Cascadas del Hueznar

Seville enchants

Código INE
41091
Town image
Mapa Sevilla

In Seville, La Maestranza Theatre offers an international stage inaugurated by Her Majesty The Queen on May 2nd, 1991. Designed by architects Luis Marin de Terán and Aurelio del Pozo, the building was named "the Magefesa” by the Sevillians because of its resemblance to a pressure cooker with a dome over 47 meters high.

Built for the Ibero-American Exhibition of 1929, together with the Casino, the Lope de Vega Theatre formed the Pavilion of Seville. The Lope de Vega Theatre remains, to this day, one of the most emblematic places of culture and heritage of the city of Seville.

The Triana Theatre is located in one of the most emblematic neighbourhoods of Seville, occupying one of the most historic buildings of the city, the Colegio de Los Salesianos (Salesian school).

FIBES Seville, the city's Exhibition and Conference Centre, currently has two completely different spaces in terms of style and functionality. These two centres are linked by an impressive exhibition walkway that allows the two facilities to be used as a single site. 

Seville's Holy Week is, without a doubt, Seville's biggest festivities and commemorates the passion, death and resurrection of Christ, between Palm Sunday and Easter Sunday. 

The Velá de Triana in honour of Santa Ana is the oldest festivity in Seville. It originated in the 13th century, when King Alfonso X, had an eye disease, for which he entrusted himself to the Virgin, making a promise that if he was cured, he would build a temple in honour of Santa Ana. Works began in 1266.