
The Torre del Oro

View from the riverside
The 'Torre del Oro' (
Spanish for "Gold Tower") is a military
watchtower built in
Seville,
Spain during the
Almohad dynasty in order to control access to the city via the
Guadalquivir river. The tower was built as part of the defensive works running from the
Alcázar to the river. The tower may have received its name from the golden tiles which cover its dome and may have once adorned the rest of the tower.
Constructed in the first third of the 13th century, it has twelve sides, and from its base a chain would be stretched, underwater, across the river to another fort on the opposite shore, thereby preventing enemy ships from traveling upstream to the port of Seville. The Castilian naval force commanded by
Ramón de Bonifaz broke this defense, helping
Ferdinand III of Castile capture Seville in
1248. The final and highest addition to the tower was made by
Sebastián Van der Borcht in
1760.

The Torre del Oro at night
The tower served as a
prison during the
Middle Ages and as a secure enclosure for the protection, at times, of precious metals periodically brought by the
fleet of the Indies, another possible origin for the tower's name. This last naming theory was actually created by some tourist guides to deceive tourist. In fact the tower has been called Torre del Oro since at least 1248, when Fernando III gave it to an italian named Nicoloso de la Torre del Oro.
It has appeared as the Spanish wonder in
Ensemble Studios'
Age of Empires II, and a Home City building for the Spanish civilization in the sequel,
Age of Empires III
This tower has a lesser known half sister: La Torre de la Plata.
Today the tower is a naval museum, containing engravings, letters, models, instruments, and historic documents. The museum outlines the naval history of Seville and the importance of its river.
External Link
The Torre del Oro in Seville