Chapter

Democratic Autonomy & Tourism Economy

After Franco's death in 1975, the Canary Islands transformed rapidly. The Carnival of Santa Cruz de Tenerife reemerged by 1977 and grew into one of the world's largest—shaped by the ida y vuelta (emigration/return) cycle to Venezuela and Cuba and by tourism-driven spectacle. The 1982 Estatuto de Autonomía established the autonomous community with its own parliament and fiscal regime (REF/IGIC), recognizing geographic conditions first articulated in the Carta de Calatayud and Fuero de Canarias. Tourism now drives 32% of GDP, sometimes obscuring syncretic and contested layers beneath colorful surfaces. The Silbo Gomero—a whistled Guanche communication system adapted to Spanish phonology after the indigenous language went extinct—was inscribed as UNESCO Intangible Heritage (2009) and is mandatory in La Gomera schools, demonstrating the broader Canarian pattern of indigenous structure preserved with imported content. Romerías blend Catholic devotion with aboriginal-rooted harvest practices, while bajada cycles continue to bring patron images from remote sanctuaries to communities. Today you can taste gofio at a romería, hear Silbo during a bajada procession, and walk the Achbinico cave where Guanche and Catholic ritual have overlapped for over six centuries—but look carefully to see the contested layers beneath the tourism surface.

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Places connected to this chapter

Places are linked through Research Center era-node mappings.

spiritual

Ermita de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe (La Gomera)

The remote sanctuary of the patron of La Gomera, located in the barranco of the same name. Every five years, the Bajada de la Virgen de Guadalupe brings the image from this isolated sanctuary to the island's communities, following the Canarian pattern of "bringing down" a patron from a remote site at multi-year intervals. The five-year cycle mirrors the La Palma bajada and may preserve older communal gathering rhythms. Maintained by the Diocese of Tenerife (Nivariense) and the island's religious confraternity. Anchor modes: living_ritual; custodian | Search hooks: Ermita de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe; Bajada La Gomera; Virgen de Guadalupe patron; five-year bajada; barranco sanctuary

Visit the remote sanctuary in its barranco setting, and during a bajada year, witness the procession bringing the patron image to the island's communities.

spiritual

Ermita de Nuestra Señora de los Reyes (El Hierro)

A remote hilltop chapel in La Dehesa natural park on El Hierro, housing the island's patron image of the Virgen de los Reyes. Every four years, the Bajada de la Virgen de los Reyes brings the image down from this isolated sanctuary—the shortest of the Canarian bajada cycles, possibly reflecting older communal gathering rhythms tied to the island's geography and pastoral calendar. The first Saturday of July marks the start of each bajada. Anchor modes: living_ritual; custodian | Search hooks: Ermita de Nuestra Señora de los Reyes; Bajada El Hierro; Virgen de los Reyes; bajada every four years; La Dehesa sanctuary

Visit the remote chapel in La Dehesa, and during a bajada year (next: 2029), witness the procession that brings the patron image across the island.

modern

Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (modern city)

The co-capital of the Canary Islands and the archipelago's largest city, home to the Archdiocese of Gran Canaria and the eastern islands' ecclesiastical administration. Las Palmas hosts its own Carnival with deep roots in port-city culture shaped by centuries of Atlantic trade. The Vegueta quarter contains the Cathedral of Santa Ana and the Casa de Colón, while the modern port reflects the banana and tourism economies. Anchor modes: custodian; signal | Search hooks: Las Palmas de Gran Canaria; Carnival Las Palmas; Archdiocese Canariense; Vegueta historic quarter; Atlantic port city

Experience the Las Palmas Carnival (Feb/Mar), explore the Vegueta historic quarter with its colonial-era churches and the Casa de Colón, and see the modern port.

political

San Cristóbal de La Laguna (Tenerife)

The first planned city in Spain, founded by Alonso Fernández de Lugo in 1496–1497 on Renaissance humanist principles with an orthogonal grid and no defensive walls. A UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1999, La Laguna preserves the colonial urban layout and hosts the Romería de San Benito Abad, the only romería designated "regional" for the entire archipelago. The town also serves as the diocesan seat (Diocese of Tenerife/Nivariense), making it the institutional center governing festival calendars for the western islands. Anchor modes: custodian; living_ritual | Search hooks: San Cristóbal de La Laguna; Romería de San Benito; UNESCO World Heritage; first planned city Spain; Diocese Nivariense; Fernández de Lugo foundation

Walk the Renaissance grid of the first planned Spanish city, attend the Romería de San Benito Abad (regional romería), and see the diocesan cathedral governing western island festival calendars.

modern

Santa Cruz de Tenerife (modern capital)

The co-capital of the Canary Islands and home to the Carnival of Santa Cruz de Tenerife—one of the world's largest, often ranked second only to Rio de Janeiro. The Carnival's documented history traces to 1605, but its modern form is shaped by Franco-era suppression (1936–1975, when it was driven underground as "Fiestas de Invierno") and post-1977 reconstruction. The Latin American influence on the Carnival reflects the Canarian ida y vuelta emigration cycle rather than simple cultural borrowing. Santa Cruz also serves as one of the two alternating endpoints of the seven-year Bajada de la Virgen de Candelaria and houses the Museo de la Naturaleza y el Hombre. Anchor modes: living_ritual; signal | Search hooks: Santa Cruz de Tenerife; Carnival Santa Cruz; Fiestas de Invierno; bajada Candelaria endpoint; ida y vuelta carnival; Franco suppression

Experience one of the world's largest Carnivals (Feb/Mar), visit the Museo de la Naturaleza y el Hombre, and during a bajada year, see the Virgin of Candelaria arrive at the city.

Celebrations and traditions

Only reviewed Historical Anthropology projections appear here.

No reviewed festival relations are projectable for this chapter yet.

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Historical worlds connect this chapter to wider cross-border context.

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More chapters in Canary Islands

Adjacent chapters stay inside the same cultural region.

Chapter

Liberal State Formation & Plantation Monoculture

1800 - 1950

The 19th century reshaped Canarian society through monoculture cycles—cochineal (1860s–1880s), then bananas introduced by British merchants—that concentrated wealth while creating jornaleros (day laborers) and medianeros (sharecroppers). The 1852 Puertos Francos decree opened the islands to free trade. In this period, the "Guanche" was reinvented as a noble ancestor by Creole elites—a process analyzed by Fernando Estévez González as "invented tradition" that "whitened" the Guanche by classifying them as European-origin Berbers, distancing Canarian identity from African and Afro-Caribbean contributions. The Pirámides de Güímar are 19th-century agricultural stone-clearing heaps from the cochineal era, not ancient monuments—though Aparicio and Esteban (2009) identified possible Freemasonic symbolism in their orientation. The Corpus Christi flower carpet tradition in La Orotava, first documented in 1847 when the Monteverde family created a carpet using Italian-inspired geometric motifs, uses volcanic sand (tepete) from Mount Teide as its distinctive material. The original Virgin of Candelaria image was lost in an 1826 tsunami. The Santa Cruz Carnival—documented since 1605—was banned under Franco (1936–1975) and driven underground as "Fiestas de Invierno" (Winter Festivals), meaning the modern Carnival is partly a post-Franco reconstruction rather than an unbroken tradition.

Chapter

Habsburg Imperial Integration & Atlantic Commerce

1496 - 1800

Integrated into Habsburg Castile, the Canary Islands became the critical resupply station for Spanish galleons crossing to the Americas—and the laboratory for colonial practices later exported across the Atlantic. The sugar economy brought Genoese and Flemish merchants; wine trade drew English merchants who established permanent communities. The Catholic Church reorganized indigenous ritual geography: Achbinico was rededicated as the Cueva de San Blas (1526), while the Virgin of Candelaria cult grew into the archipelago's most important pilgrimage with annual feasts on February 2 (Candlemas) and August 14–15. The first recorded bajada—the ritual "bringing down" of a patron image from its hilltop sanctuary—occurred in 1555 when the Virgin of Candelaria was moved for protection from French attack. In 1676, the Bajada de la Virgen de las Nieves was established on La Palma after Bishop Bartolomé García Jiménez ordered the patron invoked during drought. These cyclical bajadas (every 4, 5, or 7 years depending on the island) may overlay older communal gathering rhythms at mountain sanctuaries—though direct Guanche calendrical continuity remains a hypothesis rather than proven fact. On Lanzarote, the catastrophic Timanfaya eruptions (1730–1736) buried eleven villages and forced island-wide agricultural adaptation, creating the volcanic wine landscape you see today.

Chapter

Reconquista Extension & European Island Conquest

1402 - 1496

The European conquest extended the Iberian Reconquista into the Atlantic in two phases. The Norman phase (1402) began when Jean de Béthencourt and Gadifer de la Salle, operating under Enrique III of Castile, landed on Lanzarote and Fuerteventura, founding Betancuria in 1404 as the archipelago's first European capital. The Castilian phase (1478–1496) was bloodier: Gran Canaria fell in 1483, La Palma in 1493, and Tenerife only after Alonso Fernández de Lugo's defeat at La Matanza de Acentejo (1494) and final victory at La Victoria (1495). The 1481 Carta de Calatayud between the Catholic Monarchs and a guanarteme of Gran Canaria had guaranteed native freedom and customs—a pact repeatedly violated as colonization proceeded. At Candelaria, the Guanche cave sanctuary of Achbinico became the first collision site of indigenous and Catholic ritual: Guanche shepherds had been venerating a carved image they called Chaxiraxi since c.1392, and after the conquest, the first Catholic Mass on Tenerife was celebrated there on February 2, 1497. Fernández de Lugo founded San Cristóbal de La Laguna as Spain's first planned city without walls—a Renaissance grid still legible in the old town today.

Chapter

Amazigh Atlantic Settlement & Guanche Island Cultures

-1000 - 1402

Amazigh-speaking populations from North Africa settled the Canary Islands around the first millennium BC, developing isolated island cultures later called "Guanche" (from Tenerife's indigenous name). Each island evolved distinct social structures—Gran Canaria practiced matrilineal autocracy; Tenerife was divided into nine menceyatos (kingdoms) under elected kings. Religion centered on Achamán (supreme father), Chaxiraxi (goddess mother, "she who sustains the firmament," linked by some scholars to the star Canopus), and Guayota (the malignant force dwelling inside Mount Teide). Gofio—toasted cereal flour from an Amazigh-derived word—was the staple and remains the deepest culinary identity marker ("más canario que el gofio"). Walk through Barranco de Guayadeque or enter the Cueva Pintada and you step inside settlements already centuries old when Europeans first sighted the islands. The Guanche seasonal gatherings around the beñesmén (grain harvest) and celestial observations may be the oldest layer of the romería and bajada traditions you can still experience today—though the exact continuities remain fragmentary and debated, and the audit warns against projecting modern neo-pagan reconstructions onto fragmentary evidence.