- the "gentlemen of the
lower class" of Andalusia. Its ****ociation with
barateros, pícaros, jácaros and
rufos (gamblers, rogues, ruffians, and thugs) comes...
- distraction, and counterstrike.
Among navaja aficionados, the
gamblers or
barateros of Málaga and
Seville were
cited as the most
skilled practitioners of...
- career, however, was a
bullfight on 10
August 1969 at Las Ventas,
featuring Baratero, a bull from his ranch, who
faced matador Andrés Vázquez ("El ****"), substituting...
-
Retrieved 24
February 2016. de
Rementeria y Fica, Mariano,
Manual of the
Baratero (transl. and annot. by
James Loriega), Boulder, Colorado:
Paladin Press...
- ISBN 0-87349-015-0 (1987), pp. 37 - 43 de
Rementeria y Fica, Mariano,
Manual of the
Baratero (transl. and annot. by
James Loriega), Boulder, CO:
Paladin Press, ISBN 978-1-58160-471-9...
-
generally as the navaja. The
navaja was
originally used
primarily by the
barateros of the
underworld and the
working class, but by the 1800s it had become...
-
substituting for Antoñete, when he cut both ears from the
famous bull
Baratero,
which heightened his
status as a bullfighter. It led to his
third trip...