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Seville |
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Seville (səvĭl`, sĕ`–), Span. Sevilla, city (1990 pop. 678,218), capital of Seville prov. and leading city of Andalusia, SW Spain, on the Guadalquivir River. Connected with the Atlantic by the river and by a canal accessible to oceangoing vessels, Seville is a major port as well as an important industrial, cultural, and tourist center. Wines, fruit, olives, cork, and minerals are exported. Its industries include the manufacture of tobacco, armaments, explosives, perfume, porcelain, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, textiles, and machinery. It has a university (founded 1502).
Points of InterestSeville has kept much of its Moorish aspect. The Gothic cathedral (1401–1519), one of the world's largest, occupies the site of a former mosque, of which two parts remain—the Court of Oranges and the beautiful Giralda Giralda (hēräl`dä), the famous tower adjoining the Cathedral of Seville, Spain. HistoryThe ancient Hispalis, Seville was important in Phoenician times. It was favored by the Romans, who made it a judicial center of Baetica prov. and who built the nearby city of Italica (where the emperors Trajan and Hadrian were born), of which some ruins remain. Seville continued as the chief city of S Spain under the Vandals and the Visigoths. In the 6th cent. Seville was a center of learning. Falling to the Moors in 712, it was (c.1023–1091) the seat of an independent emirate under the Abbadids Abbadids (ă`bədĭdz), Arab dynasty in Spain that ruled Seville from 1023 to 1091. |
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| While the fight for marriage equality here at home inches along--if it moves at all--two male air force privates in Seville, Spain, wed in grand fashion September 15 without controversy. Pavilion during the Universal Expo in Seville, Spain. However, the improvement in female condition might have backfired, biologists including Robertson and Jose Tella of Donana Biological Station in Seville, Spain, suggested at the beginning of the decade. |
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