Salvadoran folklore


The folklore of El Salvador shares traits with the rest of the Mesoamerican region. The ancestral civilizations of the Mayans, Toltecs, Nahuas, among others, left their presence in many aspects of daily life.
The arrival of Europeans began an amalgamation of customs, traditions, and expressions. The colonizers attempted to eradicate local cultures, but the native cultures survived, and eventually coexisted with those of the Europeans. Examples of this combined culture include the adaptation of several Nahuat words into Spanish, the continued dominance of the Catholic religion, and the daily presence of corn in meals. The folklore of the two cultures combined to create modern hybrids.

Material

Material folklore includes physical and created items, such as foods, furniture, and traditional medicine.
In popular cuisine, corn-based dishes are common, including pupusas, atol shuco, tortillas, tamales, corn chicha, chilate, corn atol, torrejas, and cashew seed atol.
Drinks include hot drinks, such as hot chocolate and coffee, as well as cold drinks, such as horchata, barley soft drink, and tamarind soft drink.
Popular sweets include coconut preserves, milkshakes, grapefruit sweets, and marshmallows. Jellies are often made of local fruits, such as the quince and guava.
Examples of common furniture items are hammocks, petates, tombillas, tecomates, bateas, comals, and pitchers.

Social

Social folklore relates to festivals, brotherhoods, games, and markets. It can be divided into the following categories, with common examples:
  • Traditional toys: the capirucho, the yo-yo, the trompo, marbles, and the kite.
  • Group games: blind man's chicken, thief freed, donkey jumps, onion plucking, and mica.
  • Rounds: the peregrina, Mrs. Ana, Chanchavalancha, Naranja Dulce, Ton-Ton, and Componte.
  • Adult games: the deck, ribbon races, dice, and Nejapa Fireballs.
  • Brotherhoods: the brotherhood of Izalco, Santo Domingo de Guzmán, San Antonio del Monte, Sonzacate, and Panchimalco.

Spiritual-mental folklore

Spiritual-mental folklore relates to popular religious manifestations, popular literature, music, dance, oral tradition, idioms, and other related concepts.

Oral tradition

Salvadoran oral tradition includes legends and stories of pre-Hispanic, colonial or republican origin. These can be classified based on the character or location of the story:

Patron saint festivities and popular celebrations

Each municipality is dedicated to a patron saint who is celebrated annually. Among the most important:
Some popular religious celebrations include Roodmas, Holy Week, the Talcigüines, and the Day of the Animas.

Dances and musical

El Salvador has around thirty dances. Among the most popular are: dance of the historians, the Chapetones, the Partesana, the Torito Pinto, the Tiger and the Deer, the Negritos, the Giantess, the feathered ones, and the Cortadoras.
Traditional musical instruments include the Caramba, the Eunuch flute, the Sacabuche, and the Jawbone.