Cascadas del Hueznar

Seville enchants

Theme

The Lime Museum is located at the heart of the area known as "Las Caleras de la Sierra", in Morón de la Frontera.

The village is registered in the General Catalogue of Andalusian Historical Heritage as an Asset of Cultural Interest, under the heading of Site of Ethnological Interest.

In 2009, a former farm building that was used as a chicken coop was converted into the Museo de Aperos de Labranza, or Museum of Farm Implements, in Castilleja del Campo. The couple José Moreno and María Zaragoza, and their son, are behind this initiative. The Moreno-Zaragoza family’s private collection of over 2000 farm implements and antique items were collected over the years by the owners.

The origin of the Fundación Fondo de Cultura de Sevilla (Focus) has to be attributed to the cultural activity that the company Abengoa began in 1972 and that first became manifest in the edition of the work Temas Sevillanos.

A visit to this museum is an ideal opportunity to learn about Estepa’s mantecado tradition, the hallmark of this town. The diorama provides a detailed explanation of how mantecados and polvorones are made, from reception of the raw material to kneading, baking and packaging.

Considered the largest chocolate museum in Spain, it offers a chronological tour of the cocoa culture through its fifteen rooms.

Its contents include sections dedicated to the Mayan and Aztec cultures, an audio-visual show on the history of chocolate, a diorama recreating the cocoa harvest and rooms on the manufacture of the product.

Osuna is home to the Andalusian “Vintage Toy Museum” with over 4,000 items from the 1970s and 1980s. This space is considered as another tourist attraction, both for residents and visitors, that will enrich the city's tourist offering. It is Spain’s only toy museum dedicated exclusively to a specific period (the 1970s and 1980s).

The brothers Serafín (1871-1938) and Joaquín (1873-1944) Álvarez Quintero were born in Utrera, where they lived their childhood years.