Self-guided Sightseeing Tour #2 in Seville, Spain
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Tour Facts
6.8 km
115 m
Experience Seville in Spain in a whole new way with our self-guided sightseeing tour. This site not only offers you practical information and insider tips, but also a rich variety of activities and sights you shouldn't miss. Whether you love art and culture, want to explore historical sites or simply want to experience the vibrant atmosphere of a lively city - you'll find everything you need for your personal adventure here.
Activities in SevilleIndividual Sights in SevilleSight 1: Iglesia de San Román
The church of San Román in Seville is one of the oldest temples in the city, dating back to 1356. It is part of the so-called Gothic-Mudejar churches.
Sight 2: Iglesia de Los Terceros
The old convent of Nuestra Señora de la Consolación, known as the convent of the Third Franciscans because it is of that order, is located in the city of Seville. It was founded in 1602. The church is a Catholic temple and the main headquarters of the Brotherhood of the Supper.
Wikipedia: Convento de los Terceros Franciscanos (Sevilla) (ES)
Sight 3: Iglesia de Santa Catalina
The Church of Santa Catalina is a church located in Sevilla, Spain, constructed in the fourteenth century. It was declared Bien de Interés Cultural in 1912.
Sight 4: Iglesia de San Pedro
The church of San Pedro is a Catholic temple in Gothic-Mudejar style built in the fourteenth century and renovated in the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries. It is located in the Plaza de San Pedro in the city of Seville and is the seat of the Parish of San Pedro and San Juan Bautista.
Sight 5: Convento de Santa Inés
The convent of Santa Inés de Sevilla, located in the central street of Doña María Coronel in this city, was founded in 1374 by a lady of illustrious Sevillian family, María Coronel, widow of Juan de la Cerda. This foundation was carried out on the site of the family palace of his father, the Lord of Aguilar, to which they later added some adjoining houses, such as that of Juan Rodríguez Tello, on which the church would later be built. A total of forty women entered this convent at the time of its foundation
Sight 6: Setas de Sevilla
Get Ticket*Setas de Sevilla or Las Setas, initially titled Metropol Parasol, is a large, predominantly wood structure located at La Encarnación square in the old quarter of Seville, Spain. It accommodates a traditional market, restaurants, a performance square, archaeological museum — and 'rooftop' terrace with a panoramic view of Seville's old city.
Sight 7: Iglesia de la Anunciación
The Church of the Annunciation is a Catholic church in Seville. It has in its crypt the pantheon of Illustrious Sevillians, where Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer is buried, among other figures. It is located on Calle Laraña, next to the Faculty of Fine Arts of the University of Seville.
Sight 8: Iglesia de la Misericordia
The Church of Mercy in Seville is a Catholic temple that is located inside the Old Town of the city.
Sight 9: Iglesia de San Andrés
The church of San Andrés is a Catholic church that is the seat of a parish in Seville. It is located in the square of the same name. Its construction dates back to the fourteenth century and the architect who designed the project is unknown. Its basic style is Gothic-Mudejar, with Baroque-style reforms, carried out by the architect Pedro de Silva in the eighteenth century.
Sight 10: Palacio del Marqués de la Motilla
The palace of the Marquis of La Motilla appears in the heart of the historic centre of Seville as if it were a medieval construction, at the confluence of Calle Laraña with Calle Cuna in the Old Town. The project was carried out between 1921 and 1924 and was completed in 1931. The property, which was owned by the Marquis of Valencina y de la Motilla, was acquired by a businessman from Cordoba in 2022.
Sight 11: Iglesia del Salvador
The Church of San Salvador is a church in Seville, Spain. It is the second-largest church in Seville, after the city's cathedral.
Sight 12: Monumento a Martínez Montañés
The Martínez Montañés monument is an urban sculpture located in the Plaza del Salvador, in Seville, Andalusia, Spain. It is dedicated to the sculptor Juan Martínez Montañés (1568-1649), who settled in the city and became one of the greatest exponents of the Sevillian school of sculpture.
Sight 13: Iglesia de Nuestra Señora de la Paz
The hospital of Nuestra Señora de la Paz in Seville, also known as the asylum of San Juan de Dios, is an old hospital whose construction began in the sixteenth century, it is listed as an Asset of Cultural Interest. It is located in the center of the city, with facades to the Plaza del Salvador and Calle Sagasta.
Wikipedia: Hospital de Nuestra Señora de la Paz (Sevilla) (ES), Website
Sight 14: Edificio La Adriática
The building of La Adriática was erected in Seville between 1914 and 1922 on Calle Cánovas del Castillo, now Avenida de la Constitución.
Sight 15: Fernando el Santo
The monument to San Fernando is a monument dedicated to Ferdinand III of Castile, conqueror of Seville in 1248 and declared a saint by the Catholic Church in 1671. It was made by several artists and is located in the Plaza Nueva, in the Arenal neighborhood, Casco Antiguo district.
Sight 16: Iglesia de San Buenaventura
St. Buenaventura's Church is situated in the calle Carlos Cañal in the Casco Antiguo of Seville, Andalusia, Spain. It was the church of the Franciscan College of San Buenaventura that was destroyed in the 19th century.
Sight 17: Capilla de Montserrat
The Chapel of Montserrat in Seville is a religious building of Catholic worship located in the historic center of the city. It is the headquarters of the Brotherhood of Montserrat, a corporation that carries out an annual procession in the afternoon and evening of Good Friday.
Sight 18: Iglesia de la Magdalena
Santa María Magdalena is a Baroque church in Seville, southern Spain. It was built in 1691-1709 to a design of architect Leonardo de Figueroa.
Sight 19: Iglesia de Santo Ángel
The church of Santo Ángel in Seville was the temple of the convent of Santo Ángel de la Guarda, of the Order of Carmen Descalzo. This convent had a school. It was founded in the sixteenth century.
Sight 20: Capilla de San José
The Chapel of San José is a chapel located in Sevilla, Spain. It was declared Bien de Interés Cultural in 1912.
Sight 21: Studebaker
Enrique Orce Mármol is a Sevillian ceramist, painter and drawing teacher of the first half of the twentieth century whose work ranges from advertising ceramics to ceramics with religious motifs.
Sight 22: Monumento a Pastora Imperio
The Monument to Pastora Imperio is dedicated to this artist of flamenco and cinema of the twentieth century. It is the work of the sculptor Luis Álvarez Duarte and is located at the intersection of Velázquez and O'Donnell streets in Seville, Andalusia, Spain. It was made thanks to the full patronage of the XVIII Duchess of Alba. It was inaugurated in 2006.
Sight 23: Sala San Hermenegildo
The church of the Convent of San Hermenegildo is located in Seville, in the Plaza de la Concordia, on its corner with Calle Jesús del Gran Poder. It was the church of a convent school.
Sight 24: puerta Real
The Puerta Real, called until 1570 as Puerta de Goles, was one of the gates of the walled enclosure of the city of Seville (Andalusia). It was located at the confluence of the calles de Alfonso XII, Gravina, Goles and San Laureano, and today only is it a cloth of the wall on which it was based, in which there is embedded a stone that was part of the gate.
Sight 25: Iglesia Nuestra Señora de la O
The church of Nuestra Señora de la O is a Roman Catholic church located on Calle Castilla, in the neighborhood of Triana, Seville, Andalusia, Spain. It is the headquarters of the Brotherhood of the O.
Sight 26: Centro Cerámica Triana
The Triana Ceramic Centre is a museum created in 2014 by the Seville City Council, with the collaboration of the Junta de Andalucía, to preserve and promote the city's ceramic tradition.
Sight 27: Iglesia de San Jacinto
The church of San Jacinto in Seville is the temple of a Dominican convent founded in the seventeenth century. It is located on the corner of San Jacinto and Pagés del Corro streets, in the Triana neighborhood.
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