Chapter

Bourbon Absolutism & Industrial Catalonia

The Nueva Planta decrees (1714-1716) abolished Catalan institutions, the Diputació del General, and the University of Barcelona, replacing them with a centralized Bourbon administration. Philip V established the University of Cervera in 1717—the only university permitted in Catalonia—as a reward for the town's loyalty, a Bourbon institutional imposition rather than a Catalan achievement. Yet popular culture evolved in the cracks: the Ball dels Valencians in Valls, first documented in 1712, gradually transformed into the castell (human tower) tradition, building on the older Valencian Muixeranga but developing a secularized, competitive, and much taller form. La Bulla (later La Patum) was referenced in 1715 and renamed 'La Patum' between 1795 and 1809—the moment when popular festival broke from its official Corpus Christi frame. Montjuïc Castle was converted into a military fortress watching over the subdued city. The early cotton industry began transforming the landscape, planting the seeds of an industrial working class that would later reshape festival culture from below.

1714 - 1833
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rupture

Cervera

Cervera received Catalonia's only university under the Nueva Planta decrees (1717-1842), a Bourbon reward for loyalty during the War of Succession—an institutional imposition rather than a Catalan achievement. The university building (now part of the Universitat de Barcelona heritage network) is the most legible Bourbon-institutional layer in Catalonia. The town's annual Isagoge i Festa Major, published by the Ajuntament, reflects centuries of academic and municipal festivity shaped by this unique institutional history. Anchor modes: custodian|material_layer|signal | Search hooks: Cervera; Universitat de Cervera 1717; Nueva Planta Bourbon; Isagoge festa major; university heritage building; academic procession

Visit the former University of Cervera building with its Baroque courtyard, now heritage of the Universitat de Barcelona, and experience the Isagoge i Festa Major—Cervera's annual cultural week and festa major rooted in its unique university-town history.

rupture

Montjuïc Castle

Montjuïc Castle overlooking Barcelona's harbor was the military fortress that bombarded the city during the 1714 siege and later served as a political prison where Lluís Companys (Catalan president) was executed in 1940. The Ajuntament de Barcelona now manages the castle as a public space; it has been reinterpreted as a site of democratic memory. The castle's Interpretation Center documents its role in the 1714 siege and the Franco-era repression. Anchor modes: custodian|material_layer|signal | Search hooks: Montjuïc Castle; 1714 siege Barcelona; Lluís Companys execution; political prison; Franco repression; military fortress bombardment

Walk the ramparts where Bourbon cannons once fired on Barcelona, visit the Interpretation Center documenting the castle's repressive history, and see the memorial to Lluís Companys at the execution site.

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Valls

Valls is the birthplace of the castell tradition—the Ball dels Valencians, first documented here in 1712, evolved from the older Valencian Muixeranga into the secularized, competitive human towers that are now Catalonia's most iconic practice. The Castellers de Valls (Vella and Joves) maintain the tradition; the town's Festa Major features casteller performances. The tradition was transformed in Catalonia from its Valencian roots—not merely transplanted—developing much taller towers, different social organization, and competitive structure. Castells were inscribed UNESCO Intangible Heritage in 2010. Anchor modes: custodian|living_ritual|signal | Search hooks: Valls; castells origin; Ball dels Valencians; Castellers de Valls; Muixeranga Valencian; human tower competition; festa major castellers

Watch casteller performances in the Plaça del Blat during Valls' Festa Major—the square where the tradition was born. Two historic collas (Vella and Joves) compete here, building towers that can reach ten levels high.

Celebrations and traditions

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More chapters in Catalonia

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Chapter

Habsburg Spain & Catalan Revolt

1479 - 1714

Under the Habsburgs, Catalonia retained its own laws, language, and institutions—but the relationship was always contested. The Catalan Revolt (Guerra dels Segadors, 1640-1652) erupted when royal troops were quartered in Catalan towns; the revolt's anthem, Els Segadors, later became the Catalan national anthem. The Corpus Christi processions of this era spawned the festive elements—gegants (giants), capgrossos (big-heads), ball de diables (devil dances)—that still animate Catalan festes majors today. But the Council of Trent (1563) attempted to suppress the carnivalesque interludes (entremesos) within those processions; Berga alone defied the suppression, preserving what would become La Patum. The etymology of 'Patum' is debated—possibly onomatopoeia from drums and firecrackers, possibly Latin—encoding the tension between popular noise and ecclesiastical order. The 1714 siege of Barcelona, ending the War of Spanish Succession, is the era's final rupture: the fall of the city to Bourbon forces led to the Nueva Planta decrees that abolished Catalan institutions. Montjuïc Castle, standing above the harbor, witnessed the bombardment of the city. Barcelona Cathedral's Gothic nave and cloister preserve the era's religious architecture, while its Corpus Christi procession records document the festive infrastructure that survived Tridentine suppression.

Chapter

Romantic Nationalism & Catalan Renaissance

1833 - 1931

The Renaixença—a romantic-nationalist cultural revival—began reconstructing a mythologized medieval Catalan past, projecting modern national identity backward onto medieval symbols. The restoration of the Jocs Florals poetry competition in 1859 in Barcelona was the movement's founding gesture. The sardana, originally a localized Empordà dance, was standardized and promoted as a national Catalan symbol; a 'legendary origin' claiming ancient Greek roots was invented to link it to Empúries and Classical antiquity—an imagined tradition. La Mercè became an official civic holiday in 1871 when Barcelona's city council first organized special activities for the feast of Our Lady of Mercy. The Arc de Triomf, built as the gateway to the 1888 Universal Exposition, announced Barcelona's European ambitions. The Palau de la Música Catalana (1908) crowned the Modernisme movement in architecture. Santiago Rusiñol transformed Sitges into a Modernista salon at Cau Ferrat, linking artistic avant-garde with the town's pre-Lenten carnival (carnestoltes). The Sant Jordi book tradition was proposed in 1926 by Valencian Vicent Clavel—initially a Spanish-national initiative under Alfonso XIII—adding a literary layer to the rose fair at the Palau de la Generalitat (documented since 1427). In 1881, the Pope proclaimed the Virgin of Montserrat patron of Catalonia on the Catalan national day, fusing Catholic devotion and national identity. La Santa Espina, the most emblematic sardana (composed 1907), was banned in 1924 by Primo de Rivera for its Catalanist connotations—the first major suppression-revival episode of the 20th century.

Chapter

Crown of Aragon & Mediterranean Empire

1137 - 1479

The union of the County of Barcelona with the Kingdom of Aragon in 1137 created a Mediterranean empire that stretched to Sicily, Sardinia, and Naples. The Palau de la Generalitat in Barcelona—still the seat of Catalan government today—housed the Corts and the Diputació del General, institutions unique among European medieval polities for their representative character. Girona's cathedral and its Jewish call (quarter) preserve the material traces of a cosmopolitan, multilingual society where Catalan, Latin, Hebrew, and Arabic coexisted. The Jewish community of Girona—producing thinkers like Nahmanides—formed an intellectual layer whose violent removal after 1391 remains an unhealed wound in the festival landscape: celebrations in these streets take place in spaces from which Jewish communities were erased. The earliest documented Corpus Christi procession in Berga (1454) marks the beginning of the festive form that would become La Patum. Sant Jordi was designated patron saint of Catalonia in 1456, the earliest institutional adoption of a tradition that still shapes April 23rd every year.

Chapter

Second Spanish Republic & Civil War

1931 - 1939

The Second Spanish Republic (1931-1939) restored Catalan self-government: the Statute of Autonomy of 1932 re-established the Generalitat in the Palau de la Generalitat, and the Diada was institutionalized as an official commemoration. The Republic was a brief window where Catalan language, culture, and institutions operated freely—before the Civil War shattered everything. In October 1934, Lluís Companys proclaimed the Catalan State from the balcony of the Palau, a brief insurrection crushed within hours. In July 1936, anarchist militias attacked Barcelona Cathedral and other churches, burning religious images and destroying ecclesiastical property—an anti-clerical violence that shaped how Catholic Catalans remembered the Republic. Montjuïc Castle served as a military prison and execution site during the war. The Republic ended with the fall of Barcelona in January 1939; Companys was captured, brought to Montjuïc, and executed in October 1940. The exile of hundreds of thousands of Republicans across the French border through La Jonquera began the diaspora that would preserve Catalan culture abroad while it was suppressed at home.

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