Feria

Seville, beautiful and diverse

This 18th-century palace, located in the historic centre of Huévar del Aljarafe, has a façade that combines rendered and whitewashed walls with brick. The impressive main entrance and the circular corner tower, with horseshoe-arched windows, are made in brick. The rest of the building is whitewashed and crowned with decorative merlons.

The former Palace belonged to the Counts of Cepeda, whose most prominent member was Saint Theresa of Jesus. Her image appears above the doorway. Its baroque façade from the mid-18th century is one the most beautiful in Osuna. The portal is framed with stone estipites, while the balcony is crowned by the family coat-of-arms flanked by two almost life-size halberdiers.

The Marquisate of the Peña de los Enamorados is a Spanish noble title created by King Carlos II in 1679 for Jerónimo Francisco de Rojas y Rojas, son of the 3rd Lord of the Peña de los Enamorados. Its name refers to the Peña de los Enamorados, located in the Andalusian municipality of Antequera, in the province of Malaga.

The Palace of the Counts of Puerto Hermoso, commonly known by the name of its former owner as Santaella Palace, is an excellent example of Ecija’s palatial houses and 18th-century civil architecture. 

The inside of Pepe Hara's manor house has a Sevillian feel to it, but its exterior has a modernist touch that contrasts with the rest of the buildings on San Bartolomé Street in Aguadulce.

Early 17th century farmhouse built on a large rock. It belonged to the Count of Santa Coloma, Count of Gerena. It currently belongs to the Marquis of Albaserrada.

It was declared a Site of Cultural Interest (BIC) 1984.

The Palace of the Marquis of Cerverales is the most significant civil building in the city of Estepa; a clear example of the civil architecture of Estepa. It is listed as a National Monument since 1984.