This square carries an unusually blunt name. A breach is a gap torn into a defensive wall, and here the city chose not to soften the memory.
Serapio Múgica Zufiria, the local historian who wrote about San Sebastián’s streets in nineteen sixteen, treated this place almost like a scar on a face: impossible to miss, and too important to hide. He noted that the name remembered the point where Anglo-Portuguese forces broke into the city on the thirty-first of August, eighteen thirteen, after pounding the wall with artillery. The opening did not end with a military success. It led to the great fire that erased almost the whole intramural town. Popular memory distilled the disaster into one stark fact: only one street survived, the one now called the thirty-first of August.
And yet, in a darker twist, Múgica also tells us the name Brecha was older still. In seventeen nineteen, the Duke of Berwick brought sixteen thousand men here. His guns battered the weak stretch of wall by Zurriola until the garrison surrendered the town and withdrew to the castle, where they held out until the seventeenth of August. So this was not one wound, but a place named for repeated tearing.
After the walls came down in eighteen sixty-four, daily life rushed in. Antonio Cortázar raised the market in eighteen seventy as an open U-shaped structure for ordinary trade. Then José de Goicoa tightened it in eighteen ninety-eight, roofing the central court and closing the side toward the Boulevard. Later came the fish market, and the caseras, country women selling produce directly in the square, and even the city’s first permanently staffed fire station behind the market. A place of assault became a place of buying supper and guarding against fire.
If a city could preserve only one memory in its place names, would it choose victory, grief, or survival?
Hold that thought as we continue toward the Royal Yacht Club, where San Sebastián answers ruin with display.


