Semana Santa Estepa

Seville enchants

The Archaeological and Ethnographic Museum of La Puebla de Cazalla is located at the Hacienda la Fuenlonguilla. It used to be a traditional olive oil mill that was operational between the 19th and 20th centuries. Its floor plan is practically square with two differentiated areas.

The country estate, also known as Hacienda La Fuenlonguilla, is located half a kilometre along the road SE-457. It dates back to the mid-19th century, more specifically 1858. It was used for agricultural and livestock activities. The Hacienda’s original olive oil mill is still in perfect condition, as is the rest of the complex.

Fuenlonguilla Park is located to the south of the town, at the end of the promenade of the same name, next to the Hacienda Nuestra Señora del Carmen, commonly known as La Fuenlonguilla.

Hacienda de Córdoba, also known as Hacienda de Ruiz Cabal, is located on Iglesia Street, adjacent to the church and close to the Arab baths. The latter indicates that the former estate was built on the site of an old Moorish farmstead. The former kitchen garden and a large outbuilding, possibly used for agricultural and livestock purposes, have been preserved. 

The Hacienda is located between the village church and the path leading to the fountain, at the edge of the cornice overlooking the river. Although the interior has been extensively renovated, it still preserves the facade, possibly from the seventeenth century, the chapel and the tower capped with a lookout that is accessed through the attic.

This old hacienda is accessed through an elegant 17th century Baroque doorway with side pilasters and a pediment representing the Immaculate Conception.

(Also known as Hacienda de Liendo or Hacienda de Torrenueva) 

The Hacienda del Marqués de Torrenueva, also known as Hacienda de Liendo and Hacienda de Torrenueva, was the stately house of the Count of Gines.

For decades, the street on which this emblematic building had the same name as the Hacienda. However, its original name, Calle Real, was reinstated in 2009.