Seville - more than just three words
The thing about Spain was it was close enough to be real and far enough away to be unfamiliar. Being across the Pyrenees it was ripe, once they had done with all that implacable Catholic Empire bit, into being a land of exotic gipsies and brigands who would fight Napoleon at the drop of a hat, while being chivalric to capture English m’ladies - who were having quiet enough trouble with bed bugs in inns and surly muleteers. Welcome to Seville. Seville dates back to the 8th century when the Phoenicians turned up to do their thing. The Romans, under the command of Scipio Africanus, did for the Carthaginians in 206BC and sent veteran soldiers to the area. Hispalis, as it was known, grew and was the birth place of Emperors Trajan and Hadrian. I’m not sure if we will go near it but five arches of aqueduct do remain in the city. After various Vandals and Visigoths the Moors besieged Seville in 712 and Prince Abd al-Aziz made the place capital of al-Andalus until his co...