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Running of the bulls

A running of the bulls (Spanish: encierro, from the verb encerrar, 'to corral, to enclose'; Occitan: abrivado, literally 'haste, momentum'; Catalan: correbous, 'run-bulls') is an event that involves running in front of a small group of bulls, typically six[1] but sometimes ten or more, that have been let loose on sectioned-off streets in a town,[1] usually as part of a summertime festival. Particular breeds of cattle may be favored, such as the toro bravo in Spain,[1] also often used in post-run bullfighting, and Camargue cattle in Occitan France, which are not fought. Bulls (non-castrated male cattle) are typically used in such events.

Running of the bulls
The bull run in Pamplona
Dates7–14 July (in 2022)
Location(s)Pamplona and other
Monument in Pamplona
Runners surround the bulls on Estafeta Street

History

The most famous bull-run is the encierro held in Pamplona during the nine-day festival of Sanfermines in honor of Saint Fermin.[2] It has become a major global tourism event, today very different from the traditional, local festival. More traditional summer bull-runs are held in other places such as towns and villages across Spain and Portugal, in some cities in Mexico,[3] and in the Occitan (Camargue) region of southern France. Bull-running was formerly also practiced in rural England, most famously at Stamford until 1837.

The event has its origins in the old practice of transporting bulls from the fields outside the city, where they were bred, to the bullring, where they would be killed in the evening.[4] During this "run", local youths would jump among them in a display of bravado. In Pamplona and other places, the six bulls that run are also in that afternoon's bullfight.

Spanish tradition holds that bull-running began in northeastern Spain in the early 14th century. Cattle herders who wanted to transport their animals from barges or from the countryside into city centers for sale or bullfights needed an easy way to move their precious animals. While transporting cattle in order to sell them at the market, men would try to speed the process by hurrying their cattle using tactics of fear and excitement. After years of this practice, the transportation and hurrying began to turn into a competition, as young adults would attempt to race in front of the bulls and make it safely to their pens without being overtaken. When the popularity of this practice increased and was noticed more and more by the expanding population of Spanish cities, a tradition was created and stands to this day.[5][non-primary source needed]

The Running was cancelled in 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Spain, but resumed 7–14 July 2022.[6][7]

Pamplona bull run

 
Saint Fermin, honored in Pamplona
 
Pamplona, 7 July 2005. People climb to the fences as the bulls run by and cross the Town Hall Plaza.

The Pamplona[2] encierro is the most popular in Spain and has been broadcast live by RTVE, the public Spanish national television channel, for over 30 years.[8] It is the highest-profile event of the San Fermín festival, which is held every year from 6–14 July.[2] The first bull running is on 7 July, followed by one on each of the following mornings of the festival, beginning every day at 8 am. The rules require participants to be at least 18 years old, run in the same direction as the bulls, not incite the bulls, and not be under the influence of alcohol.[9][10]

Fence

In Pamplona, a set of wooden fences is erected to direct the bulls along the route and to block off side streets. A double wooden fence is used in those areas where there is enough space, while in other parts the buildings of the street act as barriers. The gaps in the barricades are wide enough for a human to slip through but narrow enough to block a bull. The fence is composed of approximately three thousand separate pieces of wood. Some parts of the fence remain in place for the duration of the fiesta, while others are placed and removed each morning.[11] Spectators can only stand behind the second fence, whereas the space between the two fences is reserved for security and medical personnel and also for participants who need cover during the event.[10]

Preliminaries

 
Police barrier at the beginning of the running stops people until the first rocket is fired.

The encierro begins with runners singing a benediction. It is sung three times, each time being sung both in Spanish and Basque. The benediction is a prayer given at a statue of Saint Fermin, patron of the festival and the city, to ask the saint's protection and can be translated into English as "We ask Saint Fermin, as our Patron, to guide us through the encierro and give us his blessing". The singers finish by shouting "¡Viva San Fermín! and Gora San Fermin! ('Long live Saint Fermin', in Spanish and Basque, respectively).[9] Most runners dress in the traditional clothing of the festival which consists of a white shirt and trousers with a red waistband (faja) and neckerchief (pañuelo). Also some of them hold the day's newspaper rolled to draw the bulls' attention from them if necessary.[9]

The running

 
Runners at the Pamplona bull run in typical attire
 
Pamplona, 2007. Bulls following some runners enter the bull ring from the callejón, where the event ends. The bulls can be seen in the foreground and background of the picture.

A first rocket is set off at 8 a.m. to alert the runners that the corral gate is open. A second rocket signals that all six bulls have been released. The third and fourth rockets are signals that all of the herd has entered the bullring and its corral respectively, marking the end of the event.[9] The average duration between the first rocket and the end of the encierro is two minutes, 30 seconds.[9]

The encierro is usually composed of the six bulls to be fought in the afternoon, six steers that run in herd with the bulls, and three more steers that follow the herd to encourage any reluctant bulls to continue along the route. The function of the steers, who run the route daily, is to guide the bulls to the bullring.[9] The average speed of the herd is 24 km/h (15 mph).[9]

The length of the run is 875 meters (957 yards). It goes through four streets of the old part of the city (Santo Domingo, Ayuntamiento, Mercaderes and Estafeta) via the Town Hall Square and the short section "Telefónica" (named for the location of the old telephone office at end of Calle Estafeta) just before entering into the bullring through its callejón (tunnel).[2] The fastest part of the route is up Santo Domingo and across the Town Hall Square, but the bulls often became separated at the entrance to Estafeta Street as they slow down. One or more would slip going into the turn at Estafeta ("la curva"), resulting in the installation of anti-slip surfacing, and now most of the bulls negotiate the turn onto Estafeta and are often ahead of the steers. This has resulted in a quicker run. Runners are not permitted in the first 50 meters of the encierro, which is an uphill grade where the bulls are much faster.[citation needed]

Injuries, fatalities, and medical attention

 
Two injured runners are treated by medical services.

Every year, between 50 and 100 people are injured during the run.[9] Not all of the injuries require taking the patients to hospital: in 2013, 50 people were taken by ambulance to Pamplona's hospital, with this number nearly doubling that of 2012.[12]

Goring is much less common but potentially life threatening. In 2013, for example, six participants were gored along the festival, in 2012, only four runners were injured by the horns of the bulls with exactly the same number of gored people in 2011, nine in 2010 and 10 in 2009; with one of these last killed.[12][13] As most of the runners are male, only 5 women have been gored since 1974. Before that date, running was prohibited for women.[14]

Another major risk is runners falling and piling up (a "montón") at the entrance of the bullring, which acts as a funnel as it is much narrower than the previous street, resulting in a crowd crush. In such cases, injuries come both from asphyxia and contusions to those in the pile and from goring if the bulls crush into the pile. This kind of blocking of the entrance has occurred at least ten times in the history of the run, the last occurring in 2013 and the first dating back to 1878. A runner died of suffocation in one such pile up in 1977.[15]

Overall, since record-keeping began in 1910, 15 people have been killed in the bull running of Pamplona, most of them due to being gored.[9] To minimize the impact of injuries every day 200 people collaborate in the medical attention. They are deployed in 16 sanitary posts (every 50 metres on average), each one with at least a physician and a nurse among their personnel. Most of these 200 people are volunteers, mainly from the Red Cross. In addition to the medical posts, there are around 20 ambulances. This organization makes it possible to have a gored person stabilized and taken to a hospital in less than 10 minutes.[16]

In 2021 a man bled to death after he was repeatedly gored at a bull-running festival in the city of Onda in eastern Spain.[17]

15 deaths since 1910 in the bull run of Pamplona[9]
Year Name Age Origin Location Cause of death
1924 Esteban Domeño 22 Navarre, Spain Telefónica Goring[18]
1927 Santiago Zufía 34 Navarre, Spain Bullring Goring[18]
1935 Gonzalo Bustinduy 29 San Luis Potosí, Mexico Bullring Goring[18]
1947 Casimiro Heredia 37 Navarre, Spain Estafeta Goring[18]
1947 Julián Zabalza 23 Navarre, Spain Bullring Goring[18]
1961 Vicente Urrizola 32 Navarre, Spain Santo Domingo Goring[18]
1969 Hilario Pardo 45 Navarre, Spain Santo Domingo Goring[18]
1974 Juan Ignacio Eraso 18 Navarre, Spain Telefónica Goring[18]
1975 Gregorio Gorriz 41 Navarre, Spain Bullring Goring[18]
1977 José Joaquín Esparza 17 Navarre, Spain Bullring Suffocated in a pile-up.[9]
1980 José Antonio Sánchez 26 Navarre, Spain Town Hall Square Goring[18]
1980 Vicente Risco 29 Badajoz, Spain Bullring Goring[18]
1995 Matthew Peter Tassio 22 Glen Ellyn, Illinois, USA Town Hall Square Goring[19]
2003 Fermín Etxeberria 62 Navarre, Spain Mercaderes Goring[20]
2009 Daniel Jimeno Romero 27 Alcalá de Henares, Spain Telefónica Goring[21][22]

Dress code

 
Town Hall Square in the "Poor Me".

Though there is no formal dress code, the very common and traditional attire is white trousers, a white shirt with a red cummerbund around the waist, and a red neckerchief around the neck.[23] Some have large logos on their shirts; in the Internet age this is thought to be a way to highlight someone in a photo. This dress is to honor San Fermin, the center of the celebration, because of his martyr's death; the white outfits represent the purity and holiness of a saint, and the red kerchiefs (pañuelos), represent his death by decapitation. A common alternate color to red is blue.

Media

 
Hemingway drank in the Café Iruña, established 1888 in Pamplona/Iruña

The encierro of Pamplona has been depicted many times in literature, television or advertising, but became known worldwide partly because of the descriptions of Ernest Hemingway in books The Sun Also Rises and Death in the Afternoon.[24]

The cinema pioneer Louis Lumière filmed the run in 1899.[25]

The event is the basis for a chapter in James Michener's 1971 novel The Drifters.

The run is depicted in the 1991 Billy Crystal film City Slickers, where the character "Mitch" (Crystal) is gored (non-fatally) from behind by a bull during a vacation with the other main characters.

 
Running of the bulls in Cellar, provincial de Segovia, Spain.

The run appears in the 2011 Bollywood movie Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara, directed by Zoya Akhtar, as the final dare in the bucket list of the three bachelors who have to overcome their ultimate fear; death. At first, the trio run part of the route. They stop at the square, but then recover their nerve, and continue to the end. The completion of the run depicts their freedom as they learn that surviving a mortal danger can bring joy.

Running with Bulls, a 2012 documentary of the festival filmed by Construct Creatives and presented by Jason Farrel, depicts the pros and cons of the controversial tradition.[26]

From 2014 until 2016, the Esquire Network broadcast the running of the bulls live in the United States,[27] with both live commentary and then a recorded 'round up' later in the day by NBCSN commentators the Men in Blazers, including interviews with noted participants such as Madrid-born runner David Ubeda,[28] former US Army soldier turned filmmaker Dennis Clancey,[29] Joseph Distler, famous New York bull runner, and former British bullfighter and author Alexander Fiske-Harrison.[30]

In 2014, a guidebook authored by Alexander Fiske-Harrison, Joe Distler, Ernest Hemingway's grandson John, Orson Welles' daughter Beatrice, and with a foreword by the Mayor of Pamplona, caused headlines around the world when one of the contributors, Bill Hillmann, was gored by a bull soon after its publication. It was republished in 2017 under the title The Bulls Of Pamplona with a replacement chapter by Dennis Clancey.[31]

The award-winning 2015 feature documentary Chasing Red directed by Dennis Clancey, follows four runners during the 2012 fiesta in Pamplona, including Bill Hillmann and David Ubeda.[32][33][34]

Other examples

 
Fire bull and children running from it (Tudela, Navarre)

Although the most famous running of the bulls is that of San Fermín,[2] they are held in towns and villages across Spain, Portugal, and in some cities in southern France during the summer. Examples are the bull run of San Sebastián de los Reyes, near Madrid, at the end of August which is the most popular of Spain after Pamplona, the bull run of Cuéllar, considered as the oldest of Spain since there are documents of its existence dating back to 1215, the Highland Capeias of the Raia in Sabugal, Portugal, with horses leading the herd crossing old border passes out of Spain and using the medieval 'Forcåo', or the bull run of Navalcarnero held at night.

Other encierros have also caused fatalities.[35]

Correbous or bous al carrer

 
Bous al carrer at Albocàsser

Bous al carrer, correbou or correbous (meaning in Catalan, 'bulls in the street', 'street-bulls' or 'bull-running') is a typical festivity in many villages in the Valencian region, Terres de l'Ebre, Catalonia, and Fornalutx, Mallorca. Another similar tradition is soltes de vaques, where cows are used instead of bulls. Even though they can take place all along the year, they are most usual during local festivals (normally in August). Compared to encierros, animals are not directed to any bullring.

These festivities are normally organized by the youngsters of the village, as a way for showing their courage and ability with the bull. Some sources consider this tradition a masculine initiation rite to adulthood.[36]

Occitan area of France

 
An abrivado at Calvisson. The guardians are demonstrating their skill in turn a group of at least four bulls through a 360-degree turn
 
A bandido at Calvisson. Contact has been made with the bull: but it has not yet been stopped.

Numerous bull-running events happen in France in the region around Sommières, in accordance with the Camargues tradition, in which no bulls are intentionally injured or killed. For instance, in Calvisson, the annual event takes place around 20 July over a period of five days. There are four events: the abrivado, in which at least ten bulls are run together through the street guided by a group of twelve gardians mounted on white Camargue horses; the encierro, in which one bull is released outside the foyer and finds his own way back to the pen; the bandido, in which one bull is run, accompanied through the streets; and the bandido de nuit, which is the same thing but after dark. Boys and men run with the bulls and try and separate them from the horses, stop them, and physically turn them away from the horses. [37]

Stamford bull run

The English town of Stamford, Lincolnshire was host to the Stamford bull run for almost 700 years until it was abandoned in 1837.[38] According to local tradition, the custom dated from the time of King John when William de Warenne, 5th Earl of Surrey, saw two bulls fighting in the meadow beneath. Some butchers came to part the combatants and one of the bulls ran into the town, causing a great uproar. The earl, mounting his horse, rode after the animal, and enjoyed the sport so much, that he gave the meadow in which the fight began, to the butchers of Stamford, on condition that they should provide a bull, to be run in the town every 13 November, for ever after. As of 2013 the bull run had been revived as a ceremonial, festival-style community event.

Mock bull runs

A variation is the nightly "fire bull" where balls of inflammable material are placed on the horns. Currently the bull is often replaced by a runner carrying a frame on which fireworks are placed and dodgers, usually children, run to avoid the sparks.

The Encierro de la Villavesa ("running of the town bus") started in Pamplona on 15 July 1984 when, after the end of the festival, youths would run before the earliest urban bus entering the traditional encierro course. Starting in 1990, the Pamplona bus company detoured the early bus to defuse the risk. Currently, the youths run before a cyclist in a yellow jersey as an homage to the Navarrese cycling champion Miguel Induráin.[39]

In 2008, Red Bull Racing driver David Coulthard and Scuderia Toro Rosso driver Sébastien Bourdais performed a version of a 'bull running' event in Pamplona, Spain, with the Formula One cars chasing 500 runners through the actual Pamplona route.[40]

 
"Running of the Bulls" in the French Quarter of New Orleans

The Big Easy Rollergirls roller derby team has performed an annual mock bull run in New Orleans, Louisiana since 2007. The team, dressed as bulls, skates after runners through the French Quarter. In 2012, there were 14,000 runners and over 400 "bulls" from all over the country, with huge before- and after-parties.[41][42][43]

In Ballyjamesduff, Ireland, an annual event called the Pig Run is held with small pigs. It looks just like a mini-encierro but with pigs instead of bulls.

In Dewey Beach, Delaware, a bar named The Starboard sponsors an annual Running of the Bull [sic], in which hundreds of red- and white-clad beachgoers are chased down the shore by a single "bull" (two people in a pantomime horse-style costume).[44]

In Rangiora, New Zealand, an annual Running of the Sheep is held, in which 1000–2000 sheep are released down the main street of the small farming town.

The Running of the Bulls UK is a pub crawl event that takes place on London's Hampstead Heath and uses fast human runners in place of bulls.

In 2014, Pamplona inaugurated a series of running events in June, the San Fermín Marathon, of a full marathon (42.195 km), half-marathon (21.097 km), or 10 km road race that concludes with the final 900m of each race using the encierro route, runners crossing the finish line inside the bullring.[45]

Since 2008 in Anchorage, Alaska during the Fur Rendezvous Festival the Running of the Reindeer sends "herds" of people running down a four-block downtown street, with a group of reindeer released behind them.

Opposition

Many opponents state that bulls are mentally stressed by the harassment and voicing of both participants and spectators, and some of animals may also die because of the stress, especially if they are roped or bring flares in their horns (bou embolat version).[46] Despite all this, the festivities seem to have wide popular support in their villages.[47]

The city of San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, cancelled its Sanmiguelada running of the bulls after 2006, citing public disorder associated with the event.[48] After the event was cancelled in San Miguel, the city of Salvatierra, also in the state of Guanajuato, picked up the event. It is now called La Marquesada and the three-day event is held during the last weekend of the month of September or first weekend of October.

As of 2002, a Running of the Nudes occurs two days before the running of the bulls. The event is supported by animal welfare groups, including PETA, who object to the running of the bulls, claiming that it is cruel and glorifies bullfighting, which the groups oppose.

Further reading

  • Fiske-Harrison, Alexander, ed. (2018). The Bulls Of Pamplona (1 ed.). Mephisto Press. ISBN 978-1986500272.
  • Hillmann, Bill (2015). Mozos: A Decade Running with the Bulls of Spain. Chicago, Illinois: Curbside Splendor Publishing. ISBN 978-1-9404-3053-9.
  • Hillmann, Bill (2021). The Pueblos: My Quest to Run 101 Bull Runs in the Small Towns of Spain. Chicago, Illinois: Tortoise Books. ISBN 978-1-9489-5417-4.
  • Etxanobe, Ander (2021). The Basque: An American's Journey to Embrace His Roots. Txapela Publishing. ISBN 978-1736948101.

See also

References

Some links may contain graphic content where marked.

  1. ^ a b c Fiske-Harrison, Alexander (editor) The Bulls Of Pamplona, Mephisto Press, 2018
  2. ^ a b c d e . Kukuxumusu. 2007. Archived from the original on 5 May 2008. Retrieved 21 July 2008.
  3. ^ "Bull-run hits liquor-fueled town", 2 February 2009. "The tradition, enacted in a handful of Mexican towns, traces its roots back to the centuries-old Pamplona bull-run in Mexico's former colonial power." Retrieved 4 March 2009.
  4. ^ According to the Mayor of Pamplona in his foreword to the book Fiesta: How to Survive the Bulls of Pamplona
  5. ^ "Running of the Bulls 2011 Live Stream, Pamplona San Fermin Festival Webcam Feed". PRLog. 5 July 2011.
  6. ^ "Running of the Bulls 2021 Officially Cancelled". www.runningofthebulls.com. 26 April 2021. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  7. ^ "Running of the Bulls 2022 Dates". www.runningofthebulls.com. 5 April 2021. Retrieved 6 July 2021.
  8. ^ "27 años de Sanfermines en TVE". RTVE.es. Corporación de Radio y Televisión Española. 2008. Retrieved 21 July 2008.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k . Pamplona.net. Ayuntamiento de Pamplona (Council of Pamplona). 2008. Archived from the original on 29 May 2008. Retrieved 21 July 2008.
  10. ^ a b . Bando San Fermin 2014. Ayuntamiento de Pamplona. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 20 March 2015.
  11. ^ "Encierro bullrun San Fermin festival Sanfermines tourist information on Navarre". Government of Navarre. Retrieved 8 March 2010.
  12. ^ a b Alonso, Gorka (15 July 2013). . Noticias de Navarra (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 16 July 2013. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  13. ^ . Diario de Noticias (in Spanish). 14 July 2012. Archived from the original on 19 July 2012. Retrieved 13 July 2013.
  14. ^ "Quinta mujer corneada en los encierros de San Fermín" (in Spanish). Diario de Navarra. EFE. 14 July 2013. Retrieved 15 July 2013.
  15. ^ Doria, Javier (13 July 2013). "Montón en el encierro de Sanfermines, un peligro con historia". El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  16. ^ . Diario de Navarra (in Spanish). 18 June 2009. Archived from the original on 4 November 2013. Retrieved 16 July 2013.
  17. ^ "Man dies after being gored at Spanish bull-running festival". Reuters. 31 October 2021.
  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "La muerte de hoy es la número quince en la historia del encierro". Terra Noticias (in Spanish). Retrieved 6 July 2012.
  19. ^ "The last person killed at Pamplona". BBC News. British Broadcasting Corporation. 14 July 2005. Retrieved 10 July 2009. ...Matthew Tassio...22 years old and came from Chicago...The...bull...hit him in the abdomen, severed a main artery, sliced through his kidney and punctured his liver
  20. ^ . DiarioDeNavarra.es (in Spanish). 25 September 2003. Archived from the original on 3 August 2009. Retrieved 10 July 2009.
  21. ^ "Bull gores man to death in Spain". BBC News. 10 July 2009. Retrieved 10 July 2009. The 27-year-old was gored in the neck on Friday, during the fourth bull run of the week-long San Fermin festival. Daniel Jimeno Romero, from Madrid, had emergency surgery in hospital but died of his injuries. Earlier reports had described the dead man as British....a veteran Spanish bull-runner died after a fall in 2003
  22. ^ . EncierroSanFermin.com. 10 July 2009. Archived from the original on 14 July 2009. Retrieved 10 July 2009. A runner died in today's running of the bulls in the northern spanish city of Pamplona, the bull running held during the famous San Fermin festivities. The man died after being gored in the neck and lung by a bull of the Jandilla ranch, named "Capuchino".The runner, Daniel Jimeno Romero from Alcalá de Henares (Madrid) was at the end of the street run
  23. ^ Tan, Rebecca (6 July 2018). "As bull run revelry kicks off in Pamplona, hundreds wear black to mourn victims of sexual assault". Washington Post.
  24. ^ "Hemingway in Spain. A definitive guide to Ernest Hemingway's Spain". 15 March 2022.
  25. ^ Encierro de toros in the Spanish-language Auñamendi Encyclopedia.
  26. ^ Running with Bulls at IMDb
  27. ^ , Esquire TV
  28. ^ Vadillo, Jose Luis. 'Así son los corredores de elite en San Fermín', El Mundo. 6 July 2015
  29. ^ Editorial Staff. "Pamplona, bull running, bull gorings, Esquire TV and poetry from New York", The Pamplona Post. 10 July 2015
  30. ^ "Running of the Bulls 2015: A Democratic Sport" 17 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine, Esquire TV
  31. ^ Fiske-Harrison, Alexander, "The Bulls Of Pamplona
  32. ^ "The People Trying to Use Technology to Save Nature". 15 May 2021.
  33. ^ "Chasing Red (2020) - IMDb". IMDb.
  34. ^ "This Iraq war veteran has been running with the bulls since 2007". 5 February 2020.
  35. ^ Mari Carmen López del Burgo, aged 48, from Madrid, Spain. "Muere una mujer embestida por un toro en los encierros de Arganda del Rey". ElPais.com (in Spanish). 9 September 2010. Retrieved 9 September 2010.
  36. ^ Touristic leaflet. Festes de la Costa Blanca, Diputació Provincial d'Alacant, 2006, Alacant.
  37. ^ "Taurine traditions". OT-Sommieres.com. Office de Tourisme du Pays de Sommières. Retrieved 22 August 2017.
  38. ^ Chambers Book of Days (1864). W. & R. Chambers Ltd. 1832. 13 November entry
  39. ^ Rolán, Saioa (8 June 2022). "Encierro de la Villavesa: qué es, cuándo se celebra y curiosidades". diariodenavarra.es (in European Spanish). Retrieved 7 July 2022.
  40. ^ "Red Bull to visit Pamplona for Bull running". GPUpdate.net. 11 June 2008. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
  41. ^ Marszalek, Keith I. (24 June 2007). "Big Easy Rollergirls to reinact [sic] famed bull run". Blog.NOLA.com. Retrieved 2 July 2011.
  42. ^ "San Fermín in Nueva Orleans, The Running of the Roller Girls". Laughing Squid. 20 July 2008. Retrieved 2 July 2011.
  43. ^ Coviello, Will. "Running of the Bulls 2012". Gambit Weekly. Retrieved 18 July 2012.
  44. ^
    • Cormier, Ryan (23 June 2017). "Turning 21, party time for Running of the Bull". The News Journal. Wilmington, DE.
    • Driscoll, Ellen (5 July 2019). "Running of the Bull takes over Dewey Beach". Cape Gazette. Lewes, DE.
    • Gonzalez, Lucas (26 June 2019). "Dewey Beach's Running of the Bull: The zany hit of summer". The Daily Times. Salisbury, MD.
  45. ^ "Home2018 - EDP San Fermín Marathon". SanFerminMarathon.com.
  46. ^ Article sobre la crueltat dels bous al carrer. 12 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine (in Catalan)
  47. ^ Article sobre la popularitat dels bous al carrer a les terres de l'Ebre. (in Catalan)
  48. ^ "No More Bull (Running, That Is) in San Miguel de Allende," 7 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Austin American-Statesman, 24 May 2007. Retrieved 4 March 2009

External links

  • Definitive Guide to Running with Bulls, Pamplona's Running of the Bulls, How To
  • A blog about Pamplona's annual bull-running festival
  • Student Travel and Party at Running of the Bulls
  • Google Maps Route Map
  • Running of the Bulls Tours

running, bulls, this, article, about, primarily, continental, european, practice, defunct, english, practice, bull, running, running, bulls, spanish, encierro, from, verb, encerrar, corral, enclose, occitan, abrivado, literally, haste, momentum, catalan, corre. This article is about the primarily continental European practice For the defunct English practice see Bull running A running of the bulls Spanish encierro from the verb encerrar to corral to enclose Occitan abrivado literally haste momentum Catalan correbous run bulls is an event that involves running in front of a small group of bulls typically six 1 but sometimes ten or more that have been let loose on sectioned off streets in a town 1 usually as part of a summertime festival Particular breeds of cattle may be favored such as the toro bravo in Spain 1 also often used in post run bullfighting and Camargue cattle in Occitan France which are not fought Bulls non castrated male cattle are typically used in such events Running of the bullsThe bull run in PamplonaDates7 14 July in 2022 Location s Pamplona and otherMonument in Pamplona Runners surround the bulls on Estafeta Street Contents 1 History 2 Pamplona bull run 2 1 Fence 2 2 Preliminaries 2 3 The running 2 4 Injuries fatalities and medical attention 2 5 Dress code 2 6 Media 3 Other examples 3 1 Correbous or bous al carrer 3 2 Occitan area of France 3 3 Stamford bull run 3 4 Mock bull runs 4 Opposition 5 Further reading 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditThe most famous bull run is the encierro held in Pamplona during the nine day festival of Sanfermines in honor of Saint Fermin 2 It has become a major global tourism event today very different from the traditional local festival More traditional summer bull runs are held in other places such as towns and villages across Spain and Portugal in some cities in Mexico 3 and in the Occitan Camargue region of southern France Bull running was formerly also practiced in rural England most famously at Stamford until 1837 The event has its origins in the old practice of transporting bulls from the fields outside the city where they were bred to the bullring where they would be killed in the evening 4 During this run local youths would jump among them in a display of bravado In Pamplona and other places the six bulls that run are also in that afternoon s bullfight Spanish tradition holds that bull running began in northeastern Spain in the early 14th century Cattle herders who wanted to transport their animals from barges or from the countryside into city centers for sale or bullfights needed an easy way to move their precious animals While transporting cattle in order to sell them at the market men would try to speed the process by hurrying their cattle using tactics of fear and excitement After years of this practice the transportation and hurrying began to turn into a competition as young adults would attempt to race in front of the bulls and make it safely to their pens without being overtaken When the popularity of this practice increased and was noticed more and more by the expanding population of Spanish cities a tradition was created and stands to this day 5 non primary source needed The Running was cancelled in 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID 19 pandemic in Spain but resumed 7 14 July 2022 6 7 Pamplona bull run Edit Saint Fermin honored in Pamplona Pamplona 7 July 2005 People climb to the fences as the bulls run by and cross the Town Hall Plaza The Pamplona 2 encierro is the most popular in Spain and has been broadcast live by RTVE the public Spanish national television channel for over 30 years 8 It is the highest profile event of the San Fermin festival which is held every year from 6 14 July 2 The first bull running is on 7 July followed by one on each of the following mornings of the festival beginning every day at 8 am The rules require participants to be at least 18 years old run in the same direction as the bulls not incite the bulls and not be under the influence of alcohol 9 10 Fence Edit In Pamplona a set of wooden fences is erected to direct the bulls along the route and to block off side streets A double wooden fence is used in those areas where there is enough space while in other parts the buildings of the street act as barriers The gaps in the barricades are wide enough for a human to slip through but narrow enough to block a bull The fence is composed of approximately three thousand separate pieces of wood Some parts of the fence remain in place for the duration of the fiesta while others are placed and removed each morning 11 Spectators can only stand behind the second fence whereas the space between the two fences is reserved for security and medical personnel and also for participants who need cover during the event 10 Preliminaries Edit Police barrier at the beginning of the running stops people until the first rocket is fired The encierro begins with runners singing a benediction It is sung three times each time being sung both in Spanish and Basque The benediction is a prayer given at a statue of Saint Fermin patron of the festival and the city to ask the saint s protection and can be translated into English as We ask Saint Fermin as our Patron to guide us through the encierro and give us his blessing The singers finish by shouting Viva San Fermin and Gora San Fermin Long live Saint Fermin in Spanish and Basque respectively 9 Most runners dress in the traditional clothing of the festival which consists of a white shirt and trousers with a red waistband faja and neckerchief panuelo Also some of them hold the day s newspaper rolled to draw the bulls attention from them if necessary 9 The running Edit Runners at the Pamplona bull run in typical attire Pamplona 2007 Bulls following some runners enter the bull ring from the callejon where the event ends The bulls can be seen in the foreground and background of the picture A first rocket is set off at 8 a m to alert the runners that the corral gate is open A second rocket signals that all six bulls have been released The third and fourth rockets are signals that all of the herd has entered the bullring and its corral respectively marking the end of the event 9 The average duration between the first rocket and the end of the encierro is two minutes 30 seconds 9 The encierro is usually composed of the six bulls to be fought in the afternoon six steers that run in herd with the bulls and three more steers that follow the herd to encourage any reluctant bulls to continue along the route The function of the steers who run the route daily is to guide the bulls to the bullring 9 The average speed of the herd is 24 km h 15 mph 9 The length of the run is 875 meters 957 yards It goes through four streets of the old part of the city Santo Domingo Ayuntamiento Mercaderes and Estafeta via the Town Hall Square and the short section Telefonica named for the location of the old telephone office at end of Calle Estafeta just before entering into the bullring through its callejon tunnel 2 The fastest part of the route is up Santo Domingo and across the Town Hall Square but the bulls often became separated at the entrance to Estafeta Street as they slow down One or more would slip going into the turn at Estafeta la curva resulting in the installation of anti slip surfacing and now most of the bulls negotiate the turn onto Estafeta and are often ahead of the steers This has resulted in a quicker run Runners are not permitted in the first 50 meters of the encierro which is an uphill grade where the bulls are much faster citation needed Injuries fatalities and medical attention Edit Two injured runners are treated by medical services Every year between 50 and 100 people are injured during the run 9 Not all of the injuries require taking the patients to hospital in 2013 50 people were taken by ambulance to Pamplona s hospital with this number nearly doubling that of 2012 12 Goring is much less common but potentially life threatening In 2013 for example six participants were gored along the festival in 2012 only four runners were injured by the horns of the bulls with exactly the same number of gored people in 2011 nine in 2010 and 10 in 2009 with one of these last killed 12 13 As most of the runners are male only 5 women have been gored since 1974 Before that date running was prohibited for women 14 Another major risk is runners falling and piling up a monton at the entrance of the bullring which acts as a funnel as it is much narrower than the previous street resulting in a crowd crush In such cases injuries come both from asphyxia and contusions to those in the pile and from goring if the bulls crush into the pile This kind of blocking of the entrance has occurred at least ten times in the history of the run the last occurring in 2013 and the first dating back to 1878 A runner died of suffocation in one such pile up in 1977 15 Overall since record keeping began in 1910 15 people have been killed in the bull running of Pamplona most of them due to being gored 9 To minimize the impact of injuries every day 200 people collaborate in the medical attention They are deployed in 16 sanitary posts every 50 metres on average each one with at least a physician and a nurse among their personnel Most of these 200 people are volunteers mainly from the Red Cross In addition to the medical posts there are around 20 ambulances This organization makes it possible to have a gored person stabilized and taken to a hospital in less than 10 minutes 16 In 2021 a man bled to death after he was repeatedly gored at a bull running festival in the city of Onda in eastern Spain 17 15 deaths since 1910 in the bull run of Pamplona 9 Year Name Age Origin Location Cause of death1924 Esteban Domeno 22 Navarre Spain Telefonica Goring 18 1927 Santiago Zufia 34 Navarre Spain Bullring Goring 18 1935 Gonzalo Bustinduy 29 San Luis Potosi Mexico Bullring Goring 18 1947 Casimiro Heredia 37 Navarre Spain Estafeta Goring 18 1947 Julian Zabalza 23 Navarre Spain Bullring Goring 18 1961 Vicente Urrizola 32 Navarre Spain Santo Domingo Goring 18 1969 Hilario Pardo 45 Navarre Spain Santo Domingo Goring 18 1974 Juan Ignacio Eraso 18 Navarre Spain Telefonica Goring 18 1975 Gregorio Gorriz 41 Navarre Spain Bullring Goring 18 1977 Jose Joaquin Esparza 17 Navarre Spain Bullring Suffocated in a pile up 9 1980 Jose Antonio Sanchez 26 Navarre Spain Town Hall Square Goring 18 1980 Vicente Risco 29 Badajoz Spain Bullring Goring 18 1995 Matthew Peter Tassio 22 Glen Ellyn Illinois USA Town Hall Square Goring 19 2003 Fermin Etxeberria 62 Navarre Spain Mercaderes Goring 20 2009 Daniel Jimeno Romero 27 Alcala de Henares Spain Telefonica Goring 21 22 Dress code Edit Town Hall Square in the Poor Me Though there is no formal dress code the very common and traditional attire is white trousers a white shirt with a red cummerbund around the waist and a red neckerchief around the neck 23 Some have large logos on their shirts in the Internet age this is thought to be a way to highlight someone in a photo This dress is to honor San Fermin the center of the celebration because of his martyr s death the white outfits represent the purity and holiness of a saint and the red kerchiefs panuelos represent his death by decapitation A common alternate color to red is blue Media Edit Hemingway drank in the Cafe Iruna established 1888 in Pamplona Iruna The encierro of Pamplona has been depicted many times in literature television or advertising but became known worldwide partly because of the descriptions of Ernest Hemingway in books The Sun Also Rises and Death in the Afternoon 24 The cinema pioneer Louis Lumiere filmed the run in 1899 25 The event is the basis for a chapter in James Michener s 1971 novel The Drifters The run is depicted in the 1991 Billy Crystal film City Slickers where the character Mitch Crystal is gored non fatally from behind by a bull during a vacation with the other main characters Running of the bulls in Cellar provincial de Segovia Spain The run appears in the 2011 Bollywood movie Zindagi Na Milegi Dobara directed by Zoya Akhtar as the final dare in the bucket list of the three bachelors who have to overcome their ultimate fear death At first the trio run part of the route They stop at the square but then recover their nerve and continue to the end The completion of the run depicts their freedom as they learn that surviving a mortal danger can bring joy Running with Bulls a 2012 documentary of the festival filmed by Construct Creatives and presented by Jason Farrel depicts the pros and cons of the controversial tradition 26 From 2014 until 2016 the Esquire Network broadcast the running of the bulls live in the United States 27 with both live commentary and then a recorded round up later in the day by NBCSN commentators the Men in Blazers including interviews with noted participants such as Madrid born runner David Ubeda 28 former US Army soldier turned filmmaker Dennis Clancey 29 Joseph Distler famous New York bull runner and former British bullfighter and author Alexander Fiske Harrison 30 In 2014 a guidebook authored by Alexander Fiske Harrison Joe Distler Ernest Hemingway s grandson John Orson Welles daughter Beatrice and with a foreword by the Mayor of Pamplona caused headlines around the world when one of the contributors Bill Hillmann was gored by a bull soon after its publication It was republished in 2017 under the title The Bulls Of Pamplona with a replacement chapter by Dennis Clancey 31 The award winning 2015 feature documentary Chasing Red directed by Dennis Clancey follows four runners during the 2012 fiesta in Pamplona including Bill Hillmann and David Ubeda 32 33 34 Other examples Edit Fire bull and children running from it Tudela Navarre Although the most famous running of the bulls is that of San Fermin 2 they are held in towns and villages across Spain Portugal and in some cities in southern France during the summer Examples are the bull run of San Sebastian de los Reyes near Madrid at the end of August which is the most popular of Spain after Pamplona the bull run of Cuellar considered as the oldest of Spain since there are documents of its existence dating back to 1215 the Highland Capeias of the Raia in Sabugal Portugal with horses leading the herd crossing old border passes out of Spain and using the medieval Forcao or the bull run of Navalcarnero held at night Other encierros have also caused fatalities 35 Correbous or bous al carrer Edit Bous al carrer at Albocasser Bous al carrer correbou or correbous meaning in Catalan bulls in the street street bulls or bull running is a typical festivity in many villages in the Valencian region Terres de l Ebre Catalonia and Fornalutx Mallorca Another similar tradition is soltes de vaques where cows are used instead of bulls Even though they can take place all along the year they are most usual during local festivals normally in August Compared to encierros animals are not directed to any bullring These festivities are normally organized by the youngsters of the village as a way for showing their courage and ability with the bull Some sources consider this tradition a masculine initiation rite to adulthood 36 Occitan area of France Edit An abrivado at Calvisson The guardians are demonstrating their skill in turn a group of at least four bulls through a 360 degree turn A bandido at Calvisson Contact has been made with the bull but it has not yet been stopped Numerous bull running events happen in France in the region around Sommieres in accordance with the Camargues tradition in which no bulls are intentionally injured or killed For instance in Calvisson the annual event takes place around 20 July over a period of five days There are four events the abrivado in which at least ten bulls are run together through the street guided by a group of twelve gardians mounted on white Camargue horses the encierro in which one bull is released outside the foyer and finds his own way back to the pen the bandido in which one bull is run accompanied through the streets and the bandido de nuit which is the same thing but after dark Boys and men run with the bulls and try and separate them from the horses stop them and physically turn them away from the horses 37 Stamford bull run Edit Main article Stamford bull run The English town of Stamford Lincolnshire was host to the Stamford bull run for almost 700 years until it was abandoned in 1837 38 According to local tradition the custom dated from the time of King John when William de Warenne 5th Earl of Surrey saw two bulls fighting in the meadow beneath Some butchers came to part the combatants and one of the bulls ran into the town causing a great uproar The earl mounting his horse rode after the animal and enjoyed the sport so much that he gave the meadow in which the fight began to the butchers of Stamford on condition that they should provide a bull to be run in the town every 13 November for ever after As of 2013 the bull run had been revived as a ceremonial festival style community event Mock bull runs Edit A variation is the nightly fire bull where balls of inflammable material are placed on the horns Currently the bull is often replaced by a runner carrying a frame on which fireworks are placed and dodgers usually children run to avoid the sparks The Encierro de la Villavesa running of the town bus started in Pamplona on 15 July 1984 when after the end of the festival youths would run before the earliest urban bus entering the traditional encierro course Starting in 1990 the Pamplona bus company detoured the early bus to defuse the risk Currently the youths run before a cyclist in a yellow jersey as an homage to the Navarrese cycling champion Miguel Indurain 39 In 2008 Red Bull Racing driver David Coulthard and Scuderia Toro Rosso driver Sebastien Bourdais performed a version of a bull running event in Pamplona Spain with the Formula One cars chasing 500 runners through the actual Pamplona route 40 Running of the Bulls in the French Quarter of New Orleans The Big Easy Rollergirls roller derby team has performed an annual mock bull run in New Orleans Louisiana since 2007 The team dressed as bulls skates after runners through the French Quarter In 2012 there were 14 000 runners and over 400 bulls from all over the country with huge before and after parties 41 42 43 In Ballyjamesduff Ireland an annual event called the Pig Run is held with small pigs It looks just like a mini encierro but with pigs instead of bulls In Dewey Beach Delaware a bar named The Starboard sponsors an annual Running of the Bull sic in which hundreds of red and white clad beachgoers are chased down the shore by a single bull two people in a pantomime horse style costume 44 In Rangiora New Zealand an annual Running of the Sheep is held in which 1000 2000 sheep are released down the main street of the small farming town The Running of the Bulls UK is a pub crawl event that takes place on London s Hampstead Heath and uses fast human runners in place of bulls In 2014 Pamplona inaugurated a series of running events in June the San Fermin Marathon of a full marathon 42 195 km half marathon 21 097 km or 10 km road race that concludes with the final 900m of each race using the encierro route runners crossing the finish line inside the bullring 45 Since 2008 in Anchorage Alaska during the Fur Rendezvous Festival the Running of the Reindeer sends herds of people running down a four block downtown street with a group of reindeer released behind them Opposition EditMany opponents state that bulls are mentally stressed by the harassment and voicing of both participants and spectators and some of animals may also die because of the stress especially if they are roped or bring flares in their horns bou embolat version 46 Despite all this the festivities seem to have wide popular support in their villages 47 The city of San Miguel de Allende Mexico cancelled its Sanmiguelada running of the bulls after 2006 citing public disorder associated with the event 48 After the event was cancelled in San Miguel the city of Salvatierra also in the state of Guanajuato picked up the event It is now called La Marquesada and the three day event is held during the last weekend of the month of September or first weekend of October As of 2002 a Running of the Nudes occurs two days before the running of the bulls The event is supported by animal welfare groups including PETA who object to the running of the bulls claiming that it is cruel and glorifies bullfighting which the groups oppose Further reading EditFiske Harrison Alexander ed 2018 The Bulls Of Pamplona 1 ed Mephisto Press ISBN 978 1986500272 Hillmann Bill 2015 Mozos A Decade Running with the Bulls of Spain Chicago Illinois Curbside Splendor Publishing ISBN 978 1 9404 3053 9 Hillmann Bill 2021 The Pueblos My Quest to Run 101 Bull Runs in the Small Towns of Spain Chicago Illinois Tortoise Books ISBN 978 1 9489 5417 4 Etxanobe Ander 2021 The Basque An American s Journey to Embrace His Roots Txapela Publishing ISBN 978 1736948101 See also EditBou embolat or toro embolado variant in which bulls have flares or fireworks attached to their horns Bull baiting Bullfighting Spanish style bullfighting Bull leaping ancient Course landaise modern France Recortes modern Spain Bull running a similar defunct tradition in England Jallikattu a similar tradition in Tamil Nadu India Sokamuturra similar to the encierro spread over different parts of the Basque CountryReferences EditSome links may contain graphic content where marked a b c Fiske Harrison Alexander editor The Bulls Of Pamplona Mephisto Press 2018 a b c d e Sanfermin guide Running of the bulls Kukuxumusu 2007 Archived from the original on 5 May 2008 Retrieved 21 July 2008 Bull run hits liquor fueled town 2 February 2009 The tradition enacted in a handful of Mexican towns traces its roots back to the centuries old Pamplona bull run in Mexico s former colonial power Retrieved 4 March 2009 According to the Mayor of Pamplona in his foreword to the book Fiesta How to Survive the Bulls of Pamplona Running of the Bulls 2011 Live Stream Pamplona San Fermin Festival Webcam Feed PRLog 5 July 2011 Running of the Bulls 2021 Officially Cancelled www runningofthebulls com 26 April 2021 Retrieved 6 July 2021 Running of the Bulls 2022 Dates www runningofthebulls com 5 April 2021 Retrieved 6 July 2021 27 anos de Sanfermines en TVE RTVE es Corporacion de Radio y Television Espanola 2008 Retrieved 21 July 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k The Bull Run Pamplona net Ayuntamiento de Pamplona Council of Pamplona 2008 Archived from the original on 29 May 2008 Retrieved 21 July 2008 a b Seccion quinta Bando San Fermin 2014 Ayuntamiento de Pamplona Archived from the original on 2 April 2015 Retrieved 20 March 2015 Encierro bullrun San Fermin festival Sanfermines tourist information on Navarre Government of Navarre Retrieved 8 March 2010 a b Alonso Gorka 15 July 2013 Los encierros se saldan con 50 heridos trasladados y 6 corneados Noticias de Navarra in Spanish Archived from the original on 16 July 2013 Retrieved 15 July 2013 Los encierros de 2012 dejan cuatro heridos por asta los mismos que en 2011 Diario de Noticias in Spanish 14 July 2012 Archived from the original on 19 July 2012 Retrieved 13 July 2013 Quinta mujer corneada en los encierros de San Fermin in Spanish Diario de Navarra EFE 14 July 2013 Retrieved 15 July 2013 Doria Javier 13 July 2013 Monton en el encierro de Sanfermines un peligro con historia El Pais in Spanish Retrieved 14 July 2013 Especialistas destacan que el dispositivo sanitario de los encierros no se puede mejorar porque es espectacular Diario de Navarra in Spanish 18 June 2009 Archived from the original on 4 November 2013 Retrieved 16 July 2013 Man dies after being gored at Spanish bull running festival Reuters 31 October 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k La muerte de hoy es la numero quince en la historia del encierro Terra Noticias in Spanish Retrieved 6 July 2012 The last person killed at Pamplona BBC News British Broadcasting Corporation 14 July 2005 Retrieved 10 July 2009 Matthew Tassio 22 years old and came from Chicago The bull hit him in the abdomen severed a main artery sliced through his kidney and punctured his liver Muere el pamplones Fermin Etxeberria de 63 anos herido en el encierro del 8 de julio DiarioDeNavarra es in Spanish 25 September 2003 Archived from the original on 3 August 2009 Retrieved 10 July 2009 Bull gores man to death in Spain BBC News 10 July 2009 Retrieved 10 July 2009 The 27 year old was gored in the neck on Friday during the fourth bull run of the week long San Fermin festival Daniel Jimeno Romero from Madrid had emergency surgery in hospital but died of his injuries Earlier reports had described the dead man as British a veteran Spanish bull runner died after a fall in 2003 One dead in the running of the bull s in Pamplona EncierroSanFermin com 10 July 2009 Archived from the original on 14 July 2009 Retrieved 10 July 2009 A runner died in today s running of the bulls in the northern spanish city of Pamplona the bull running held during the famous San Fermin festivities The man died after being gored in the neck and lung by a bull of the Jandilla ranch named Capuchino The runner Daniel Jimeno Romero from Alcala de Henares Madrid was at the end of the street run Tan Rebecca 6 July 2018 As bull run revelry kicks off in Pamplona hundreds wear black to mourn victims of sexual assault Washington Post Hemingway in Spain A definitive guide to Ernest Hemingway s Spain 15 March 2022 Encierro de toros in the Spanish language Aunamendi Encyclopedia Running with Bulls at IMDb Running Of The Bulls Esquire TV Vadillo Jose Luis Asi son los corredores de elite en San Fermin El Mundo 6 July 2015 Editorial Staff Pamplona bull running bull gorings Esquire TV and poetry from New York The Pamplona Post 10 July 2015 Running of the Bulls 2015 A Democratic Sport Archived 17 July 2015 at the Wayback Machine Esquire TV Fiske Harrison Alexander The Bulls Of Pamplona The People Trying to Use Technology to Save Nature 15 May 2021 Chasing Red 2020 IMDb IMDb This Iraq war veteran has been running with the bulls since 2007 5 February 2020 Mari Carmen Lopez del Burgo aged 48 from Madrid Spain Muere una mujer embestida por un toro en los encierros de Arganda del Rey ElPais com in Spanish 9 September 2010 Retrieved 9 September 2010 Touristic leaflet Festes de la Costa Blanca Diputacio Provincial d Alacant 2006 Alacant Taurine traditions OT Sommieres com Office de Tourisme du Pays de Sommieres Retrieved 22 August 2017 Chambers Book of Days 1864 W amp R Chambers Ltd 1832 13 November entry Rolan Saioa 8 June 2022 Encierro de la Villavesa que es cuando se celebra y curiosidades diariodenavarra es in European Spanish Retrieved 7 July 2022 Red Bull to visit Pamplona for Bull running GPUpdate net 11 June 2008 Retrieved 30 January 2011 Marszalek Keith I 24 June 2007 Big Easy Rollergirls to reinact sic famed bull run Blog NOLA com Retrieved 2 July 2011 San Fermin in Nueva Orleans The Running of the Roller Girls Laughing Squid 20 July 2008 Retrieved 2 July 2011 Coviello Will Running of the Bulls 2012 Gambit Weekly Retrieved 18 July 2012 Cormier Ryan 23 June 2017 Turning 21 party time for Running of the Bull The News Journal Wilmington DE Driscoll Ellen 5 July 2019 Running of the Bull takes over Dewey Beach Cape Gazette Lewes DE Gonzalez Lucas 26 June 2019 Dewey Beach s Running of the Bull The zany hit of summer The Daily Times Salisbury MD Home2018 EDP San Fermin Marathon SanFerminMarathon com Article sobre la crueltat dels bous al carrer Archived 12 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine in Catalan Article sobre la popularitat dels bous al carrer a les terres de l Ebre in Catalan No More Bull Running That Is in San Miguel de Allende Archived 7 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Austin American Statesman 24 May 2007 Retrieved 4 March 2009External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Running of the bulls Definitive Guide to Running with Bulls Pamplona s Running of the Bulls How To A blog about Pamplona s annual bull running festival How to attend or view the Pamplona festival Student Travel and Party at Running of the Bulls Google Maps Route Map Running of the Bulls Tours Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Running of the bulls amp oldid 1128382500, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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