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 La Candelaria, Madrid 

In towns all over Spain, parades, feasts, and general carousing honor the anniversary of the day Mary and Joseph took Jesus to the Temple in Jerusalem forty days after his birth, in order to perform the required sacrifice of purification. Called "the feast of candles," La Candelaria is a reminder of the light of the Baby Jesus. Wherever it's celebrated, Candelaria is a time of purification. In pagan folklore, the day marks the middle of Winter and the promise of spring. If you visited towns in Spain today, you'd see the wide variety of ways it's celebrated around the country.

Start your journey in Madrid, where the celebration of La Candelaria is particularly popular--though we're not sure what it has to do with Jesus! Clowns dressed as Andalusian farmers bring out "vaquillas" (young bulls), made of wooden frames with two horns. "Bullfighters", dressed in multicolored silk pants, carry lassos and wear paper flowers and belts, and perform hilarious mock bullfights around town all day long. At the end of the day in the town plaza, the bull is "killed," and sangria is communally passed around, symbolizing the blood of the bull.

Perhaps you're not a bullfighting fan, even when it's with wooden bulls. But maybe you like sausages? Well then head to A Pobra de Trives, Ourense, where the "Festa dos Chourizos," or the Festival of the Sausage, draws people from miles around to eat homemade roasted sausages around bonfires (presumably symbolizing huge candles). In other towns, parades and processions are the order of the day. In Malaga, for example, a young girl from the village leads the Parade in Honor of Our Lady of The Candelaria, eventually reenacting the presentation of Jesus at the Temple. Menasalbas, in Toledo, holds a horseback parade in which 11 riders and their 22 lackeys carry torches through town.

Still, parades and sausages might not float your boat. But never fear, there's plenty more to choose from. Dancing, feasting and horse races occur in many nooks and crannies of Spain and even a devil parade! Yes, in Almonacid del Marquesado, Cuenca, hundreds of "devils" dress in colorful outfits and jump and dance through the streets.

More "Fiestas" of Spain



 When?
La Candelaria takes place on February 2nd.




Web page created with the sponsorship of the Madrid Chamber of Commerce (Cámara de Comercio e Industria de Madrid)