← Back

Fire Festival: Le Focare

73020 Cutrofiano LE, Italia ★★★★☆ 237 views
kelly Bergman
Cutrofiano
🏆 AI Trip Planner 2026

Get the free app

Discover the best of Cutrofiano with Secret World — the AI trip planner with 1M+ destinations. Get personalized itineraries, hidden gems and local tips. Free on iOS & Android.

🧠 AI Itineraries 🎒 Trip Toolkit 🎮 KnowWhere Game 🎧 Audio Guides 📹 Videos
Scan to download iOS / Android
Scan for AppGallery Huawei users

About Fire Festival: Le Focare

Fire Festival: Le Focare - Cutrofiano | Secret World Trip Planner

There is a feast in Cutrofiano, the winter festival of the Cutrofianesi that is celebrated every Feb. 17 with Holy Mass, Procession and “Focare” (falò) in the village. The term ”focara” a dialectal derivation from Salento, and other southern dialects, stands for a falò of wood for burning.

Fire Festival: Le Focare - Cutrofiano | Secret World Trip Planner

Today the tradition continues,in almost all municipalities of Salento, piles of faggots are created at the crossroads of the main roads, a traditional rite participated in by all the inhabitants. The fire is lit during the evening of the eve of the liturgical feast of St. Anthony Abbot on January 16. Around this burning pyre the families who built it are wont to linger, to spend the evening there.

Where this tradition originates is not certain, there are currents of thought: perhaps from ancient pagan rites or perhaps in memory of an earthquake that struck Salento centuries ago. The focara è consists of thousands of bundles of shrubs, dried olive branches, generally speaking it canò have a diameter of about 20 mt to go as high as 25 meters. The bundles from the fields are transported to a suburban square and arranged until they form what they call “furnieddhru” in Salento, a typical country building that farmers used as a storage room. .. The inhabitants begin the work of this pyramid of dry branches alreadyà in the first days of December.

There are calculated to be about a hundred falò built all over Salento, especially in winter, to warm the cold nights of pilgrims on the feast day of the village. The focara as mentioned above probably draws its origin from a disastrous event that struck the Salento many centuries ago: earthquake (as in Acquarica di Lecce) or hurricane (in Martignano). Fire then, as a universal symbol, the flame is associated, for example, with the sacred, love, sex, light, glory and purification. Other Focare to signal are for example that of San Marzano (TA) in the Ionian province we point out the great “Zjarr i Madhe the falò largest and oldest in Italy.

The term Zjarr i Madhe means big fire.

It has its origins around 1600, the peculiarity of this rite è that it is done in procession with 50 horses carrying bundles of dry branches, the faithful then in turn carry logs for more than 3 km, until they reach the point of the construction of the focara. Some horses then, kneel before the patron saint St. Joseph. È this is a unique tradition in Italy that attracts tourists from all over the world.

🗺 L'app dei tesori italiani

Plan your visit to Cutrofiano

Suggested itinerary near Fire Festival: Le Focare

MAJ+
500.000+ travelers worldwide
  1. 🌅
    Morning
    Fire Festival: Le Focare
    📍 Cutrofiano
  2. ☀️
    Afternoon
    Corigliano d'Otranto: a village in the Grecìa Salentina area
    📍 5.9 km · Cutrofiano
  3. 🌆
    Evening
    Galatina the little Baroque Jewel
    📍 6.3 km · Cutrofiano

Buy Unique Travel Experiences

Powered by Viator

See more on Viator.com

Explore nearby · Cutrofiano

Frequently Asked Questions

The festival is celebrated on February 17th in Cutrofiano with Holy Mass, a Procession, and the lighting of traditional wood fires called 'Focare.' However, the fires are actually lit on the evening of January 16th, the eve of the feast of St. Anthony Abbot, which is celebrated throughout the Salento region.
The Focare are massive structures made from thousands of bundles of shrubs and dried olive branches, typically reaching diameters of about 20 meters and heights up to 25 meters tall. These impressive pyramids, called 'furnieddhru' in the local Salento dialect, are built starting in early December.
The exact origin is uncertain, but the tradition is believed to stem from either ancient pagan rites or from a disastrous event like an earthquake or hurricane that struck Salento centuries ago. The fires were traditionally used to warm pilgrims during the cold winter nights of village feast days.
Approximately one hundred Focare are built all over the Salento region during winter, primarily at the crossroads of main roads in various municipalities. This widespread tradition involves entire communities gathering together to build and maintain these massive wooden structures.
The term 'Focara' is a dialectal derivation from Salento and other southern Italian dialects, literally meaning a bonfire or 'falò' of wood for burning. It represents an important part of local cultural heritage, with the tradition continuing across almost all municipalities in the Salento region.