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- Bullring of Pontevedra. Galicia - Servitoro
It is the province that stays to the southwest of Galicia, doing border with Portugal in the south His Bullring is the only one that stays in quite Galicia The Bullfighting Fair is celebrated in the fair of the Virgin of the Outlandish one in August
- Plaza de Toros de Pontevedra - Wikipedia
The Plaza de Toros de Pontevedra (Spain) is the bullring of the Spanish city of Pontevedra and the only one in the autonomous community of Galicia [2] It has a capacity of 7,800 spectators [3] and is classified as the second category of Spanish bullring [4]
- Pontevedra: The Bulls Speak Galician - Blog Taurino - Servitoro
Pontevedra is the bullfighting bastion of Galicia, and every August it proudly boasts of such a blessed connection Because the figures each season drop by the San Roque bullring to check that, despite everything, bullfighting continues to beat strongly in those lands
- Spain’s Bull Fighting: Barbarism or Culture? - Euro Weekly News
In Spain tens of thousands of bulls are killed each year for a practice that animal protection groups say is both barbaric and losing popular support 126 municipalities across Spain, including parts of Mallorca, Catalonia and Galicia have declared themselves anti-bullfighting zones, but as the law protects the sport there is little legal
- Children and bullfighting - CAS International
Children of all ages are allowed in bullfights in Colombia, France, Mexico and Peru In Spain and Venezuela minors are also permitted to attend bullfights except in some regions: the Spanish states of Galicia and the Balearic Islands have an age limit of 12 years old and the Venezuelan states of Aragua, Zulia Guárico of 18 years old
- Bullfighting | History, Culture, Spectacle | Britannica
bullfighting, the national spectacle of Spain and many Spanish-speaking countries, in which a bull is ceremoniously fought in a sand arena by a matador and usually killed
- A brief history of bull fighting in Spain - Spain Traveller
Experts consider that modern bull fighting in Spain started in 1726 when Francisco Romero, a significant matador from Ronda, introduced the use of the sword (estoque) and the famous red cape (muleta) into the bullfight After this exploit, humble people started to practice it on foot
- Bullfights in Spain and Portugal should be child-free zones, say . . .
In the northwestern region of Galicia, under-12s cannot attend bullfights and the Balearic Islands introduced an age restriction on them in 1992, but it was withdrawn recently by a new
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