Sevilla
Sevilla/History

16 Historic Landmarks in Sevilla

16 landmarks with verified facts and stories

Archivo General de Indias
~3 min

Archivo General de Indias

3 Avenida de la Constitución, Casco Antiguo, Seville, 41004, Spain

architectureheritagecolonial

Every piece of paper that shaped the colonization of the Americas — treaties, letters, maps, ship manifests, death warrants — ended up here.

Barrio Santa Cruz
~4 min

Barrio Santa Cruz

Barrio Santa Cruz, 41004 Sevilla

iconicculturelocal-life

This tangled labyrinth of whitewashed alleyways and jasmine-draped patios was once the most feared address in Seville.

Basílica de la Macarena
~3 min

Basílica de la Macarena

1 Calle Bécquer, Casco Antiguo, Seville, 41002, Spain

religioncultureart

Seville has dozens of churches, but this is the one that makes the city weep.

Callejón del Agua
~2 min

Callejón del Agua

Callejón del Agua, Casco Antiguo, Seville, 41004, Spain

hidden-gemromanceculture

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.

Casa de Pilatos
~4 min

Casa de Pilatos

1 Plaza de Pilatos, Casco Antiguo, Seville, 41003, Spain

architectureartmoorish

The name of this palace is based on a misunderstanding, but it is a beautiful one.

Castillo de San Jorge
~2 min

Castillo de San Jorge

Triana, Seville, Spain

dark-historymuseummedieval

Beneath the cheerful Mercado de Triana — where locals buy their morning fish and tourists sample tapas — lie the excavated ruins of one of the most feared buildings in Spanish history.

Hospital de la Caridad
~3 min

Hospital de la Caridad

3 Calle Temprado, Casco Antiguo, Seville, 41001, Spain

artarchitecturebaroque

The man who founded this hospital was, by most accounts, the worst person in Seville before he became the best.

Itálica
~4 min

Itálica

2 Avenida de Extremadura, Santiponce, Santiponce, 41970, Spain

ancientarchaeologyheritage

Two Roman emperors were born in this ruined city just eight kilometres north of Seville, and that fact alone makes Italica one of the most historically significant archaeological sites on the Iberian Peninsula.

Palacio de la Condesa de Lebrija
~3 min

Palacio de la Condesa de Lebrija

8 Calle Cuna, Casco Antiguo, Seville, 41004, Spain

architecturearthidden-gem

In the early twentieth century, the Countess of Lebrija did something that would be a jailable offence today: she bought Roman mosaics excavated from the ruins of Italica, the ancient city just outside Seville, and had them installed as the floors of her sixteenth-century palace.

Palacio de San Telmo
~2 min

Palacio de San Telmo

Avenida de Roma, Casco Antiguo, Seville, 41013, Spain

architecturebaroquepolitics

This extravagant Baroque palace has had more career changes than most buildings dream of.

Parque de María Luisa
~3 min

Parque de María Luisa

Paseo de las Delicias, Casco Antiguo, Seville, 41013, Spain

natureparkarchitecture

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
~3 min

Plaza de Toros de la Real Maestranza

12 Paseo de Cristóbal Colón, Casco Antiguo, Seville, 41001, Spain

iconicarchitectureculture

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.

Puente de Isabel II (Triana Bridge)
~2 min

Puente de Isabel II (Triana Bridge)

Puente de Isabel II, 41001 Sevilla

iconicengineeringviewpoint

Every city with a river has a bridge that defines its identity, and for Seville that bridge is the Puente de Isabel II — known universally as the Triana Bridge.

Real Alcázar
~5 min

Real Alcázar

Patio de Banderas, s/n, 41004 Sevilla

iconicarchitecturemoorish

This palace has been continuously occupied by royalty for over a thousand years, making it one of the oldest royal residences still in active use anywhere in the world.

Real Fábrica de Tabacos
~3 min

Real Fábrica de Tabacos

C. San Fernando, 4, 41004 Sevilla

architectureneoclassicalculture

This massive neoclassical fortress was not built to defend Seville from armies — it was built to defend tobacco from thieves.

Torre del Oro
~3 min

Torre del Oro

Paseo de Cristóbal Colón, 41001 Sevilla

iconicmilitarymaritime

For eight centuries this twelve-sided tower has watched over the Guadalquivir River, and for most of that time its job was making sure nobody got in without permission.

Explore history in Sevilla

GPS-guided narration at every landmark. Tap a spot on the map, hear the story. Every fact verified.