Palacio de San Telmo
The Palace of San Telmo is a historic edifice in Seville, southern Spain, formerly the Universidad de Mareantes, now the seat of the presidency of the Andalusian Autonomous Government. via Wikipedia
Coming soon on iOS — be first to walk Seville offline.
Palacio de San Telmo is one of 50 sights worth the detour in Seville — all within walking distance and all bundled offline in Voyage GO. Download the Seville pack before you go and Palacio de San Telmo sits on your map with no signal needed, and fills your travel passport the moment you walk past.
More to see in Seville
- Casa de MurilloThe Casa de Murillo is a historical house in Seville, Andalusia, Spain, at number 8, calle Santa Teresa, in the historic Barrio de Santa Cruz.
- Archivo de IndiasThe Archivo General de Indias, often simply called the Archive of the Indies, was created by Charles III and inaugurated in 1785.
- Torre del OroThe Torre del Oro is a dodecagonal military watchtower in Seville, southern Spain.
- Palacio de las DueñasPalacio de las Dueñas is a palace in Seville, Spain, currently belonging to the House of Alba.
- Caños de CarmonaThe Caños de Carmona is a Roman aqueduct built during the first century BC to supply water from a spring in the ancient Roman city of Irippo –current Alcalá de Guadaíra– to the ancient Roman city of Hispalis –current Seville–, both in the ancient Roman province of Hispania Ulterior –current Spain–.
- Muralla-AcueductoThe Caños de Carmona is a Roman aqueduct built during the first century BC to supply water from a spring in the ancient Roman city of Irippo –current Alcalá de Guadaíra– to the ancient Roman city of Hispalis –current Seville–, both in the ancient Roman province of Hispania Ulterior –current Spain–.