Sevilla, Spain

Evergreen city guide with quick facts, travel, business, and culture.

Overview

Seville is Andalusia's capital and soul — a city where the Real Alcázar's Moorish gardens shimmer in the heat, flamenco is danced and lived rather than performed, tapas are a way of life rather than a meal, and Semana Santa and Feria de Abril define the emotional calendar of the year.

Flamenco

Intimate tablaos in Triana and Santa Cruz, the Museo del Baile Flamenco, spontaneous performances at ferias and bars, and the Bienal de Flamenco (biennial festival, September–October in even years) — the world's most important flamenco event.

Moorish & Christian Heritage

Real Alcázar (Moorish palace and gardens), Cathedral and Giralda (largest Gothic church, Moorish minaret), Barrio de Santa Cruz (Jewish quarter), Torre del Oro (Moorish watchtower on the river), Plaza de España (1929 Expo), and the Archivo de Indias (colonial Americas archive, UNESCO).

Tapas & Food

Bar-hopping through Feria, Triana, Santa Cruz and Macarena — a tapa and a caña at each stop. Iberian ham (jamón ibérico), salmorejo (thick cold tomato soup), espinacas con garbanzos (spinach and chickpeas), pescaíto frito (fried fish), and the Mercado de Triana and Mercado de la Feria.

Festivals

Semana Santa (Holy Week — emotional processions with ornate pasos and penitents), Feria de Abril (six days of casetas, flamenco dresses, sherry, horses and dancing until dawn), and the Bienal de Flamenco.

History

Seville's layered history runs from Phoenician trading post (Spal) through Roman Hispalis (Trajan and Hadrian were born nearby in Italica), Moorish Isbiliya (the Alcázar and the Giralda date from this era), to the 16th-century golden age when Seville held the monopoly on trade with the Americas — every ship to and from the New World passed through the city, bringing wealth that built the Cathedral and funded the artistic flowering of Velázquez, Murillo and Zurbarán. The 1929 Ibero-American Exposition produced the Plaza de España and the María Luisa Park. Modern Seville hosted Expo '92 and continues to live through its two great emotional poles: the solemnity of Semana Santa and the joy of the Feria de Abril.

Culture

Seville has the deepest tapas culture in Spain. The ritual: move between bars, one or two tapas at each, standing or on a stool. Salmorejo (thicker, creamier than gazpacho, topped with ham and egg) is Andalusian to the core. Jamón ibérico de bellota from the Huelva sierra is a near-religious experience. Pescaíto frito (fried baby squid, anchovies, shrimp) is the summer staple. Espinacas con garbanzos is Seville's signature comfort dish. Wash it all down with a copa of Manzanilla sherry from Sanlúcar de Barrameda. Festivals: Semana Santa (March/April — Holy Week processions), Feria de Abril (two weeks after Easter — Andalusian fair), Bienal de Flamenco (September–October, even years), Noche de los Investigadores (September — science night at the Alcázar). Museums: Real Alcázar, Museo de Bellas Artes (Spain's second-finest art collection after the Prado), Museo del Baile Flamenco, Archivo General de Indias (UNESCO — colonial Americas archive), Centro Andaluz de Arte Contemporáneo (in a former monastery).

Practical Info

Safety: Seville is safe. Pickpocketing occurs around the Cathedral, Alcázar and on the tram. Standard precautions with bags and phones. Extreme summer heat (40°C+) is a health risk — hydrate, seek shade during 14:00–18:00. Emergency: 112. Language: Spanish (Andalusian accent — faster, with dropped consonants). English spoken in tourist areas. Flamenco vocabulary is its own world. Currency: EUR. Cards accepted at most businesses. Cash essential for tapas bar-hopping (many traditional bars are cash-only for small amounts), market stalls and flamenco tablao tips.
Travel Overview

Seville runs on passion, heat and tradition. The Real Alcázar — a Moorish palace expanded by Christian kings, its courtyards and gardens as beautiful as the Alhambra but less crowded — sits at the city's historical heart alongside the Cathedral of Seville (the largest Gothic church in the world, with Columbus's tomb and the Giralda bell tower, originally a Moorish minaret). The Barrio de Santa Cruz, the former Jewish quarter, is a labyrinth of whitewashed alleys, flower-hung balconies, hidden plazas and orange trees. Plaza de España — the vast semicircular building constructed for the 1929 Expo — is one of the most photogenic squares in Europe, with tiled alcoves representing each Spanish province and a canal you can row on. Flamenco in Seville is not a tourist show — it is a living art form performed in intimate tablaos in Triana and Santa Cruz, where the audience sits close enough to hear the dancer's heels crack on the wooden floor. The tapas culture is the deepest in Spain: Sevillanos bar-hop through the evening, ordering a tapa and a caña at each stop — the Feria, Triana and Macarena neighbourhoods each have their own circuits. Semana Santa (Holy Week) transforms the city for a week of breathtaking processions — ornate floats (pasos) carrying religious figures are carried through the streets by costaleros while penitents walk in pointed hoods. Two weeks later, the Feria de Abril erupts: six days of flamenco dresses, casetas (marquees), sherry, horses and dancing until dawn.

Discover Sevilla

The Real Alcázar is one of the oldest palaces still in use in Europe — a complex that layers Moorish, Mudéjar, Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque architecture across centuries. The Patio de las Doncellas is the visual centrepiece, with its reflecting pool, intricate stucco work and tiled walls. The gardens cascade in terraces of orange trees, fountains, pavilions and hedged pathways. Across the plaza, the Cathedral of Seville — built on the site of the city's great mosque — is the largest Gothic cathedral in the world by volume. The Giralda tower, originally the mosque's minaret (1184), offers panoramic views from the top (a ramp, not stairs — originally built so the muezzin could ride a horse to the top). Inside, Columbus's elaborate tomb is carried by four allegorical figures representing the kingdoms of Spain.

Diplomatic missions in Sevilla

1 embassy based in this city, grouped by region.