Tags
I think Corpus Cristi is my favourite holiday in Sevilla. The main event takes place on a public holiday – always the first Thursday after Trinity Sunday (which is 60 days after Easter). There is a small procession that starts around 8.30 am and finishes at noon. The night before the procession route is strewn with sprigs of rosemary and flower petals, balconies are draped with silk shawls and flowers, shopkeepers try to outdo each other with bread & wine window displays, and altars large and small are also put up. When I first came to Sevilla I was told by Agustín that the best part of Corpus was to get up early and walk the procession route before things got started, when the morning air is still cool and fresh and there aren’t too many people around. I have done this many times, though not every year. In fact, not for the past three years. Last year I was on chemo an unable to get up early (though you may recall I did stupidly go out and move furniture in the HEAT later on that day), the year before I was still recovering from my first operation, and the year before that I was in Lisbon. As always, anniversaries and holidays make me think of times past and I get that bittersweet ache inside, hoping that I will see many more.
So last Thursday I quite enjoyed getting up early and going out with Nog & Jessica, walking the route and then nipping into the Horno San Buenaventura for brekky just as the procession started. As usual, I took lots of photos which you can see in the slideshow above. You can also see some photos taken over the years in this fotki album (the first three taken yonks ago during a wonderful visit from Lizzie). The rosemary and rose petal shots in the slideshow are my favourites. Wish you could have been there.










wow, exotic and enticing image… i am going to have to check this out next year! x
LikeLike
I love the photos, especially all the shawls. And I’m amazed at all that rosemary! It must smell wonderful.
I’m glad you were able to properly enjoy the holiday this year!
LikeLike
It must smell wonderful with the Rosemary sprigs being stepped on and releasing the smell. Beautiful photos!
I’m glad you were able to walk the route this year. I remember when you had to move all that furniture!
LikeLike
Two things spring to mind as I watch the slide show: First, how beautiful your photo essay is, I also really liked the rosemary and thought about how much rosemary was required to strew the streets so lavishly. Second, is it really already over 60 days since Easter??? Egads, where did the time go?
So glad you could walk the route this year, and I’m sure you will be doing it for many years to come.
LikeLike
What is the story of the silk shawls? It’s pretty and festive; do you know how it started?
LikeLike
I don’t know where it comes from … though the display that took first prize for balconies looked more than somewhat like a house of ill-repute.
They give out prizes each year for altars and balcony & shop window displays.
I do love the shawls. And still have not managed to find the poem written by a local artist called Lucas, telling about “los balcones de seda…”
LikeLike
For the first time I also walked the route the evening before as Nog & I came home from a tapas “job”. It seems that all the shopkeepers are given huge batches of rosemary which they then distribute in front of their shops … it must take tons of the stuff. The rose petals are only strewn around the “high altar” areas.
The smell is amazing, and often makes me crave a roast leg of lamb … and the rosemary tends to get stuck in one’s sandals. I mean, the whole thing is just crazy expensive, but it seems that Sevillanos love nothing better than an excuse to dress up not only themselves, but also their beloved city.
I think the portales (the arches) were the prettiest I’ve ever seen. These were specially constructed for the 450th anniversary of a saint … cannot remember which one … and the sunflowers just blew me away. All that blue and yellow. Lovely.
LikeLike
I love that in Spain, a ‘small’ procession lasts from 8.30-12.00…
How big is a big procession then??
LikeLike
Well okay, if you are standing in one spot watching it pass by it maybe lasts an hour. I’ve never actually watched more than bits of it because, well, it’s pretty boring. By 12.00 it’s done the whole route and everybody is back in the cathedral and things are more or less normalish in the streets again.
LikeLike
Pingback: corpus cristi 2011 « casa az