Bullfighting remains a popular sport in parts of Spain, especially in Seville. Here you can visit Plaza de Toros, one of the oldest bullrings in the world. The arena’s construction began in 1762 and was completed in 1881; it can hold up to 14,000 spectators.
(Inside of Seville’s bullfighting arena, courtesy Wikimedia and Harlock20)
We stopped by the arena late in the day so we didn’t have a chance to do a guided tour, which I think would have been interesting. Besides visiting the inside of the arena (you need to take a tour or see a bullfight to do so), the tour includes a visit to a museum of bullfighting, the chapel where matadors pray and the infirmary where they’re patched up when the bull wins the fight.
There are lots of posters of old bullfights on the walls of the arena.
A few statues are scattered outside, the most interesting to me being that of Curro Romera, a famous and popular bullfighter from Seville. He retired at the age of 66 after 42 years in the ring.