1987 Bar Sevilla
Promo 1987 Bar Sevilla. Alameda de Hércules, 93 (Sevilla)
Bar 1987 fiesta halloween 2019
La mejor fiesta de halloween de Sevilla, en Alameda de Hercules 93
A Tapas bar on a typical night in Seville.
Pregonando Sevilla
Provided to YouTube by Altafonte Music Distribution S.L.
Pregonando Sevilla · María Fernandez Muñoz
Los Exitos de Sevillanas
℗ 2014 ProExport Digital Distribution
Released on: 2014-07-17
Auto-generated by YouTube.
Actuación especial en la fiesta dedicada a Alaska en el bar 1987
24/11/2012
Paseo por Sevilla 1987. Parte 4
Ya queda menos para finalizar éste nostálgico paseo por las calles de Sevilla.
Giralda, Seville, Province of Seville, Andalusia, Spain, Europe
The Giralda is a bell tower of the Seville Cathedral in Seville, Spain. It was originally built as a minaret during the Moorish period, with a Renaissance style top subsequently added by Spaniards. The Giralda was registered in 1987 as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO along with the Alcazar and the General Archive of the Indies. The tower is 104.1 m in height and remains one of the most important symbols of the city, as it has been since medieval times. The tower began to be built under architect Ahmad Ben Baso in 1184. After Ben Baso's death, other architects continued work on the tower. The mathematician and astronomer Jabir ibn Aflah (or Geber) is also often credited with the tower's design. The tower was completed March 10, 1198 with the installation of copper spheres on the tower's top. The Almohads built similar towers in what are now Spain and Morocco during this period. The tower of the Koutoubia Mosque in Marrakesh served as a model for the Giralda and its sister, the Hassan Tower in Rabat. The tower's first two-thirds is a former minaret from the Almohad period of Seville, the upper third Spanish Renaissance architecture. After Seville was taken by the Christians in 1248 during the Reconquista, the city's mosque was converted into a church. This structure was badly damaged in a 1356 earthquake, and by 1401 the city began building the current cathedral, one of the largest churches in the world and an outstanding example of the Gothic and Baroque architectural styles. The tower survived the earthquake, but the copper spheres that originally topped the tower fell during a 1365 earthquake, and the spheres were replaced with a cross and bell. The new cathedral incorporated the tower as a bell tower and eventually built it higher during the Renaissance under architect Hernán Ruiz the Younger, who was commissioned to work on the tower in 1568. This newer section of the tower contains a large inscription of Seville's motto, NO8DO, meaning has not abandoned me. Alfonso X of Castile gave the motto to the city when it continued to support his rule during an insurrection. Covering the top of the tower is the Lily section which surrounds the enclosure with the bell. The statue stands 4 m (13 feet) in height 7 m (23 ft) with the pedestal and sit on top of the tower from its installation in 1568. Many towers have borrowed from the Giralda's design throughout history. Several church towers in the province of Seville also bear a resemblance to the tower, and may have been inspired by the Giralda. These towers, most notably those in Lebrija and Carmona, are popularly known as Giraldillas.
Seville Alcázar & Cathedral
We will visit the place and cathedral in this look at two UNESCO World Heritage Sites in Seville, Spain.
Click to Subscribe
The Alcázar is the royal palace of Seville, renowned as one of the most beautiful buildings in Spain. There was previously a Muslim fortress on this site about 1,000 years ago, which was entirely rebuilt in the 1300s and 1400s after the reconquest of Spain. Today the Alcázar is an outstanding example of mudéjar architecture, which is that special blend of Muslim and Spanish styles that displays very elaborate ornamentation. For the next several hundred years the complex expanded and grew into one of the grandest palaces in Europe. Declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1987, it is one of the most popular attractions in Spain and a must-see while you are in Seville. Our visit includes the Alcázar gardens with their labyrinths of flower-lined walks, and glorious date-palms, bananas, orange tress and citron groves. It really is a pleasing spot within the palace enclosure. The Alcázar is situated just next to the Cathedral so it is very easy to find.
We walked through the Alcázar with a local guide, which is always a great way to learn more about a place – you don’t have to go fumbling for books or walking through without understanding what you’re looking at.
The gardens are a most pleasing spot within the enclosure. They form a delicious presence, where the orange and citron diffuse their fragrance, and magic fountains spring up suddenly beneath the traveler’s feet, sprinkling with a cooling dew. The gardens actually open up earlier than the palace, so if you are up first thing in the day and you want to get a head start, take a walk in the gardens and then you can be first in line for entering the Alcázar Palace.
And then you can walk up steps to the second level, which gives you a beautiful panorama view over the gardens as you stroll along through the arcaded hallway. Parts of the second floor are still utilized by the royal family today as their private residence and official rooms for functions.
The cathedral of Seville is the world’s largest Gothic church. By any standard, the cathedral is unbelievably huge and amazingly beautiful. There are so many tall columns holding up the lofty ceiling 130 feet above the floor that it seems like you are strolling through a vast, indoor stone forest.
This grand church is located of course in the center of the historic Old Town with several prominent landmarks next to it: the Archives building and the Archbishop's Palace. Situated on a broad plaza, it's also located right next to the Alcázar Palace.
This site has been for millennia Seville’s main religious setting. Before the cathedral was constructed this was the location of one of the most important mosques in the Muslim world and 2,000 years ago it was the scene of an important Roman temple.
The entrance brings you first into the gorgeous patio courtyard. This courtyard is called Patio de los Naranjos, as in patio of the orange trees which are growing here. Formerly it was the courtyard of the original mosque on the site that was used for cleansing, for the worshipers on their way in, for ablution. This courtyard and the Giralda Tower, that we will see, are the only two remaining features of the original mosque.
Walking up the Giralda is one of the most interesting and fun things you can do while in Seville: not only will you gain great views over the vast cathedral and surrounding rooftops of the old town, but you will also have the unusual experience of walking up all those ramps that wind round and round inside the square tower.
The space of the top of the Giralda is a lovely promenade. You walk all the way around the tower to get your different views looking in all the cardinal directions, 360° panorama spread out down below all around you.
The view from its upper galleries is another one of those sites that one can never forget, with the city spread out below as a map with white, closely-packed houses looking like toys. And one looks down into patios, rooftop pools, on brown and yellow tiles, along narrow streets that wind like dark thread and then across all the housetops.
Cafe Royale Seville Original
Cafe Royale Seville Original
Photo by Ted Emmons
Taberna de Pepe Peregil, Sevilla
Algunos asistentes a la KDD de S.N. en Sevilla, Enero 2009, divirtiéndose en la Taberna de Pepe Peregil.
Paseo por Sevilla 1987. Parte 2
Las imágenes hablan por si solas. Seguimos nuestro paseo por la Sevilla de 1987.
FLAMENCO EN UN BAR SEVILLA
Bienvenidos a Sevilla
First night of weekend in Sevilla, Spain.
Ventanas NYC Flamenco night
Flamenco Night
Seville - Flamenco, night life, plaza...
Two days trip in Seville.
Masada – Live In Sevilla 2000
Tracklist:
1 Ne'eman 0:00
2 Katzatz 13:00
3 Hadasha 18:11
4 Beeroth 29:23
5 Yoreh 36:53
6 Hazor 47:04
7 Nashon 53:52
Encores
8 Lakom 1:04:04
9 Bith Aneth 1:09:30
Credits:
John Zorn - saxophone, composer, producer
Dave Douglas - trumpet
Greg Cohen - bass
Joey Baron - drums
José María Martin Valverde - recording engineer
Jorge Marín - recording engineer
Kazunori Sugiyama - associate producer
Allan Tucker - mastering
Plaza de Santa Marta, Plaza del Triunfo Sevilla
¡¡Un viaje diferente, el mapa de Andalucía con vídeos espectaculares…. en nuestra Web!!
Nos sumergimos en la magia de Sevilla y visitamos algunas de sus plazas más céntricas, como la Plaza de Santa Marta, un bello rincón que respira paz y singularidad. La encantadora Plaza de Santa Marta está adornada en el centro con una austera cruz de piedra, rodeada de naranjos y bancos de azulejos sevillanos que invitan al descanso y a la meditación, que nos sorprende por su serenidad en medio del ajetreo y bullicio de las visitas turísticas.
La Plaza del Triunfo, la más visitada de la ciudad al estar rodeada de tres monumentos declarados Patrimonio de la Humanidad, el Archivo de Indias, los Reales Alcázares y la Catedral de Sevilla. Es también una de las entradas al Barrio Santa Cruz y toma su nombre por el templete o triunfo que se levanta en ella, erigido en acción de gracias tras el terremoto de Lisboa en 1755. Su centro está dominado por la Inmaculada Concepción de María, monumento original de Coullaut Valera, levantado en 1918, a cuyos pies Sevilla le rinde homenaje cada 8 de diciembre con la tradicional ofrenda floral y el encuentro de las tunas universitarias sevillanas con sus alegres canciones.
andalucia.org/es/destinos/provincias/sevilla/municipios/sevilla/
andalucia.org/es/turismo-cultural/visitas/sevilla/.../ayuntamiento-de-sevilla/
EXPO SEVILLA 92 (2)
Exposição universal de Sevilla em 1992.