Every Christmas in Mallorca, one of the island’s most treasured traditions returns: the Canto de la Sibila, a haunting medieval chant sung on Christmas Eve during the Matines (Midnight Mass).
Declared UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage, it is performed only in a few places in the world — and Mallorca is its spiritual home.
Canto de la Sibila – Mallorca’s Sacred Christmas Tradition ✨
December 24 & 26, 2025 · Palma & Lluc
This ancient liturgical drama, sung in Catalan, tells of the prophecy of the Last Judgment. Its solemn, mystical melody fills the church as a lone singer (traditionally a child or young soloist) walks through the nave carrying a sword and a candle. The effect is timeless, dramatic, and deeply moving — a moment that connects Mallorca to over a thousand years of history.
This year, the Canto de la Sibila is again performed at some of the island’s most iconic sacred spaces.
✨ December 24 – Christmas Eve (Matines)
⛪ Sanctuary of Lluc, Escorca
🕖 19:00
Performed by the Blauets, the famous children’s choir of Lluc.
Their pure, crystalline voices give the Sibila a uniquely emotional interpretation inside the Serra de Tramuntana’s spiritual heart.
⛪ Cathedral of Mallorca, Palma
🕚 23:00
Experience the Canto de la Sibila in the island’s most majestic setting — La Seu’s soaring Gothic architecture and candlelit atmosphere make this an unforgettable Christmas Eve moment.
✨ December 26 – Feast of Saint Stephen
⛪ Santa Eulàlia Church, Palma
🕢 19:30
A special post-Christmas performance by the Capella Mallorquina, offering a refined choral version of the tradition inside one of Palma’s most historic churches.
🕊️ What exactly is the Canto de la Sibila?
The Canto de la Sibila is a medieval chant that dates back to early Christian and pre-Romanesque Europe (10th–12th century).
Key elements:
- A prophetic text sung by the Sibyl, foretelling the Final Judgment
- A single singer (often a child) dressed in a tunic or ceremonial garments
- A slow processional performance through the darkened church
- A symbolic sword, held upright as a sign of justice
- A haunting melody preserved almost unchanged for nearly a millennium
While it disappeared across Europe during the Counter-Reformation, Mallorca kept it alive – making it one of the island’s most cherished cultural treasures.
In 2010, UNESCO recognised it as Intangible Cultural Heritage, safeguarding this extraordinary ritual for future generations.