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Human towers 1
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© UNESCO · Wikimedia Commons
UNESCO ICHRepresentative ListInscribed 2010

Human towers

Practised In

Overview

''Castells'' are human towers built by members of amateur groups, usually as part of annual festivities in Catalonian towns and cities. The traditional setting is the square in front of the town hall balcony. The human towers are formed by ''castellers'' standing on the shoulders of one another in a succession of stages (between six and ten). Each level of the ''tronc,'' the name given to the second level upwards, generally comprises two to five heavier built men supporting younger, lighter-weight boys or girls. The ''pom de dalt'' – the three uppermost levels of the tower – comprises young children. Anyone is welcome to form the ''pinya,'' the throng that supports the base of the tower. Each group can be identified by its costume, particularly the colour of the shirts, while the cummerbund serves to protect the back and is gripped by ''castellers'' as they climb up the tower. Before, during and after the performance, musicians play a variety of traditional melodies on a wind instrument known as a ''gralla,'' setting the rhythm to which the tower is built. The knowledge required for raising ''castells'' is traditionally passed down from generation to generation within a group, and can only be learned by practice.

About Human towers

A castell is a human pyramid built traditionally at festivals in southern Catalonia (Spain), now also found in the rest of Catalonia, and in the Balearic Islands.

Read more on Wikipedia

Domains

Details

Country
Spain
Inscribed
2010
Register
Representative List
Reference
364
View on UNESCO ICH website
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