Before the area was named Seville, the indigenous Taino people called it Maima, and it’s here that historians say Christopher Columbus first encountered the island’s people in 1494.
On a guided tour, visitors discover remnants of a Taino village and the 16th-century Spanish settlement of Sevilla la Nueva, including ruins of the church of Peter Martyr, a fortified castle, and the base of a sugar mill. The Great House of the 17th-century British sugar plantation still stands in its original glory. A classic wattle-and-daub construction, the house is awash in English tiling and thick mahogany arches and doors. Visitors can also explore the grounds on horseback.