Chapter

Democratic Transition & Regional Revival

Spain's 1978 Constitution created autonomous communities, and Castile and León was formally constituted in 1983 — but León province voted against joining, a result that the Leonesismo movement cites as evidence that the region's Leonese provinces were never willingly "Castilian." This political tension animates festival interpretation today: traditions in León, Zamora, and Salamanca should not be assumed to be Castilian in origin. The Astures y Romanos festival in Astorga, founded in 1986 as a bimillennial commemoration and adopting its current form in 2004, is an invented tradition — a reenactment that creates an appearance of continuity with the Roman/Astur past but actually expresses modern Leonese regional identity. Holy Week cofradías in Cuéllar maintain procession traditions with institutional archives that may settle questions about festival origin dates. Logroño's Fiesta de la Vendimia (wine harvest festival) reflects Rioja's distinct economic and cultural identity, separate from Castile. Heritage designations (UNESCO for Burgos Cathedral, Salamanca, San Millán de la Cogolla) have boosted tourism but also reinforced "national" or "European" framing that can obscure specifically Leonese, Riojan, and Cantabrian distinctiveness. Animal-welfare challenges to the Toro Jubilo and folk-Catholic tensions around El Colacho continue to generate legal and doctrinal debate — making these festivals sites of living cultural negotiation rather than static survivals. Today, you can experience this layered story in person: walk the Roman ruins of Astorga, hear the Mozarabic rite at the Capilla de Talavera, watch fire-walkers at San Pedro Manrique on San Juan night, or join the Batalla del Vino at Haro on June 29.

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Places connected to this chapter

Places are linked through Research Center era-node mappings.

knowledge

Astorga

Asturica Augusta, founded around 14 BC as a legionary camp, became the most important Roman city in northwestern Hispania. Its Roman Route (museumized since 2009) displays excavated gates, sewers, and baths. In the modern era, Astorga hosts the Astures y Romanos reenactment festival (founded 1986), making this town a palimpsest of Roman, medieval, and contemporary identity layers. The Diocese of Astorga maintains ecclesiastical archives relevant to festival documentation. Anchor modes: custodian; material_layer; living_ritual | Search hooks: Astorga; Asturica Augusta; Roman Route Astorga; Astures y Romanos; Diocese of Astorga archive; reenactment procession

Walk the Roman Route through excavated gates, sewers, and bath complexes; visit the Roman museum; in summer, watch or join the Astures y Romanos historical reenactment in the town streets.

spiritual

Cuéllar

A town in Segovia province with medieval walls, parish churches, and Holy Week cofradías that maintain procession traditions with their own archives — potential sources for the earliest documentation of local festival practices. Cuéllar appears in the festival cities database with multiple observed festivals, and its cofradías represent the institutional mechanism that preserves and transmits festival tradition across generations. The municipal tourism office and the cofradías themselves publish event information. Anchor modes: custodian; living_ritual; signal | Search hooks: Cuéllar; Semana Santa Cuéllar; cofradías Cuéllar Segovia; medieval walls Cuéllar; Holy Week procession; parish archive

During Holy Week, watch cofradía processions through the medieval streets; walk the 11th-century walls; visit the parish churches that house cofradía chapels.

trade

Logroño

Capital of La Rioja and a major wine-culture centre, Logroño hosts the Fiesta de la Vendimia (Wine Harvest Festival) that follows the agricultural calendar of the grape harvest rather than the liturgical calendar — a reminder that not all regional festivals originate in Catholic feast-day practice. La Rioja's separate autonomous community status means its festival traditions should not be interpreted as Castilian. The city also sits on the Camino de Santiago, creating a pilgrimage route intersection with its wine-trade identity. The municipal government and Rioja wine regulatory council (Consejo Regulador) organize harvest events. Anchor modes: custodian; living_ritual; network_route | Search hooks: Logroño; Fiesta de la Vendimia; Rioja wine harvest; Camino de Santiago Logroño; Consejo Regulador DOCa Rioja; agricultural calendar; wine culture

During the September harvest festival, watch the grape-treading ceremony and parade; walk the Camino de Santiago route through the old town; visit bodegas in the surrounding wine district.

Celebrations and traditions

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No reviewed festival relations are projectable for this chapter yet.

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More chapters in Castile and León

Adjacent chapters stay inside the same cultural region.

Chapter

Bourbon Centralization & National Heritage

1700 - 1975

The Bourbon dynasty centralized administration, abolished fueros, and in 1833 reorganized Spain into the provincial boundaries that still define the region — splitting the historic Kingdom of León into the provinces of León, Zamora, and Salamanca within a "Castile and León" framework. The Alcázar of Segovia became the Royal Artillery Academy (1764), symbolizing the military rationalization of historic sites. Yet local communities maintained festival practices that the state neither controlled nor fully understood. The Paso del Fuego (fire-walking) at San Pedro Manrique continues each San Juan night (June 23), coinciding with the summer solstice — the calendar convergence suggests seasonal logic that may predate Christianity, though documentary evidence is lacking. The Luminarias at San Bartolomé de Pinares (Ávila), purportedly held for five centuries, applies the same fire-ritual logic to a winter feast on January 16. The Batalla del Vino at Haro evolved from a romería (pilgrimage) to the Riscos de Bilibio, formally named as such by 1949, though the underlying boundary-marking tradition between Haro and Miranda de Ebro dates to medieval land disputes. Franco-era historiography promoted "Castilian, Catholic centrality" as national ideology, suppressing evidence of regional diversity and Mozarabic continuity — a framing that still colors how festivals are presented to visitors today.

Chapter

Habsburg Empire & Cofradía Consolidation

1492 - 1700

Under Habsburg rule, Cardinal Cisneros reformed the Mozarabic rite (1500–1502), adding Roman-rite feasts like Corpus Christi to the Missale Mixtum — a key moment for festival origin-dating, since Corpus Christi was not on the pre-1080 Hispanic calendar. The El Colacho at Castrillo de Murcia, documented from 1620 and attached to Corpus Christi, may be a ritual practice transferred to this feast day after the rite change, making its actual origins older than documented. The Real Cofradía del Santísimo Sacramento de Minerva y la Santa Vera Cruz has organized the El Colacho since at least 1620 — a continuous institutional custodian. The Toro Jubilo at Medinaceli first appears in the archives of the Dukes of Medinaceli in 1559, during a visit by Philip II; its folk claim of Punic War origins is unsupported by documentation. The Lebaniego Jubilee, granted by papal bull in 1512, established a Cantabrian-specific pilgrimage cycle at Santo Toribio de Liébana separate from the Camino de Santiago. At the Capilla de Talavera, the Mozarabic rite survived as a heritage practice within the Habsburg religious landscape. The tension between local folk-Catholic practice (baby-jumping as protection against evil) and official Church doctrine (baptism as sole means of cleansing original sin) structures the festival landscape that you encounter today.

Chapter

United Crowns & Gothic Christendom

1230 - 1492

Ferdinand III's permanent union of León and Castile in 1230 did not erase León's distinct identity — its language (Leonese), its legal traditions, and its cultural memory persisted, especially in the provinces of León, Zamora, and Salamanca. But the political merger shifted resources toward Gothic cathedral-building on the French model. Burgos Cathedral (begun 1221) and León Cathedral (begun 13th century, famed for its stained glass) embodied the new international Gothic aesthetic. Salamanca's university, founded around 1218, became one of Europe's leading scholarly institutions. The Alcázar of Segovia served as a royal residence. Cofradías — lay religious brotherhoods — began organizing Holy Week processions and patron-saint feast days, becoming the institutional custodians of festival tradition. Fueros (municipal charters) granted to repopulation-era towns included provisions for feast-day observances that may be the earliest written references to local celebrations. Cuéllar's medieval walls and parish churches bear traces of this era's cofradía foundations. For festival history, this is the era when cofradía institutional memory begins — their archives may contain the earliest reliable documentation of festival practices that travelers encounter today as "ancient tradition."

Chapter

Roman-Rite Transition & Dual Crown Integration

1037 - 1230

The Council of Burgos in 1080 replaced the Hispanic (Mozarabic) rite with the Roman rite across León and Castile — a liturgical calendar shift with profound consequences for festival history. Feasts unique to the Hispanic rite (Incarnation on December 18, St. Ildefonsus on January 23) were deprioritized, while Roman-rite feasts like Corpus Christi and Trinity Sunday were introduced. At the Capilla de Talavera in Salamanca's Old Cathedral, you can still hear the Mozarabic rite celebrated today — a living survival of the pre-1080 calendar. Romanesque cathedrals rose in Salamanca and León, and the Camino de Santiago poured pilgrims and their cultural practices through Burgos, León, and Astorga, creating corridors of festival influence. The kingdoms of León and Castile oscillated between union and separation under Ferdinand I (1037), Alfonso VI, and their successors, until the permanent union under Ferdinand III in 1230. The diocesan seat at El Burgo de Osma (Soria) governed the ecclesiastical records that may preserve early documentation of frontier-zone festival practices. This era's liturgical transition is the key mechanism by which pre-existing local practices may have been transferred to new Roman-rite feast days — making some festivals appear younger than their rituals actually are.