Festa de l'Estendard, Palma
Every 31 December, Palma stages the Festa de l'Estendard — a solemn civic commemoration rather than a New Year's Eve street party. The city marks 31 December 1229, the day King Jaume I's troops entered Madîna Mayûrqa and ended centuries of Muslim rule, founding what would become the Kingdom of Mallorca. Held for more than 700 years, it is counted among the oldest secular civic ceremonies in Europe and the most ancient of its kind in the former Crown of Aragón — a living act of historical memory and civic identity that blends medieval ritual with formal ceremony. What happens: The centrepiece is the placing of the Royal Standard of the Conquest at Plaça de Cort, where the Ajuntament's façade is dressed in red hangings bearing the city crest and a portrait of Jaume I. A procession moves through the old town to La Seu cathedral for a solemn mass, accompanied by traditional performers — cavallets and cossiers dancers and the Tamborers de la Sala drummers. As the banner is raised, "La Balanguera," Mallorca's anthem, fills the square, and the day closes with a final lifting of the standard and a recital of the poem "La Colcada." Institutional honours and distinctions are also presented at the Town Hall. Good to know: The festival falls on 31 December every year, with a wider programme of institutional and folkloric acts typically running from around 29 to 31 December across Palma's old town. It centres on Plaça de Cort beside the Ajuntament, with the main procession heading to La Seu. It is an open-air public ceremony that draws a large crowd — free to attend, with no ticket required.