Jump to content

¡Santiago y cierra, España!

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
Saint James, represented by 17th-century painter Francisco Camilo as a Moor-slayer and with the Cross of Saint James as an attribute.

¡Santiago y cierra, España! is a Spanish-language phrase. The invoking of the apostle's name (Santiago, James in English) is said to have been a common battle cry of Christian soldiers in medieval Iberia and beyond into the Early Modern Period.[1] The full form, using a conjugated form of the verb cerrar,[n. 1] is recorded since the late-16th and 17th centuries.[1] It made a comeback in 1930s Spain as it became the motto of Ramiro de Maeztu's right-wing magazine Acción Española.[1] As a reminiscence of a mythicized look on the middle ages, embedded in narratives of the "Recovery" of Catholic Spain against the [Muslim] Other-enemy-invader, it has thus been historically embraced as a political slogan by arch-conservative milieus of Spanish society.[1] As a nationalist symbolic banner, the phrase has been a staple within far-right discourses in Spain, developed in war-related and national self-affirmation contexts.[2]

Notes

  1. ^ According to Pedro de Ribadeneira, as a synonym of acometer (transl. assail).[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Linares, Lidwine (2012). "¡Santiago y cierra, España!". Les Cahiers de Framespa. 10 (10). doi:10.4000/framespa.1552.
  2. ^ García García, Jesús (2023). "Ideología y exclusión. Nacionalismo antimusulmán de ayer a hoy". In Álvarez Díaz, Katia; Cotán Fernández, Almudena (eds.). Educar, comunicar, sociabilizar en la heterogeneidad. Madrid: Dykinson. p. 54. ISBN 978-84-1170-355-0.