of grand music.
This cuadrilla (group of apprentices) that follows each matador into the ring,
will assist the matadors in the slaying of the bulls. |
 
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Chris' mom and dad are sitting with us as our Norwegian friends from s/v
Stroller. The time has come...our senses are overloading as the rich tradition of
the fight begins to play itself out in front of us.
Classical bullfighting is theater in three acts...
In the first act, the toro, or bull, is released into the bullring from the
confines of a dark pen. Dazed by the light, the bull will first see three toreros,
or bullfighters, standing in the ring waving large capes to attract its attention and goad
it into initial charges. The toreros run behind wooden barriers at the sides of the
bullring, which the bull charges and rams with enormous violence. Then Picadors on
horseback (a couple of photos up) spear the bull with long lances, a practice designed
both to enrage the animal and to make it expend its energy battering their blindfolded and
padded horses. |
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In the second act three banderilleros in sequence enter and run at the
bull carrying short, barbed harpoons with flags attached. Agilely avoiding the bull, they
plant the harpoons in the hump of its back, leaving it gleaming with (more) fresh blood.
The stings of the barbs drive the animal further into a frenzy of rage. |
 
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The faena is the final act. The matador faces the bull alone
across the ring, carrying only a tiny red cape and a sword. His goal is to kill the bull.
Ideally, he will do it with a single sword thrust between the shoulder blades, his weapon
sinking in to the hilt and piercing the heart of the beast. First, however, he must bring
the animal to a mesmerized, exhausted, and panting halt. To achieve this, he entices
the bull into frantic charges by flourishing the cape in elaborate passes. Purists demand
these motions be graceful, swift, sure arcs. They also demand the matador not falter or
flinch as he draws the thrusts of the bull's lethal horns within inches of his flesh.
Before this apex of human cool, the bull eventually grows hypnotized from its own dizzying
circles. It wears down until it sinks on the sand before the matador. Younger matadors may
play to the spectators near the finish, sinking to their knees and dropping their capes.
More traditional matadors lock the bull in a deadly stare, stroking the bull's horns or
the rough fringe of hair across its head to gauge the spirit remaining before delivering
the death blow with the sword.
Here, one of our matadors, Enrique Ponce, lines up for the final thrust. |
 
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If the matador shows a lack of grace, skill, or courage, or if the
knowledgeable crowd perceives that the matador contrived to fight a smaller, tamer bull,
jeers will follow him from the ring. If all is performed with sufficient aplomb, however,
the judge will award the matador the bull's ears or, for an exceptional kill, its tail.
The crowd is very appreciative today for the first performance of
superstar "El Cid" and the judges award two ears, which you can see in
the matador's hands as he walks around the perimeter of the bullring smiling at and waving
to his fans. These guys have massive egos! In our event programme, all the
statistics are spelled out for each fighter: total number of corridas, total number of
ears awarded, more specific details on the past season. For example, one of them has
fought 1348 times and been awarded 1767 ears since his professional debut in this form of
bullfighting in 1988. |
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And what of the bull? He is hooked to a team of mules - con o
sin orejas (with or without ears) - and hauled out of the bull arena. A team of
attendants quickly straighten things up and rake the floor as required. Then the
next event begins. ¡Olé! |
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The corrida is a spectacle with a long history and many rules. It is
not, as many might suggest, a ghoulish alternative to the slaughterhouse (itself no pretty
sight). Aficionados will say the bull gets to live a year longer than the
slaughterhouse route and will die with much more honour. The corrida is about many
things - death, bravery, performance. No doubt the fight was bloody and cruel, and
our hackles and bile raised more than once. To witness a fight is not necessarily to
understand it, but it gives some clues to the thought and tradition behind it. And so, we
conclude this log with a picture of a delicious Spanish concoction we got to enjoy, Rabo
de Toro - bull's tail stew. |
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