the Burial - Turismo de Murcia
Transcription
the Burial - Turismo de Murcia
The origins of the celebration can be traced back to 1850, when a group of students decided to create a procession with a sardine as its centrepiece, as a symbol of fasting and abstinence, in order to revive the festivities celebrated during Carnival. the Burial of the Sardine in Murcia DEPÓSITO LEGAL: MU-358-2012 • photographs: JOAQUÍN ZAMORA After years of intermittent celebrations, in 1900 a project was conceived to revive the procession and make it part of the Murcia Spring Festival. The Burial recalls ancient pagan myths in which fire fulfilled a purifying role, while at the same time bringing back a carnival air that enables local people to forget the recently concluded privations of Holy Week, in an allegorical enactment of the victory of Don Carnal over Doña Lent. Tourist Information Office Plaza Cardenal Belluga. Edificio Ayuntamiento. 30004 Murcia. España e-mail: [email protected] Tel. 968 358 749 • Fax 968 358 748 www.turismodemurcia.es Follow us on The Burial of the Sardine is a popular procession in many parts of Spain, where it is usually held to mark the end of Carnival. In Murcia, however, this event possesses certain characteristics that make it remarkable for its originality. One of these is the date it is celebrated, which is much later, on the first Saturday after Holy Week, when it forms part of the city’s Spring Festival, having been declared a Festival of International Tourist Interest. On Saturday morning a street procession is held in the city, for which large crowds gather to watch the “sardineros”, as a prelude to the big parade that will take place that night, attended by hundreds of thousands of people. The central act of the festival is a great parade, colourful and playful, in which the rites of carnival and mythology are mixed, and dance troupes, dragons, giants, bigheads and brass bands from all over the world take part, after which there is a procession of floats dedicated to the gods of Olympus when, to the delight of the thousands of children in attendance, tons of toys are distributed. After the parade, the final paroxysm of the celebrations takes place, with the burning of the sardine at the Old Bridge, an event culminating in a firework display that serves as a counterpoint to the reverent devotion demanded by Doña Lent during the recently-ended Holy Week. The entire week of festivities is studded with a number of processions and events enacted by the groups known as “sardineros”. These groups take their names from the gods of Greek and Roman mythology, recalling the ancient civilisations of the Mediterranean region. The groups elect a “Big Fish” [“Gran Pez”] and a “Lady Sardine” [“Doña Sardina”] as the patrons of the festival. The arrival of the sardine in the city is the signal for the commencement of this popular Murcia festivity. Each year it arrives from one of the region’s districts, where a farewell celebration is held and a well-attended fiesta is organised, with parades and the handing out of toys, as a prelude to what is to come later, in the city. During the days prior to the burial, Murcia is a bustling hive of activity, with an air of celebration encouraged by the din of brass bands and street processions, as the city awaits the arrival of the decisive moment, Saturday night. These processions preceding the Burial include the Testament and the Sardine’s Wake. On the day of the Testament, after the procession through the city’s main streets, at nightfall Lady Sardine becomes the focus of the celebrations, which are always imbued with a markedly humorous aspect, through which current issues are parodied.