Santa María Magdalena, Seville

The church was built to serve a Dominican monastery, and replaced a medieval building dating from after the Christian conquest of the city in 1248.

Above the portals are an oculus, sided by two blue spheres symbolizing the mystery of the rosary, and a bell-gable (1697).

The interior has a nave and two aisles, a transept and five chapels, including the only one remaining from the previous edifice, that of the Hermandad de la Quinta Angustia (Brotherhood of the Fifth Anguish) and a presbytery.

The nave is surmounted by an octagonal dome, whose exterior is decorated with fugres resembling Inca Indians.

The Chapel of the Dulce Nombre de Jesús has another work by Roldán and a Christ Reborn by Jerónimo Hernández.

Church of Santa María Magdalena.