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BULLFIGHTING
La Fiesta Brava
by
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La Fiesta Brava
Bullfighting is a tradition, art and athletic sport combined in one. Bullfighting
originated in the classical world. The first bullfights supposedly took place in Knossos,
Greece, "a contest of some sort is depicted in a wall painting unearthed... dating from
about 2000 BC. It shows male and female acrobats confronting a bull, grabbing its horns
as it charges, and vaulting over its back." (Encarta) Bullfights stayed popular after the
Greek era had declined, in Rome. The spectacle of bullfighting during this time period
was scarcely an art form but pure sport. It was not until the Moors of North Africa
conquered the Visigoths of Europe in 711 AD that bullfighting started to evolve into an
art. The Moors would ride skilled horses on feast days on which they killed the bulls.
During this time period, when the Moors were redefining bullfighting, there were those
bullfighters that rode horses and killed the bulls but there were also those men who
stood on the ground with capes. The men that wielded the capes aided the horsemen in how
the bull was positioned during the fight. These men began to draw most of the attention
from the crowd due to their expertise and craftsmanship with their capes; these men
eventually became the matadors of
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today. With this development, a corrida de toros ("the running of the bulls") began to
take the shape in which it is seen today as modern bullfighting. In 1726 Francisco Romero
of Ronda, Spain fit the last piece into the bullfighting puzzle when he introduced the
estoque (the sword) and the:
"The muleta [bullfighting cape]... a Spanish cloak, and you can even see it being worn at
times, if rain falls, by fighters off duty... It is nowadays made of two thicknesses of
heavy silk, the outside being blotting-paper pink and the inside generally yellow. It is
very strong." (Machnad 58)
The modern sport of bullfighting is strictly an art form, having evolved from its origin
in ancient Greece and firmly taken its roots mostly in Spanish speaking countries.
Bulls used for bullfighting are a special breed of animal and their lives and breeding
reflect that fact:
"This Spanish fighting bull is a long way removed from the Hereford or the Jersey, or
even the Texas longhorn. You can let cattle run loose on the open range for generations
until they are complete 'outlaws', but they will never turn into what the
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Spanish call toros bravos or fighting bulls. The reason is that the race is different."
(Machnad 5)
There are two races of cattle native to Spain, one domestic and the other wild. The
domestic animals came over by land from Asia and were already domesticated by the Celts.
The other race came by sea from Northern Africa and was being thoroughbred in ancient
Egypt at that time. These latter animals were only barely domesticated and began to roam
the Spanish mountainsides wild. This fighting bull is called Bos Taurus Africanus. This
bull is a descendant of Bos Primigenius or the Primordial Bull. Some of these Primordial
Bulls survived in herds in the German forests and were hunted by men such as Julius
Caesar who said, "In size they are a little less than elephants; in species, colour and
shape, they are bulls." (Machnad 5) Most bulls that enter the ring with the bullfighter
are at least four years old, one year older than those bulls in the slaughterhouse. In
the eyes of the spectator, the last twenty minutes of the bull's life are what matters.
The fighting bull lives the life of peace in nature until it is time for the fight,
having the best pastures and rations of food than that of its cousins, the domesticated
cow. Calves are born in the winter and suckled by the mother until just after the second
summer of the calf's life. At this point the calf is separated from the mother and
branded shortly thereafter. When the calves reach a certain age they are put through a
rigorous bravery test. This test, called a tienta, consists of most
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everything in an actual bullfight minus the banderillos and the kill. Experts determine
which calves will become fighting bulls by grading "the animal's attitude, style, speed,
smoothness, nervousness or calmness, nobility and mode of going for the cloth lures,"
(Machnad 41) After the bull has matured he is put into a traveling box and taken to his
final destination. The unboxing of the bulls is a very tense moment for all involved
because the bulls may be ill tempered and be feverish with swollen feet. After this, the
bulls rest and are prepared for the fight.
In the bullfight itself, the matador has many different moves in his arsenal along with
weapons that he uses to survive and to dispatch the bull. One of the basic passes that
the matador uses is called the veronica, which is the basic pass with the cape. This move
as with all the passes takes an immense amount of practice. Another pass is the pass of
death, which is a swing of the cape when the cape is held out and spread wide by the
estoque. A derechazo is a pass where the matador attempts to regulate and direct the
charge of the bull. This particular pass deals with the distances between the animal and
the bullfighter, requiring a lot of skill for knowing the temperament of the animal. The
matador will walk steadily into the path of the bull shaking the cape the entire time
until the bull passes under the cape of the moving matador. This pass requires nerve,
skill, and timing. The Pase Por Alto is a pass in which the Spanish phrase 'Parar,
templar, y mandar' has originated, coined by Pedro Romero. This phrase means planting the
feet, slowing
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down and smoothing out the bull's charge, and dominating the bull and controlling it's
path, respectively. These are some of the basic passes of bullfighting. An experienced
matador would also add more complex, artistic and beautiful passes such as the
manoletina, the arrucina, and the afarolado.
"The most dramatic of the cape passes is the larga cambiada. The man kneels, swirls the
cape out on the sand in front of him, and holds onto the corner with one hand. When the
bull charges, the matador waits until the animal is about six feet away, then flips the
cape over his head. As it flares out, it changes the bull's direction so that instead of
passing on the man's right side, it goes by on the left. It can be highly exciting,
beautiful, and dangerous. The problem is knowing the exact moment to swing the cape."
(Conrad, Barnaby 52)
As in many sports each bullfighter has his or her own superstitions about thing
pertaining to and things not pertaining to the sport which in the end affect
the outcome of the bullfight. The obvious immortal of bullfighting is Pedro Romero who is
said to have perfected the art of bullfighting. Chronologically speaking, Francisco
Romero would have to come first. Francisco Romero was a
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great bullfighter in his own right but he is best known and remembered for inventing the
estoque and the muleta and being the grandfather of Pedro Romero. Pedro Romero is the
unchallenged ruler of all that is and was modern bullfighting:
Pedro Romero is the Homer of bullfighting: first in time and still unchallenged in
supremacy. Grave, hieratic, with the air of a judge and the face of an aristocrat as Goya
depicts him, he made it into a science and an art, and laid down the classical,
imperishable norms of how to dominate a wild bull with a piece of cloth. No one has ever
departed from those norms except to his own physical cost and to the detriment of the
art." (Machnad 107)
Beginning in 1771 and continuing until his retirement in 1799, Pedro dispatched about 200
bulls per season. He did this using the receiving method, which is nearly obsolete today
due to its difficulty and danger to the matador. However, Romero was a master also of the
attacking method newly invented at the time by Costillares. Pedro Romero was coaxed into
the ring one last time at the age of eighty. He, without the facilities of a younger man,
dispatched and killed all of the bulls that fell to him. Pedro died at the age of
eighty-four and when it came time to bury him; there was not a single scar to be found on
his body. Then there were others like El Chiclanero who was a braggart that loved the
firewater and the
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ladies. Uneducated except in the ways of the bullfight he was loud and quarrelsome and
fit the stereotype of the bullfighter of his time period to a tee. He came from a small
town named Chiclana, which was also the hometown of Francisco Montes, the foremost
disciple of Pedro Romero. His actual name was Jose Redondo and he was the best of his
time. There have also been many other greats such as: Rodolfo Gaona, Armillita (Fermin
Espinosa, 1911-80), and Arruza, of Mexico; and Belmonte, Manolete, and Antonio Ordo?ez,
of Spain.
All of this is the art of bullfighting. Bullfighting has evolved from a raw adrenaline
sport ancient Greece to a worldwide art form in modern times. There are many techniques
and many traditions. The clothing and the weapons along with the respect for the animals
and the courage and grace of the bullfighters. Everything has evolved, even Bos Taurus
Africanus.
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Works Cited
All about Spain. Corrida de Torros. 17 April 2000.
*http://www.red2000.com/spain/toros/*
"Bullfighting." Encarta Encyclopedia. CD-ROM. Redmond: Microsoft, 1996.
Conrad, Barnaby. How to Fight a Bull. New york: Doubleday, 1968.
Conrad, Stanley. Bullfighting Reference Material. 17 April 2000.
*http://www.mundo-taurino.org/backgrnd.html*
Hemingway, Ernest. Death in the Afternoon. New York: Scribner, 1960.
Hemingway, Ernest. The Sun Also Rises. New York: Scribner, 1954.
Machnad, Angus. Fighting Bulls. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1959.
Michener, James A. My Lost Mexico: The Making of a Novel. Austin: State House Press,
1992.
Bibliography
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Works Cited
All about Spain. Corrida de Torros. 17 April 2000.
"Bullfighting." Encarta Encyclopedia. CD-ROM. Redmond: Microsoft, 1996.
Conrad, Barnaby. How to Fight a Bull. New york: Doubleday, 1968.
Conrad, Stanley. Bullfighting Reference Material. 17 April 2000.
Hemingway, Ernest. Death in the Afternoon. New York: Scribner, 1960.
Hemingway, Ernest. The Sun Also Rises. New York: Scribner, 1954.
Machnad, Angus. Fighting Bulls. New York: Harcourt Brace, 1959.
Michener, James A. My Lost Mexico: The Making of a Novel. Austin: State House Press,
1992.
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