Cow fighting
Cow fighting; (French: Combat de Reines), is a traditional Swiss event, mostly in Valais, in which a cow fights another cow (unlike bullfighting, in which humans fight bulls, often to the death). Each year, the Swiss canton of Valais hosts a series of cow fights known as combats de reines ("queen fights"), which began in the 1920s and has drawn as many as 50,000 spectators in a year. The winner is called La Reine des Reines ("the queen of queens") and increases dramatically in value. At the end of the year, a grand final is held in Aproz, where the six best from seven districts do battle in six weight categories.
Cows naturally fight to determine dominance in the herd, and this is the behaviour that is exploited in cow fighting, using cows from the local Herens breed. With their horns blunted, the fights are mainly a pushing contest. Any cow that backs down from a fight is eliminated until one cow is left standing in the ring. It sometimes happens that the cows in a fight refuse to engage in physical contact with each other at all. Each fight can last up to 40 minutes.
Similar events take place in Savoie and Haute-Savoie, France, in the Aosta Valley of Italy, and in the Kafkasör plateau of Artvin, Turkey called Bull wrestling.
See also
- Camel wrestling
- Tōgyū, a similar sport in Okinawa, Japan
References
- Hunt, Julie, 13 April 2003. "Locking horns in canton Valais". Accessed 8 July 2006.
- Hayes-Gehrke, Melissa N. "In the mood: Swiss always enjoy a good cow fight". Accessed 8 July 2006.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Combats de reines. |
- (French) Official site of the Reines du Valais
- (French) The rules of combat