Geography of Seville
Spain - Barcelona - Seville - Valencia - Madrid
Seville City lies on the banks of the Guadalquivir and is one of the largest historical centers in Europe. Heading east of the city is a vast, undulating countryside of cereal fields and olive trees. The north of the city can be described as rural relief. If you head 90 km. north of Seville, you will find wooded hills. South of Seville is the Guadalquivir river plain that flattens out into a landscape without much variation relieved occasionally by a small town or village.
Seville is located in the South of Spain and it is a provincial capital, seat of the government and parliament of the Regional Government. It has more than 700,000 inhabitants, almost half the population of the whole province. The city of Seville is located on the plain of the Guadalquivir River which crosses the city from North to South. During the ancient times, the port of Seville played an important role in commerce between Spain and the Americas and it still remains today one of the most active river ports of the Iberian Peninsula.
Much of the province's landscape is dominated by the mighty Río Guadalquivir, one of the most important rivers of Spain. Seville itself is located at the heart of the fertile river valley while many of the province's most significant settlements are distributed around the gently rolling Guadalquivir river plain which is known as La Campiña, dotted with patchwork fields of wheat and olive groves. History has it that this area mainly was in the hands of a few wealthy landowners and today the land is still divided up into huge farm estates, interspersed with large towns rather than small villages.