Andalusia Quiz
Seville, Granada, Cordoba, the Alhambra, flamenco, and Moorish Spain — how well do you know Andalucía?
Seville, Granada, Cordoba, the Alhambra, flamenco, and Moorish Spain — how well do you know Andalucía?
Spain produces about 40% of the world's olive oil — and over half of that comes from a single Andalusian province, Jaén, which has 60+ million olive trees. From Granada's Alhambra and Córdoba's Mezquita to the flamenco bars of Seville and the sherry triangle of Jerez, Andalucía is where Roman, Moorish, Jewish, Christian, and Roma cultures fused into Spain's most evocative south.
Each round presents 10 randomized questions from a pool of 50, with four multiple-choice options and instant feedback after every answer. Your final score comes with a performance tier and shareable results.
You'll explore Andalucía's eight provinces and 8.5 million people, the legacy of al-Andalus and the Reconquista, monuments from the Alhambra to the Mezquita and Seville's Giralda, flamenco's UNESCO-listed cante and baile, sherry styles from fino to Pedro Ximénez, dishes like gazpacho, salmorejo, and jamón ibérico, and Andalusian icons from García Lorca and Picasso to Camarón de la Isla.
The Alhambra is a vast palace and fortress complex in Granada, built largely by the Nasrid dynasty from 1238 onward. Its courtyards, mocárabe vaults, and gardens earned it UNESCO World Heritage status in 1984.
Granada — the last Muslim emirate in Iberia — surrendered to the Catholic Monarchs Ferdinand and Isabella on 2 January 1492, ending nearly 800 years of al-Andalus and the Reconquista.
Sherry is a fortified white wine produced under the Jerez-Xérès-Sherry DO in Andalucía's 'sherry triangle' — Jerez de la Frontera, Sanlúcar de Barrameda, and El Puerto de Santa María. Styles range from bone-dry fino and manzanilla to sweet Pedro Ximénez.
Last updated: May 2026