Walls of Seville

Walls of Seville
Native name
Spanish: Murallas de Sevilla
Location Sevilla, Spain
Coordinates 37°24′07″N 5°59′12″W / 37.401976°N 5.986553°W / 37.401976; -5.986553Coordinates: 37°24′07″N 5°59′12″W / 37.401976°N 5.986553°W / 37.401976; -5.986553
Official name: Murallas de Sevilla
Type Non-movable
Criteria Monument
Designated 1908
Reference no. RI-51-0000093
Location of Walls of Seville in Spain
Plan of the course that followed the Walls of Sevilla in the 17th century, drawn on the current street of the old town, where it included the layout of the primitive Roman walls as well as preserved sections and other data of interest.

The Walls of Seville (Spanish: Murallas de Sevilla) are a series of defensive walls surrounding the Old Town of Seville. The city has been surrounded by walls since the Roman period, and they were maintained and modified throughout the subsequent Visigoth, Islamic and finally Castilian periods. The walls remained intact until the 19th century, when they were partially demolished after the revolution of 1868. Some parts of the walls still exist, especially around the Alcázar of Seville and some curtain walls in the barrio de la Macarena.

The walls originally had eighteen gates or points of access, four of which survive today: Puerta de la Macarena, Puerta de Córdoba, Postigo del Aceite and Postigo del Alcázar. The extant parts of the walls maintain an Almohad appearance, mixed with Classicist air resulting from restorations carried out in the 18th century.

History

Construction during the Roman Empire

The defensive city Walls were built in times of Julius Caesar, approximately between the years 68 BC and 65 BC., when was quaestor of the city. This new building was aimed at replacing the old Carthaginian stockade of logs and mud that was, being expanded and refined during the rule of his son Augustus due to the growth of the city; these were protected by cyclopean towers.

The remains of the materials this stage are only recognizable in the material reused in Caliphate period in the new Walls of the Alcázar of Seville.

Expansion in the Islamic period: 9th-12th centuries

Curtain wall in the Alcazar of Seville[1]

During the Islamic rule, particularly in the year 844 the city was razed by the Vikings, and the walls were burned down. After that the emir Abderramán II, fourth Umayyad Emir of Córdoba (822–852) sent rebuild. These were again destroyed by his great grandson Abd-ar-Rahman III, eighth independent emir (912–929) and first Umayyad caliph of Córdoba (929–961), together with the gates thereof, in the year 913 thinking why attempts at secession against Córdoba, turned himself in capital of Al-Andalus.

In 1023, Abu al-Qasim first King Taifa of Seville (1023–1042), ordered to raise again the Walls to protect themselves from Christian troops, and between the 11th century and 12th century took place a major expansion that doubled the walled enclosure under the rule of Sultan Ali ibn Yusuf (1083–1143). The defense of the city was extended, widened and strengthened, expanding the space protected by the Walls in almost twice its old surface. His successors, aware of the progress achieved over the northern Christian kingdoms in the stage of the reconquista, it devoted themselves to strengthen their defenses, resulting in the final enclosure of the walls.

The gates of al-Andalusian cities were not built with the road axis but were designed angled to favor the defense and as difficult as possible the siege. Thus, the gates were about as pillboxes and the attackers had to cross several gates and courtyards before entering the city. From the heights defenders employed full force to prevent this from happening by throwing a hail of arrows and even boiling oil on the attackers.[2]

At this time they possessed a dimension of seven kilometers of Walls with 166 towers, 13 gates and 6 postigos.

The Walls after the reconquista: 13th-16th centuries

City Walls and the Torre Blanca in the barrio de la Macarena. In this image, seen one of the two postigos opened to promote communication in the intramural area with the new round.

After the Christian reconquest of the city by Ferdinand III of Castile in 1248, the Crown of Castile kept the physiognomy of the Walls that had been imposed by the Arabs during its construction, and as was usual in the kingdom of Castile, the successive monarchs swore the privileges of the city at take possession of it in some of its gates, always those of greater social or strategic importance, as symbol of power. In the Puerta de la Macarena swore Isabella I of Castile (1477), Ferdinand II of Aragon (1508), Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor and his fiancee Isabella of Portugal (1526), and finally Philip IV (1624), while the Puerta de Goles did Philip II (1570), why it was renamed Puerta Real.[3][4]

During the reign of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor carried out a major refurbishment of the public or royal gates of the Walls to integrate them into the widening promoted by the monarch in the cities and towns, in order to facilitate the transit of such common carriages in the period. These renovations affected the Puerta de Carmona, that the Puerta de la Carne, the Puerta Real, the Puerta del Arenal, the Postigo del Aceite, where Benvenuto Tortello made works in 1572, and Postigo del Carbón, which was moved from the beginning from the calle Santander until the end of it, as happened with the Puerta de Triana, originally on calle Zaragoza, which was transferred in 1585 farther north, at the confluence of that calle with de San Pablo.

Last period before being demolished: 17th-19th centuries

Pipes inside the Walls near the Alcazar of Seville

Eventually its military function ceased to matter, and began to prevail a protective value against the flooding of Guadalquivir river. It also had a commercial function, because its presence and insulation factor it made in a customs through which it channeled and regulated the access to the city, stipulated with the payment of tariff. Also this surveillance facilitated the collection of important taxes and tributes that applied to the transit of people and goods, among which highlighted the portazgo, the alcabala or gored of the Walls, special tribute existing in Castile for this type of construction; finally it became a sanitary barrier, allowing the disease control.

In the 18th century it turn out to bring remodeling in the access gates. Was rebuilt the Puerta del Arenal, was opened a small chapel on the right side of the Postigo del Aceite, where was placed a baroque altarpiece with the image of the Immaculate Conception (patron of barrio del Arenal), work by Pedro Roldán; finally it rise the Puerta de San Fernando to the height of the Royal Tobacco Factory.

In 1836, during the invasion of Andalusia by Carlist forces, was made a moat with drawbridge near the Puerta de la Macarena in order to strengthen the set; then the Walls were practically intact. From the 1868 revolution began to tear down much of them, primarily due to the growth of the city; escaped the demolition stretches from the Macarena, where still seven square towers and one octagonal, until the Puerta de Córdoba, as well as some sections in the Jardines del Valle and the sector of the Alcazar. Furthermore are conserved the towers Torre Abd el Aziz, Torre de la Plata, Torre del Oro and Torre Blanca, own of the defenses of the walled enclosure.

Gates and potigos of access to the city

Puerta de la Macarena next to the Basilica of its name.
Puerta de Córdoba, adjacent to the Iglesia de San Hermenegildo.

The access to the city was mainly performed by the called postigos and gates, which were of two types: royals or public, and private. The gates had its layered access, as seen on the Puerta de Córdoba, and lacked decoration. Between gates (puertas) and postigos counted the city with 19 accesses:

Entrance gates
Postigos of access

Preserved sections of the walls

Section from Puerta de la Macarena to the Puerta de Córdoba

This is the most extensive and best preserved section (with the exception of two postigo), includes the puertas de la Macarena and de Córdoba, the latter attached to the iglesia de San Hermenegildo, being this gate the best preserved of the Caliphate period; also it includes several towers, among which the Torre Blanca.

Section of the Jardines del Valle

It is the second section of greater length, was hidden from view in the inside of the Convento del Valle, belonging to the order of the Franciscans, which was conficated in the 19th century, being acquired by the Marquise of Villanueva who donated for the establishment of a school of religious of the sacred heart; that college disappeared in the middle of the 20th century, becoming some time later in the current Jardines del Valle (Gardens of the Valley).

Preserved sections of the walls next to the Torre de la Plata.
Walls of the alcázar

It must distinguish three types of walls in the alcázar;

• Of ashlar, probably recovered from the early Roman walls, visible near puerta del León area.
• The areas of mud made by the Almohads, some visible, as in the calle Judería, and calle Agua and others that are not visible because these are hidden by buildings of Calle San Fernando -except in some that are public-. Parallel to the walls of the alcázar, was the walls of the city, whose remains were found during works of the Metro, leaving again buried.[7]
• Other rear walls, which close the gardens of the alcázar regarding the jardines de Murillo (garcens of Murillo).
Curtain wall attached to the Torre Abd el Aziz

It is a small curtain wall, visible inside the shop of the building that stands next to the tower.

Postigo del Aceite

The third of the exterior gates of the walls that remains today.

Section in the Plaza del Cabildo

It is a small section of about 50 meters, visible from the plaza del cabildo, as well as from the back street, includes a tower.

Section attached to the Torre de la Plata

This section includes the startup of the Postigo del Carbón, and part of the walls that joined the Torre de la Plata with the Torre del Oro. In this area, were discovered in 2012 the remains of a new tower, dating from the late 11th or early 12th century.[8]

Start of the Puerta Real

It is a small curtain wall at the confluence of the calles Alfonso XIII and Goles.

References

  1. The inscription of the azulejo maintains: City Walls of Islamic period (9th-12th c.), which contains the conductions that in the Christian period supplied water to the Royal Alcázar and to the city. Restored by the Planning Department of the City of Seville thanks to the collaboration of Texsa in 1993 .
  2. "Sevilla oculta: Puerta de Córdoba" Culture of Seville
  3. "El arco de La Macarena". Sol.com. Retrieved 12 April 2009.
  4. Romualdo de Gelo Fraile. "Antiguas murallas y puertas de Sevilla". Retrieved April 12, 2009.
  5. Attached to this gate was the aqueduct known as Caños de Carmona.
  6. On the entrance arch and in Latin prayed: Hercules built me, Julius Caesar besieged me of walls and high towers, and the Saint King won me with Garci Pérez de Vargas.
  7. "A walls under rails". cronicasdelpatrimonio.
  8. "Found a new Almohad tower in the "Casa de la Moneda"". ABC (newspaper). 29 June 2012. Retrieved March 7, 2013.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.