This post is literally just an overview of the area where most of the sights of Seville are: the Cathedral; the tower of Giralda; the Real Alcazar, which our guide book says is one of the most beautiful buildings in the world. We did not manage to go inside any of them: tickets were sold out 10 days before for both the Cathedral and the Palace. It never occured to us to pre-book let alone so much in advance.
So, we walked around the square during our second full day when we intended to visit these sights, and then on other days we would walk through this area on our way to other places.
The Catedral de Santa Maria de la Sede, or, Seville Cathedral, is one of the largest churches in the world. After its completion in the early 16th century, it supplanted Hagia Sophia as the largest cathedral in the world, a title the Byzantine church had held for a thousand years.
The Cathedral occupies the site of a great mosque built in the 12th century. Eclipsed by the Christian construction, La Giralda and the Patio de los Naranjos are the only lasting legacy of the original Moorish structure.
and lots of horse-drawn carriages for the tourists.
most of them lined with flowering jacaranda trees
All these imposing entrances that we could not access!
We got to the Giralda, the bell tower. Its height is 105 metres. This is the former minaret of the mosque that stood on the site under Muslim rule. It was converted into a bell tower after the Reconquista.
We were also able to go inside this building, the Diputacion Sevilla, Casa de la Provincia and had a look at their temporary exhibition
Eduardo Sanchez-Beato, Peligrosa Trama, 2021
This one shocked us. Apparently the title translates: Dangerous Plot. Seville is such a religious city, so, yes, they must find it blasphemous?
looking closer
Jose Luis Romeral, Atentado, 1992
into the Patio de Banderas
It's odd: I really liked this square, and yet we never spent any time in it, we just walked through it. I wanted to eat here, and yet we never managed it.
Then, through the narrow streets again,
No comments:
Post a Comment