Valencia Fallas
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The Fallas ( ca-valencia, Falles; es, Fallas) is a traditional celebration held annually in commemoration of
Saint Joseph Joseph (; el, Ἰωσήφ, translit=Ioséph) was a 1st-century Jewish man of Nazareth who, according to the canonical Gospels, was married to Mary, the mother of Jesus, and was the legal father of Jesus. The Gospels also name some brothers of ...
in the city of Valencia, Spain. The five main days celebrated are from 15 to 19 March, while the Mascletà, a pyrotechnic spectacle of firecracker detonation, takes place every day from 1 to 19 March. The term ''Fallas'' refers to both the celebration and the Falla monuments (''Falla'', singular; ''Fallas''/, plural) burnt during the celebration. A number of towns in the Valencian Community have similar celebrations inspired by the original Fallas de Valencia celebration. For example, the
bonfires A bonfire is a large and controlled outdoor fire, used either for informal disposal of burnable waste material or as part of a celebration. Etymology The earliest recorded uses of the word date back to the late 15th century, with the Catho ...
of
Alicante Alicante ( ca-valencia, Alacant) is a city and municipality in the Valencian Community, Spain. It is the capital of the province of Alicante and a historic Mediterranean port. The population of the city was 337,482 , the second-largest in th ...
or the Fiestas de la Magdalena in Castellón de la Plana. The Fallas (''Falles'' in Valencian) festival was added to UNESCO's
intangible cultural heritage An intangible cultural heritage (ICH) is a practice, representation, expression, knowledge, or skill considered by UNESCO to be part of a place's cultural heritage. Buildings, historic places, monuments, and artifacts are cultural property. Int ...
of humanity list on 30 November 2016. Each neighbourhood of the city has an organised group of people, the ''Casal faller'', that works all year long holding fundraising parties and dinners, usually featuring the noted dish paella, a specialty of the region. Each ''casal faller'' produces a construction known as a ''falla'' which is eventually burned. A ''casal faller'' is also known as a ''comissió fallera'' and currently there are approximately 400 registered in Valencia.


Etymology

The name of the festival is the plural of the Valencian word ''falla''. The word's derivation is as follows: : Latin '' fax'' (accusative ''facem''), "torch" → Latin '' facula'' (diminutive; accusative ''faculam'') →
Vulgar Latin Vulgar Latin, also known as Popular or Colloquial Latin, is the range of non-formal Register (sociolinguistics), registers of Latin spoken from the Crisis of the Roman Republic, Late Roman Republic onward. Through time, Vulgar Latin would evolve ...
*''faclam'' → Valencian ''falla''.


''Falles'' and ''ninots''

Cuba2012.jpg, Falla Cuba 2012 (2nd prize) Maeztu Lleons 2015 12.jpg, ''Ninots'' representing Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin (parodying '' The Nutcracker'') in 2015 Falla_del_Ayuntamiento_Valencia_2019_(3).jpg, Fallas 2019 from Valencia Formerly, much time would be spent by the ''casal faller'' preparing the ''ninots'' ( Valencian for puppets or dolls). During the four days leading up to 19 March, each group takes its ''ninot'' out for a grand parade, and then mounts it, each on its own elaborate firecracker-filled cardboard and paper-mâché artistic monument, in a street of the given neighbourhood. This whole assembly is a '' falla''. The ''ninots'' and their ''falles'' are constructed according to an agreed-upon theme that has traditionally been a satirical jab at whatever draws the attention of the ''fallers'' (the registered participants of the ''casals''). In modern times, the two-week-long festival has spawned a substantial local industry, to the point that an entire suburban area has been designated the ''Ciutat fallera'' (Falles City). Here, crews of artists and artisans, sculptors, painters, and other craftsmen, all spend months producing elaborate constructions of paper and wax, wood and
polystyrene foam Polystyrene (PS) is a synthetic polymer made from monomers of the aromatic hydrocarbon styrene. Polystyrene can be solid or foamed. General-purpose polystyrene is clear, hard, and brittle. It is an inexpensive resin per unit weight. It is a ...
tableaux towering up to five stories, composed of fanciful figures, often caricatures, in provocative poses arranged in a gravity-defying manner. Each of them is produced under the direction of one of the many individual neighbourhood ''casals fallers'' who vie with each other to attract the best artists, and then to create the most outrageous allegorical monument to their target. There are about 750 of these neighbourhood associations in Valencia, with over 200,000 members, or a quarter of the city's population. During Fallas, many people wear their ''casal faller'' dress of regional and historical costumes from different eras of València's history. The '' dolçaina'' (an oboe-like reed instrument) and '' tabalet'' (a kind of Valencian drum) are frequently heard, as most of the different casals fallers have their own traditional bands. Although the ''Falles'' is a very traditional event and many participants dress in medieval clothing, the ''ninots'' for 2005 included such modern characters as Shrek and
George W. Bush George Walker Bush (born July 6, 1946) is an American politician who served as the 43rd president of the United States from 2001 to 2009. A member of the Republican Party, Bush family, and son of the 41st president George H. W. Bush, he ...
, and the 2012 ''Falles'' included characters like Barack Obama and Lady Gaga. A literary contest organised annually since 1903 by the
Lo Rat Penat Lo may refer to any of the following: Arts and entertainment * '' Lo!'', the third published nonfiction work of the author Charles Fort * L.O., a fictional character in the Playhouse Disney show Happy Monster Band * ''Lo'' (film), a 2009 indep ...
cultural association recognises the work of local poets who write satirical verses in Valencian that explain these characters. The faller verses are collected in booklets (''llibrets'') and distributed to participants.


Events during ''Fallas''

The five days and nights of ''Fallas'' might be described as a continuous street party. There are a multitude of processions: historical, religious, and comedic. Crowds in the restaurants spill out into the streets. Explosions can be heard all day long and sporadically through the night. Everyone from small children to elderly people can be seen throwing fireworks and noisemakers in the streets, which are littered with pyrotechnical debris. The timing of the events is fixed, and they fall on the same date every year, though there has been discussion about holding some events on the weekend preceding the Fallas, to take greater advantage of the tourist potential of the festival or changing the end date in years where it is due to occur in midweek. But outside the Fallas proper, the Fallas season within the Valencian Community begins on the final Sunday of February and lasts till 19 March, St. Joseph's Day.


Opening Night (La Crida)

Held on the last Sunday of February, ''La Crida'' is held in the evening at the Torres de Serranos, the historical gateway to the city. Preceded by a fireworks display and a ''son et lumierie'' show, the city's mayor presents the keys to the Fallera Major and her princess, and after their addresses formally declaring the commencement of the festivities, the
Himne de l'Exposició The ''Himne de l'Exposició''Full name: ''Himne de l'Exposició Regional de 1909''. (, "Anthem of the Exposition") or ''Himne de València'' ("Anthem of Valencia") is the official anthem of the Valencian Community, Spain. The song was composed by ...
and Marcha Real are played by the city band to mark the formal start of the festivity season.


La Despertà

Each day of Falles begins at 8:00 am with ''La Despertà'' ("the wake-up call"). Brass bands appear from the casals and begin to march down every street playing lively music. Close behind them are the ''fallers'', throwing large firecrackers in the street as they go.


La Mascletà

The ''Mascletà'', an explosive barrage of coordinated firecracker and fireworks displays, takes place at 2:00 pm from March 1 to 19 (including the festival proper); the main event is the municipal Mascletà in the ''Plaça de l'Ajuntament'' where the pyrotechnicians compete for the honour of providing the final Mascletà of the ''festes'' (on 19 March). At 2:00 pm the clock chimes and the Fallera Major, dressed in her ''fallera'' finery, will call from the balcony of
City Hall In local government, a city hall, town hall, civic centre (in the UK or Australia), guildhall, or a municipal building (in the Philippines), is the chief administrative building of a city, town, or other municipality. It usually houses ...
, ''Senyor/a pirotècnic/a, pot començar la mascletà!'' ("Mr./Ms. Pyrotechnic, the Mascletà may commence!"), and the Mascletà begins. The Mascletà is almost unique to the Valencian Community, and very popular with the Valencian people. Smaller neighbourhoods often hold their own mascletà for saints' days, weddings and other celebrations. A nighttime variant runs in the evening hours by the same pyrotechnicans that were present in the afternoon. In some days, women pyrotechnicians are selected to compete. The event is televised regionwide.


La Plantà

On the day of the 15th, all of the ''falles infantils'' are to be finished being constructed, and later that night all of the ''falles majors'' (big Falles) are to be completed. If not, they face disqualification. Once the City ''Falles Major'' is finally done a fireworks display -''Amb de las Falles'' - is held at City Hall Square to pay tribute to everyone who made these works possible.


L'Ofrena de flors

In this event, the flower offering, each of the casals fallers takes an offering of flowers to the Virgin Mary, titled as '' Our Lady of the Forsaken'', principal patroness of the city of Valencia and the wider Community. This occurs all day during 17–18 March, the first day attended by the Falleja Major and her court. A statue of the Virgin Mary and its large pedestal are then covered with all the flowers.


Els Castells and La Nit del Foc

On the nights of the 15, 16, 17, and 18th there are firework displays in the old riverbed in València. Each night is progressively grander and the last is called ''La Nit del Foc'' (the Night of Fire).


Cavalcada del Foc

On the final evening of Falles, at 7:00 pm on 19 March, a parade known in Valencian as the ''Cavalcada del Foc'' (the Fire Parade) takes place along Colón street and Porta de la Mar square. This spectacular celebration of fire, the symbol of the fiesta's spirit, is the ''grand finale'' of Fallas and a colourful, noisy event featuring exhibitions of the varied rites and displays from around the world which use fire; it incorporates floats, giant mechanisms, people in costumes, rockets, gunpowder, street performances and music.


La Cremà

Mascleta 2004b.JPG, Mascletà in Valencia La_fallera_y_su_cremá.jpg, A fallera, during the burning of her falla Bomber faller.jpg, La cremà, 2002 On the final night of Falles, around midnight on 19 March, these ''falles'' are burnt as huge bonfires. This is known as ''La Cremà'' (the Burning), the climax of the whole event, and the reason why the constructions are called ''falles'' ("torches"). Traditionally, the falla in the ''Plaça de l'Ajuntament'' is burned last. All ''casals'' have a ''falla infantil'' (children's ''falles'', smaller and without satirical themes), which are held a few metres away from the main one. This is burnt first, at 10:00 pm. The main neighbourhood ''falles'' are burnt closer to midnight; the burning of the ''falles'' in the city centre often starts later. For example, in 2005, the fire brigade delayed the burning of the Egyptian funeral ''falla'' in ''Carrer del Convent de Jerusalem'' until 1:30 am, when they were sure all safety concerns were addressed. Each ''falla'' is laden with fireworks which are lit first. The construction itself is lit either after or during the explosion of these fireworks. ''Falles'' burn quite quickly, and the heat given off is felt by all around. The heat from the larger ones often drives the crowd back a couple of metres, even though they are already behind barriers that the fire brigade has set several metres from the construction. In narrower streets, the heat scorches the surrounding buildings, and the firemen douse their fronts, window blinds, street signs, etc. with water hoses to stop them catching fire or melting, from the beginning of the ''cremà'' until it cools down. Away from the ''falles'', people frolic in the streets, the whole city resembling an open-air dance party, except that instead of music there is the incessant (and occasionally deafening) sound of people throwing fireworks around randomly. There are many stalls selling trinkets and snacks such as the typical fried ''porres'', ''churros'' and ''bunyols'', as well as roasted chestnuts. While the smaller fallas dotted around the streets are burned at approximately the same time, the last falla to be burned is the main one, which is saved until last so that everybody can watch it. This main falla is found outside the ''Ajuntament'' – the city hall building. People arrive a few hours before the scheduled burning time to get a front row view. This final falla is burned in public after the signal from the Fallera Major to officially commence.


Traditional Dressing

The traditional dress worn by "fallers" (males) has changed from black trousers and black jacket with white shirt and other motives, to colorful and a more traditional and historic custom with many decorations. These dresses can be very expensive but not as much as the dresses by the "reines falleras" (queens of the festival) and the Royal Court. Prices of female traditional dresses can vary from 2,000 Euros to more than 20,000 Euros. Some of them are astonishing in beauty. They are accompanied with traditional hair style and jewelry.


History

There are different conjectures regarding the origin of the Fallas festival. One suggests that the Fallas started in the Middle Ages, when artisans disposed of the broken artefacts and pieces of wood they saved during the winter by burning them to celebrate the
spring equinox Spring equinox or vernal equinox or variations may refer to: * March equinox, the spring equinox in the Northern Hemisphere * September equinox, the spring equinox in the Southern Hemisphere Other uses * Nowruz, Persian/Iranian new year which be ...
. Valencian carpenters used planks of wood called ''parots'' to hang their candles on during the winter, as these were needed to provide light to work by. With the coming of the spring, they were no longer necessary, so they were burned. Over time, and with the intervention of the Church, the date of the burning of these ''parots'' was made to coincide with the celebration of the festival of
Saint Joseph Joseph (; el, Ἰωσήφ, translit=Ioséph) was a 1st-century Jewish man of Nazareth who, according to the canonical Gospels, was married to Mary, the mother of Jesus, and was the legal father of Jesus. The Gospels also name some brothers of ...
, the patron saint of carpenters. This tradition continued to evolve. The ''parot'' was dressed with clothing so that it looked like a person; features identifiable with some well-known person from the neighbourhood were often added as well. To collect these materials, children went from house to house asking for ''una estoreta velleta'' (an old rug) to add to the ''parot''. This became a popular song that the children sang as they gathered all sorts of old flammable furniture and utensils to burn in the bonfire with the ''parot''. These ''parots'' were the first ''ninots''. Over the years, people of the neighbourhoods began to organise the building of the ''falles'', and thus the typically intricate constructions, including their various figures, were born. Until the beginning of the 20th century, the ''falles'' were tall boxes with three or four wax dolls dressed in fabric clothing. This changed when the creators began to use cardboard. The fabrication of the ''falles'' continues to evolve in modern times, when the largest displays are made of
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and soft cork easily molded with hot saws. These techniques have allowed the creation of ''falles'' over 30 metres high. The origin of the pagan festival is similar to that of the
Bonfires of Saint John The Bonfires of Saint John ( ca, Fogueres de Sant Joan, es, link=no, Hogueras de San Juan, gl, Fogueiras de San Xoán, ast, Fogueres de San Xuán, pt, Fogueiras de São João) are a traditional and popular festival celebrated around the world ...
celebrated in the
Alicante Alicante ( ca-valencia, Alacant) is a city and municipality in the Valencian Community, Spain. It is the capital of the province of Alicante and a historic Mediterranean port. The population of the city was 337,482 , the second-largest in th ...
region, in the sense that both came from the Latin custom of lighting fires to welcome spring. In València, this ancient tradition led to the burning of accumulated waste, particularly wood, at the end of winter on the feast day of Saint Joseph. Given the reputed humorous character of Valencians, it was natural that the people began to burn figurines depicting persons and events of the past year. The burning symbolised liberation from living in servitude to the memory of these events or else represented humorous and often critical commentary on them. The festival thus evolved a more satirical and ironic character, and the wooden castoffs gradually came to be assembled into progressively more elaborate 'monuments' that were designed and painted in advance. In the early 20th century, and especially during the Spanish Civil War, the monuments became more anti-clerical in nature and were often highly critical of the local or national governments, which tried to ban the Falles many times, without success. Under the dictatorship of
Francisco Franco Francisco Franco Bahamonde (; 4 December 1892 – 20 November 1975) was a Spanish general who led the Nationalist faction (Spanish Civil War), Nationalist forces in overthrowing the Second Spanish Republic during the Spanish Civil War ...
the celebration lost much of its satirical nature because of government censorship, but the monuments were among the few fervent public expressions allowed then, and they could be made freely in València. During this period, many religious customs such as the offering of flowers to ''Mare de Déu dels Desamparats'' (Our Lady of the Forsaken) were taken up, which today are essential parts of the festival, even though they were unrelated to the original purpose of the celebration. With the restoration of democracy and the end of government censorship, the critical ''falles'' reappeared, and obscene satirical ones with them. Despite thirty years of freedom of expression, the world view of the ''faller'' can still be socially conservative, is often sexist and may involve some of the amoralism of Valencian politics. This has sometimes led to criticism by certain cultural critics, environmentalists, and progressives. Yet there are celebrants of all ideologies and factions, and they have different interpretations of the spirit of the celebration. Although recent initiatives such as the pilota championships, literary competitions and other events have broadened its cultural expression, the city still embraces such ancient traditions to express its own singular identity.


Fallas suspensions

Throughout its history the Fallas have been suspended six times. In 1886 the fallers refused to place the monuments in protest against the increase of the canon from 5 pesetas to 60 pesetas imposed in 1851 that penalized their placement on the street. The follow-up was not complete and there were two failures. In 1896 a state of war was declared because of the
Spanish American War Spanish might refer to: * Items from or related to Spain: **Spaniards are a nation and ethnic group indigenous to Spain **Spanish language, spoken in Spain and many Latin American countries **Spanish cuisine Other places * Spanish, Ontario, Cana ...
, and the Fallas were annulled two days before its beginning. In the years 1937, 1938 and 1939, the Fallas were suspended due to the Spanish Civil War. The suspension did not affect the Fallas of 1936 since they had already been held when the war started. The money destined for the Fallas was destined to the republican cause at the beginning of the war. On 10 March 2020, the Valencian Generalitat, after a Ministry of Health report, decided to suspend and postpone the parties of Fallas and all the acts that comprise it as a result of the coronavirus epidemic as a preventive measure to stop the spread of the virus. The festival was cancelled in 2021 and returned in 2022.


Secció Especial

The Secció Especial is a group of the largest and most prestigious ''falles'' commissions in the city of Valencia. In 2007, the group consisted of 14 commissions. This class of ''falles'' was first started in 1942 and originally included the ''falles'' of Barques, Reina-Pau and Plaça del Mercat. Currently, none of these are still in the group. The commission that has most often participated in this group as of 2015 was Na Jordana, with 62 times. The Secció Especial awards the prizes with the exception of the one awarded by the Valencia City Council; winning the first prize in the Secció Especial is the most prestigious prize any falla can win. All other ''falles'' fall into different classes (18 as of 2017) determined by the amount of money invested in each of these works. File:Fallas 2006 Nou Campanar (Valencia).jpg, 2006: Nou Campanar File:Falla Nou Campanar 2007.jpg, 2007: Nou Campanar File:Falla Nou Campanar.jpg, 2008: Nou Campanar File:Falla NouCampanar 2008.JPG, 2009: Nou Campanar File:Falles 2010 - Falla de Covent de Jerusalem.jpg, 2010: Convent Jerusalem-Matemàtic Marzal File:Falla Convento Jerusalen 2.JPG, 2011: Convent Jerusalem-Matemàtic Marzal File:10 Falla Pediatra J Comín-Nou Campanar 2012 (3).JPG, 2012: Nou Campanar File:Convento Jerusalén-Matemàtic Marçal 2013.jpg, 2013: Convent Jerusalem-Matemàtic Marzal File:Falla El Pilar 2014 (2).JPG, 2014: Plaza del Pilar. File:Fallas2015_02_Plaza_del_Pilar.jpg, 2015: Plaza del Pilar File:Fallas Cuba-Literato Azorín 2016.jpg, 2016: Cuba-Literato Azorín. File:Falla Antiga de Campanar 2017 01.jpg, 2017: L'Antiga de Campanar. File:Fallas2018_-_Falla_Convento_06.jpg, 2018: Convent Jerusalem-Matemàtic Marzal


See also

*
List of Winners of Sección Especial of Falles A ''list'' is any set of items in a row. List or lists may also refer to: People * List (surname) Organizations * List College, an undergraduate division of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America * SC Germania List, German rugby union ...


''Fallas'' gallery

;2005 Image:Fallas 2005 looking down street.jpg, View down street Image:Falleres i fallers drums.jpg, Falleres and fallers merrily beating drums Image:Paella_hirviendo.jpg, Paella being cooked on a wood fire in the middle of the road Image:Falla pintor y gorda.jpg, Falla with painter and fat woman. This was as high as a building. Image:Falla egipcia plorant.jpg, Part of falla with Egyptian funeral procession. In Carrer del Convent de Jerusalem. 2nd prize, special section, Falles 2005. ;2008 File:Falla Nou Campanar.jpg, Falla in Nou Campanar Image:Falla infantil Poeta Altet before.jpg, The children's falla in carrer Poeta Altet Image:Falla infantil Poeta Altet burning&sparking.jpg, The same falla with fireworks going off Image:Falla infantil Poeta Altet blazing.jpg, The same falla blazing Image:Falla egipcia collapsing.jpg, The monumental Egyptian falla, just as the frame of its tallest tower collapses Image:Valenciana.jpg, Falla in the Convento de Jerusalén Street File:Falla del Pilar Valencia 2007.jpg, Falla in the Pilar's Square Image:Calle iluminada de Sueca-Literato Azorín 2008 2.JPG, Twilight street of Sueca-Literato Azorín ;2010 Image:Lightning_Falla_Azorin_2010.jpg, Falla Literato Azorín lightning ;2017 Image:Falla Almirante Cadarso-Conde Altea 2.jpg, Falla Almirante Cadarso-Conde Altea (5th prize) Image:Commedia al Portal Nou.jpg, Falla Na Jordana (7th prize) Image:Fallas2017 09 Convento Jerusalen Matematico Marzal.jpg, Falla Convento Jerusalen Matematico Marzal (3rd prize)


References


External links


Official page for the Fallas Festival

Official page for the Fallas Festival Organizing Committee

Fallas Festival (in Spanish, Valencian, English, French and German)

Promotional video of the Fallas Festival 2011

Explanation of all the Fallas events in English

iPhone/iPod App for Las Fallas

The Fallas in Valencia: The Beauty of Fire
{{Authority control Traditions involving fire Patronal festivals in Spain Religious festivals in Valencia Culture of the Valencian Community