It’s hot as the sun here so I have fully embraced the Sevillian custom of siesta. There is nothing better than pulling into a tapas bar for snacks, cerveza, and sangria for a couple of hours in the late afternoon. After that, you have plenty of time to head back to the hotel, shower up, and head out into the cooler night. Dinner doesn’t really even begin until 10-11pm and after that its drinks. Really? This is soooo my kinda town!
Tonight I´m going to a Flamenco show and tomorrow I´m headed to Cordoba to see the big mosque there. A British guy almost has me convinced to go to a bullfight on Thursday night. I was dead against it, but now I´m strangely intrigued. . . and it´s a very Sevillian thing to do. Apparently.
outside walls of the Alcazar, the royal palace that is heavily influenced by Moorish architecture.
Cathedral of Sevilla . . . and this is only half of it!
amazing architecture in Sevilla
The white building was the setting for the opening scene in Cervante´s play, Don Juan, which he wrote while in prison in Sevilla.
The cloisters of Hospital de los Venerables, a nursing home built for old and sick priests in 1676. The sunken fountain in the middle was very cool.
This balconey was the inspiration for a scene between two crazy kids hooking up in Rossini´s opera, The Barber of Sevilla
Jardines de Murillo, part of the old orchards and vegetable plots of the Alcazar
Plaza de las Cruces
1 comment:
It looks beautiful. I'm looking for tapas bars in Philly as we speak!!
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