Kingdom of Seville
The Kingdom of Seville (Spanish: Reino de Sevilla) was a territorial jurisdiction of the Crown of Castile since 1248 until Javier de Burgos' provincial division of Spain in 1833. This was a "kingdom" ("reino") in the second sense given by the Diccionario de la lengua española de la Real Academia Española: the Crown of Castile consisted of several such kingdoms. Seville was one of the Four Kingdoms of Andalusia. Its extent is detailed in Respuestas Generales del Catastro de Ensenada (1750-54), which was part of the documentation of a census. Falling largely within the present day autonomous community of Andalucia, it included roughly the territory of the present-day provinces of Huelva, Seville, and Cádiz, the Antequera Depression in the present-day province of Málaga, and also some municipalities in the present-day autonomous communities of Extremadura in the province of Badajoz.
Kingdom of Seville Reino de Sevilla | |||||||||||||||
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Realm of the Crown of Castile Region of the Kingdom of Spain | |||||||||||||||
1248–1833 | |||||||||||||||
Coat of Arms
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Jurisdictional seigneuries of the Kingdom of Seville according to the Respuestas Generales del Catastro de Ensenada (1750-54). | |||||||||||||||
• Type | Manoralism | ||||||||||||||
History | |||||||||||||||
• Conquest of Seville | 1248 | ||||||||||||||
• Territorial division of Spain | 1833 | ||||||||||||||
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Today part of | Spain |
Like the other kingdoms within Spain, the Kingdom of Seville was abolished by the 1833 territorial division of Spain.
Notes
See also
- Seville
- es:Anexo:Localidades del Reino de Sevilla, a list of the localities that composed the Kingdom of Jaén, according to the Catastro of Ensenada (1750-54); this page is an appendix to the Spanish-language Wikipedia.