
Alameda de Hércules
Plaza Alameda de Hercules, Casco Antiguo, Seville, 41002, Spain
Laid out in 1574, this is the oldest public garden in Spain and one of the oldest in all of Europe.

Avenida de la Constitución
Av. de la Constitución, 41001 Sevilla
This broad boulevard is the ceremonial spine of Seville, the street where every Semana Santa procession passes and where the city puts itself on display.

Barrio Santa Cruz
Barrio Santa Cruz, 41004 Sevilla
This tangled labyrinth of whitewashed alleyways and jasmine-draped patios was once the most feared address in Seville.

Basílica de la Macarena
1 Calle Bécquer, Casco Antiguo, Seville, 41002, Spain
Seville has dozens of churches, but this is the one that makes the city weep.

Callejón del Agua
Callejón del Agua, Casco Antiguo, Seville, 41004, Spain
This narrow alley runs along the outer wall of the Real Alcazar, and its name — Water Lane — comes from a clay pipe that once carried water from the Carmona aqueduct into the palace gardens.

Centro Cerámico Triana
16 Calle Callao, Triana, Seville, 41010, Spain
Every tiled bench in the Plaza de Espana, every azulejo facade on a church, every decorative ceramic panel in a Seville courtyard — many of them started life in the kilns of Triana.

Convento de Santa Paula
11 Calle de Santa Paula, Casco Antiguo, Seville, 41003, Spain
Behind the unassuming walls of this working convent, enclosed Hieronymite nuns have been baking marmalade and sweets since 1473 — more than five and a half centuries of uninterrupted jam production.

Mercado de Triana
Triana, Seville, Spain
There is something darkly poetic about eating tapas on top of the ruins of the Inquisition.

Museo del Baile Flamenco
3 Calle de Manuel Rojas Marcos, Casco Antiguo, Seville, 41004, Spain
In a city that claims to be the birthplace of flamenco — and will fight anyone who says otherwise — there was no dedicated museum to the art form until 2006.

Parque de María Luisa
Paseo de las Delicias, Casco Antiguo, Seville, 41013, Spain
Half of this park was a private garden that belonged to the Palacio de San Telmo until 1893, when the Infanta Maria Luisa Fernanda — Duchess of Montpensier and sister of Queen Isabel II — donated the grounds to the city of Seville.

Plaza de Toros de la Real Maestranza
12 Paseo de Cristóbal Colón, Casco Antiguo, Seville, 41001, Spain
This is the cathedral of bullfighting, and that is not hyperbole — it is the phrase Spaniards themselves use for the oldest and most prestigious bullring in the country.

Real Fábrica de Tabacos
C. San Fernando, 4, 41004 Sevilla
This massive neoclassical fortress was not built to defend Seville from armies — it was built to defend tobacco from thieves.

Triana
Barrio de Triana, 41010 Sevilla
Cross the Guadalquivir on the Puente de Isabel II and you leave tourist Seville behind.
Explore culture in Sevilla
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