The annual Fiesta de San Fermin began in Spain this week. The festival, including the famous “Running of the Bulls,” attracts thousands of visitors to Pamplona every year. Lasting nine days, the festival kicks off with massive crowds at the Chupinazo in Pamplona town square, followed by a carnival, fireworks, the running of the bulls, and many bullfights. Held since 1591, San Fermin remains a popular, though dangerous and controversial, event—two Americans and a Briton were gored on Tuesday.
- A boy is hit with a sponge by a Kiliki during San Fermin festival's “Comparsa de gigantes y cabezudos” (Parade of the Giants and Big Heads) in Pamplona on July 8, 2015. “Kilikis” wear oversized masks as they playfully hit bystanders with sponges on sticks, while parading daily through the city accompanied by brass bands.Eloy Alonso / Reuters
- Participants run down Santo Domingo street in front of fighting bulls from the Jandilla ranch during the running of the bulls at the San Fermin Festival in Pamplona on July 7, 2015.Alvaro Barrientos / AP
- Revelers run with Jandilla's fighting bulls along the Calle Estafeta during the second day of the San Fermin Running Of The Bulls festival on July 7, 2015 in Pamplona, Spain. The annual Fiesta de San Fermin, made famous by the 1926 Ernest Hemingway novel The Sun Also Rises, involves the daily running of the bulls through the historic heart of Pamplona to the bull ring.Pablo Blazquez Dominguez / Getty
- Spain's rejoneador (bullfighter on horseback) Roberto Armendariz reacts after fighting a bull in the bullring on the first day of the San Fermin festival on July 6, 2015.Reuters
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