Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 1, 2026

Verraco

Verracos are granite megalithic sculptures of animals, created by the Vettones in the west of the meseta – the high central plain of the Iberian Peninsula – in the Spanish provinces of Ávila, Salamanca, Segovia, Zamora, Cáceres, Ourense and the Portuguese provinces of Beira Baixa, Beiras e Serra da Estrela, Douro and Terras de Trás-os-Montes. Over 400 verracos have been identified.

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The Bulls of Guisando, in El Tiemblo, Castile and León, Spain. source ↗
The Sow of Murça, in Murça, Portugal. source ↗

Verracos (Spanish: verraco; Portuguese: berrão; literally 'boar') are granite megalithic sculptures of animals, created by the Vettones in the west of the meseta – the high central plain of the Iberian Peninsula – in the Spanish provinces of Ávila, Salamanca, Segovia, Zamora, Cáceres, Ourense and the Portuguese provinces of Beira Baixa, Beiras e Serra da Estrela, Douro and Terras de Trás-os-Montes. Over 400 verracos have been identified.

Characteristics

The Spanish word verraco normally refers to boars, and the sculptures are sometimes called verracos de piedra (pigs of stone) to distinguish them from live animals. The stone verracos often represent boars and pigs, which were held as sacred animals by Celtic peoples.1 However, they appear to represent not only pigs but also other animals. Some have been identified as bulls, and the village of El Oso, Ávila, named for "the Bear", has a verraco which supposedly represents a bear. Their dates range from the mid-fourth to first centuries BC. There are some similar zoomorphic monument markers in lands of Poland from the same period or older.2

Though they were perhaps not confined to a single usage, the verracos were an essential part of the landscape of the Vettones, one of the Pre-Roman peoples of the Iberian Peninsula. It has generally been assumed, from their high visibility in their original open-field surroundings, that these sculptures had some protective religious significance, whether guarding the security of livestock or as funerary monuments (some of them bear Latin funerary inscriptions). The verracos are particularly numerous too in the vicinity of the walled Celtiberian communities that Romans had called oppida.

Notable verracos

Portugal

Berrão head displayed in the Marvão Municipal Museum source ↗
  • Murça
    • Porca de Murça (literally the "Sow of Murça" in Portuguese, although the sculpture appears to represent a boar, i.e. a male rather than a female pig). The name has been taken to designate a red wine of the Douro district.3
  • Torre de Dona Chama
    • Berroa
  • Marvão
    • Head of berrão, with right eye clearly visible, found in the Abegoa area of Marvão. Today in Municipal Museum in Marvão.

Spain

Castile and León

Verraco in Mingorría, Castile and León, Spain. source ↗
Verraco in the Plaza mayor of Villanueva del Campillo. It is the Vettones' largest zoomorphic sculpture so far discovered in the Iberian Peninsula. source ↗
Verracos in Villatoro, Castile and León, Spain. source ↗
Province of Ávila
Province of Salamanca
Verraco in Ciudad Rodrigo, Castile and León, Spain. source ↗
Province of Segovia
  • Segovia (two verracos: a bull and a wild boar; today in the Museo Provincial)4
  • Coca (three verracos: two in front the City Gate of the Town4 and one embedded in the castle's walls)
Province of Zamora
Mule of Villardiegua de la Ribera, Castile and León, Spain. source ↗

Castile-La Mancha

Province of Toledo

Extremadura

Province of Cáceres
Further reading

Further reading

  • de Vasconcelos, J. Leite (1897). Religiões da Lusitânia (in Portuguese). Lisbon: Imprensa Nacional Casa da Moeda – via archive.org.
  • Sánchez Moreno, Eduardo (2000). Vetones: Historia y Arqueología de un pueblo prerromano (in Spanish). Madrid: Ediciones de la Universidad Autónoma. ISBN 8474777593.
References

References

  1. Cardeño, M. L.; Cabañes, E. (1994). "El simbolismo del jabalí en el ámbito celta peninsular". Trabajos de Prehistoria (in Spanish). 51 (2): 103–119.
  2. Wożniak, Zenon (2004). "Problem Istnienia Celtyckiego Nemetonu Na Ślęży" (PDF). Przegląd Archeologiczny (in Polish). 52: 131–183.
  3. "Concelho de Murcaport". rtsmarao.pt. Archived from the original on 22 October 2008. Retrieved 30 August 2008.
  4. Martín, José Luis (1992). The Segovian sculpture. Segovia: Caja Segovia. pp. 231–235. ISBN 84-606-0909-X.
  5. City Council of La Puebla de Montalbán (2010). "El VII aniversario del Museo 'La Celestina' acercará al público el verraco encontrado en La Puebla". Retrieved 26 May 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
External links