The rise of professional bullfighting

print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

Also known as: combats des taureaux, corrida de toros, corrida de touros, tauromachy, tauromaquia
Spanish:
la fiesta brava (“the brave festival”) or corrida de toros (“running of bulls”)
Portuguese:
corrida de touros
French:
combats de taureaux
Also called:
tauromachy

One of the greatest of the early professional bullfighters was Joaquín Rodríguez Costillares (born in Sevilla in 1729). Known as the father of modern (foot-based) bullfighting, Costillares is credited with creating the pomp and pageantry associated with the modern, commercialized corrida, including the basic cape pass called the veronica, the matador’s tradition of wearing an elaborately embroidered costume, and the most common method of killing the bull—the volapié, in which the bull is transfixed by the cape held low to the ground while the bullfighter lunges forward (as the bull charges) and with the right hand plunges the sword between the bull’s shoulder blades. Costillares’s rival was Pedro Romero of Ronda in Andalusia, who reputedly killed 5,600 bulls during a 28-year career and popularized use of the estoque, the sword still used in the kill, and the muleta, the small red flannel cloth draped over a 22-inch (56-cm) stick that forms the small cape used in the bullfight’s final act. Romero was famous for executing the more dangerous, dramatic, and difficult of the two methods of killing the bull—the recibiendo, in which the matador stands still and receives the charging bull on the sword. These men represent the two classic “schools” of bullfighting, the Ronda school noted for a simpler, more sober approach to the corrida when compared with the more flamboyant style popular in Sevilla.

In all these early corridas, the kill was the pivotal point of the spectacle, and if the kill could be executed after only a few cape passes, so much the better. This changed over time, and the matador’s ability to work the bull, to master the animal, and to exhibit the graceful arte de torero began to be appreciated as much as, if not more than, the actual kill. (Juan Belmonte, whose career extended from 1910 to 1935, was largely responsible for this transformation.)

It was about this time, in the late 18th century, that painter Francisco de Goya (1746–1828), who had sketched scores of bullfighting scenes in his La tauromaquia series, designed a distinctive professional uniform for bullfighters (worn only on commemorative gala occasions in Goya-style corridas, or corridas goyescas). Performers also began using a net to hold back their shoulder-length hair, later tying it in a knot at the base of the skull for protection in falls when they were tossed by the bull. This hairstyle later developed into the satin-covered semispherical cork headpiece and short queue, or pigtail, which became the distinguishing mark of the profession. A kind of pigtail was the caste mark of gladiators who fought bulls in the Colosseum of ancient Rome, and it is often emulated today by this false braid (coleta) worn by contemporary bullfighters. (A matador retiring is still said to be “cutting the pigtail.”)

After the introduction of railways, the plazas de toros in Spain, Portugal, and Latin America (where the conquistadores introduced corridas in the early 1500s) greatly multiplied. In fact, long before football (soccer) and baseball stadiums were built, bullrings had become a staple of Spanish and Latin American life. The corridas in the New World served many purposes. For some they were a training ground for novice bullfighters and matadors of the second rank; for others to this day they are a source of lucrative contracts during the Spanish off-season (November through February).

Along with the expansion of the corrida around the world came increased concern about fan behaviour. Although exhibiting nothing like the hooliganism often associated with contemporary football fans, bullfighting crowds could historically be volatile. Their reputation for rowdiness was such that, in the 19th century, regulations were often passed to prohibit the throwing of fruit, sticks, stones—even dead animals—into the ring. Certain crowd behaviour, in fact, is commonly associated with certain bullrings. According to the stereotypes, the crowds in Sevilla are refined and sophisticated, sometimes unnervingly quiet, concerned above all with the aesthetic of the spectacle; in Madrid they are serious, severe, and critical, allowing for few musical interludes by the corrida bands and as demanding of a clean kill as of a graceful cape pass; and in Bilbao and Pamplona they are festive, raucous, and unpredictable.

Volleyball match
Britannica Quiz
Sports Fun Facts Quiz

Bullfighting at the turn of the 21st century

While football remains the most popular spectator sport on the Iberian Peninsula and in Latin America, bullfighting continues to draw considerable crowds, despite the organized campaigns to ban it. In 1996, for example, some 40 million spectators attended bullfights and bull-related festivals. There were a record 650 fights in Spain, in which some 3,900 bulls were killed, and the Spanish public spent some 160 billion pesetas (U.S. $1.4 billion) to watch the corridas that year; bullfighting employed 200,000 people, more than 1 percent of the workforce. Corridas in Mexico, however, declined in recent decades, and growing intolerance of bullfighting in the Catalonia autonomous community of Spain led it in July 2010 to become the first mainland Spanish region to ban bullfighting; the Canary Islands had done so in 1991. The Catalonian ban, which went into effect on January 1, 2012, was significant in that the region—unlike the Canary Islands—has a long bullfighting history, and its capital, Barcelona, was once home to three bullfighting rings. That a place so steeped in the culture of bullfighting would ban it reflects the extent of the disconnect from the spectacle’s tradition felt by a growing number of Spaniards. The ban was overturned by the Constitutional Court of Spain in October 2016. The ruling stated that Catalonia could regulate bullfighting and enact specific measures but could not outright ban the practice. However, Catalonian politicians vowed to continue to keep bullfighting out of their community despite the ruling.

Partly because of tourism and television (in Spain and many Latin American countries, numerous bullfights are televised each week), there are actually many more corridas today than in Hemingway’s era. An interesting anomaly is the small but ardent group of English, French, and American aficionados. There are several bullfighting clubs (peñas) in Great Britain and a dozen in the United States who meet regularly, show films, review videotaped corridas, contribute taurine items to their Web sites and newsletters, and organize trips to Mexico, Spain, France, and Latin America to see their favourite matadors perform.

Successful bullfighters perform more than 100 times a season and become highly paid media stars. A case in point at the end of the 20th century was the popular Julián López Escobar, called El Juli, a Spaniard born in 1982 who began his professional career at age 15. At that young age the prodigy was awarded ears and tail (an honour discussed below) in Mexico City’s arena, and he had become the highest-paid matador in history by 2000, at age 17. Though severely gored several times, he continued his career on the Iberian Peninsula and in Latin America.