Don Quixote - Tilting at Windmills
1 2016-10-31T06:32:14-07:00 Colleen Curry 958b66ea3edd9a694859b8e0d8c19cee9eb88ac9 11878 1 This humorous sculpture juxtaposes a silhouette of Don Quixote with some modern-day windmills. plain 2016-10-31T06:32:14-07:00 Colleen Curry 958b66ea3edd9a694859b8e0d8c19cee9eb88ac9This page is referenced by:
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2016-10-18T19:20:19-07:00
Don Quixote: Silhouette Sculpture and Gulf of Patras
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Colleen Curry's page on the significance of windmills and the Gulf of Patras to Cervantes' Don Quixote
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2016-10-31T06:37:29-07:00
pixabay.com
July 12, 2010
Creative Commons CC0
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38.260551, 21.609642
Hannes Rohringer
The humorous sculpture featured here may look like nothing more than a silhouette of a man on a donkey, but the modern-day windmills in the background make it easily recognizable as Don Quixote. The scene where Don Quixote attempts to fight windmills (which he believes are “giants”) is one of the most iconic scenes from the epic. While it may seem ridiculous for him to attempt to fight windmills, it’s important to note that Don Quixote was actually written during a period of war between Spain and Holland (80 Years’ War), and windmills are often associated with the Netherlands. It is interesting to note that this scene is the origin of the English phrase “tilting at windmills”, which means to take up arms against an imaginary enemy (“tilt” being a synonym for “joust”).
Location chosen: Gulf of Patras, Ionian Sea—This is where the Battle of Lepanto occurred in 1571. Miguel de Cervantes fought in this battle during his time as a soldier in the Spanish navy. The battle was fought between the Holy League (an alliance between several Catholic states) and the Ottoman Empire, initiated by Pope Pius V, and funded mainly by the Spanish Empire. During the battle, Cervantes was ill with a fever and was encouraged to stay below deck. However, believing that the battle would be one to shape European history, he insisted on fighting—and received several gunshot wounds in the process. He believed that the rewards outweighed the risks (forgive the cliché) in this scenario, ironically exemplifying the romantic attitude that he so satirized in Don Quixote.
Works Cited:
Hilton, Ronald. "Four Centuries of Cervantes: The Historical Anatomy of a Best-Selling
Masterpiece."Hispania 30.3 (1947): 310-20. Web.
Tanenbaum, Michelle. "Staging a Rewriting: "Madame Bovary" and the Romantic Interpretation of "Don Quixote"" Review of Japanese Culture and Society 18 (2006): 32-45. Web.
"The Battle of Lepanto - History of Spain: Spanish Wars | Don Quijote." DonQuijote. Don Quijote Spanish School, n.d. Web. 16 Oct. 2016.
"Windmills in Dutch History." The Dutch Windmill : WINDMILLS IN DUTCH HISTORY. University of Groningen, 26 Feb. 2001. Web. 30 Sept. 2016.