Chapter

Franco Folkloric Nationalism & Festival Reinvention

The Franco regime reoriented regional festivals toward a folkloric narrative of "Spanishness"—regional variety displayed as proof of national unity rather than local distinctiveness. After World War II, the regime rebranded fiesta as apolitical folklore, stripping it of subversive potential while showcasing colorful costumes and dances for tourism. Festival calendars were reshaped to align with national-Catholic norms. In this climate, the Medieval Theater Festival of Hita was founded in 1961 by Manuel Criado de Val, reviving the Arcipreste de Hita's medieval literary world as cultural performance—the oldest such festival in Spain. The botarga traditions of Guadalajara's Serranía—masked winter figures presiding over Nochebuena, Navidad, Año Nuevo, and Carnaval—survived as "picturesque folklore," their ritual logic reframed as entertainment. The Ruta de las Botargas now connects these dispersed winter festivals across the province, but the question remains: what did the folklorization process erase from their original communal function?

1936 - 1978
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Hita (Medieval Theater Festival)

The Medieval Theater Festival of Hita, founded 1961 by Manuel Criado de Val, is the oldest such festival in Spain—cultural performance navigating between literary revival and Franco-era approved folklore. It revives the Arcipreste de Hita's medieval world as an annual event, creating a bridge between literary heritage and living festival practice. Anchor modes: living_ritual; custodian; signal | Search hooks: Hita (Medieval Theater Festival); Festival Medieval Hita 1961; Manuel Criado de Val; Arcipreste de Hita; teatro medieval Guadalajara; festival folclórico Franco

Attend the annual Medieval Festival in Hita, Guadalajara—watch medieval theater performances, jousting, and market stalls in the village streets; the ayuntamiento publishes the annual program each summer.

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Ruta de las Botargas, Guadalajara

The Ruta de las Botargas connects masked winter festival figures across Guadalajara's Serranía—traditions that survived Franco-era folklorization as 'picturesque customs' while retaining communal ritual logic on Nochebuena, Navidad, Año Nuevo, Carnaval, and saints' days. The route creates a network anchor for dispersed practices that share a common ritual grammar of masked inversion. Anchor modes: living_ritual; network_route; signal | Search hooks: Ruta de las Botargas, Guadalajara; botarga Carnaval Serranía; personajes enmascarados invierno; Nochebuena Navidad Año Nuevo; tradición festiva Guadalajara; mascaradas invierno Castilla

Follow the Ruta de las Botargas across northern Guadalajara towns—attend winter festivals where masked botarga figures preside over community celebrations; the Diputación de Guadalajara promotes the route with a calendar of participating towns.

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Chapter

Bourbon Enlightenment & Industrial Reform

1700 - 1936

The Bourbon dynasty brought French-inspired economic centralization and enlightened reform. Fernando VI established the Real Fábrica de Seda in Talavera (1748) as part of a state manufacturing system designed to modernize Spain's economy; the factory building survives as a reminder of imposed industrial policy on a rural region. The 1765 prohibition of autos sacramentales marked a deliberate break from Baroque festival culture, pushing ritual drama out of public squares and into church interiors—a top-down reshaping of how communities could perform their beliefs. Windmills—Mediterranean tower-mill technology documented since the 14th century but widespread by the mid-16th—were the region's pre-industrial grain-processing infrastructure on the Mancha plain. Cervantes' 1605 novel later mythologized them into "giants," but their real significance is technological: they transformed wind into flour for bread, the staple of every festival table. The Consuegra and Campo de Criptana windmills stand as the most legible survivors of this food-processing network.

Chapter

Democratic Heritage Revival & Living Traditions

From 1978

Spain's democratic transition brought heritage legislation and international recognition. The 1978 Constitution enabled autonomous cultural policy; Castilla-La Mancha's Law 4/2013 established a comprehensive framework for conserving, protecting, and enriching cultural heritage. The Tamborada de Hellín—where peñas of drummers produce unbroken rhythmic sound day and night during Semana Santa—was inscribed on UNESCO's Intangible Heritage list as part of the broader tamboradas network. Cuenca's historic walled city, a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1996, anchors the region's architectural patrimony. The Mondas of Talavera, declared Fiesta de Interés Turístico in 2009, continues its 2,000-year arc from Roman Ceres cult to modern celebration—rams still pull the Carrito de Mondas through the streets, as they did in the Ludi Ceriales. The Gitano community of Albacete, documented since the 15th century, maintains cultural visibility through International Roma Day celebrations at the city hall. What you experience today is a heritage landscape where BIC declarations, UNESCO inscriptions, and community custodianship intersect—sometimes reinforcing, sometimes competing over which layers of the past deserve protection.

Chapter

Habsburg Baroque Festival Culture

1614 - 1700

After the Morisco expulsion completed in 1614, Castilla-La Mancha entered a Baroque festival culture shaped by Counter-Reformation spectacle. The Corpus Christi procession became the primary stage for communal identity: in Camuñas, the Pecados y Danzantes evolved as a ritual drama where masked "Sins" attack the Custodia before repenting, followed by the Danzantes' choreographed dance. A "Judío Mayor" figure presides—officially an Auto Sacramental allegory, but anthropologist Molinié reads it as crypto-Jewish code. The meaning remains contested; what is certain is that the ritual structure encodes a dialogue between suppression and survival. The Corral de Comedias in Almagro—the only surviving 17th-century theater structure in Spain—hosted the plays that fed this Baroque imagination. The auto sacramental, performed outdoors during Corpus Christi, became the dominant dramatic genre for public religious performance. Stand in the Corral's courtyard and you occupy the exact space where Golden Age audiences experienced the theatrical machinery that shaped festival culture until the Bourbon prohibition of 1765.

Chapter

Catholic Monarchy & Minority Expulsions

1492 - 1614

The year 1492 saw both the expulsion of the Jews and the fall of Granada, ending Muslim political power in Iberia. In Toledo, the Sinagoga del Tránsito—built by Samuel ha-Leví in 1357—was confiscated and converted; today it houses the Museo Sefardí, preserving the material memory of a community that shaped the city for centuries. The Morisco expulsion (1609–1614) hit La Mancha unevenly: in Villarubia de los Ojos, approximately 250 Moriscos resisted three expulsion orders, with many returning and Felipe IV eventually ratifying their privileges—proving that integration could challenge even state-driven removal. This era also produced the earliest documented syncretic festivals. La Endiablada (documented from 1500) encodes a ritual structure where diablos with cencerros must "ask permission" to begin—Christian institutional control layered over potentially older ritual forms. The Caballada de Atienza commemorates the 1162 liberation of child-king Alfonso VIII by arrieros, whose cofradía still conducts auctions in wheat measures (celemines de trigo) rather than money, preserving an agrarian economic logic from the medieval frontier.