The municipality of the Ronquillo is located in the noroccidental sector of the province of Seville, being adjacent with the one of Huelva. It is located in last spurs of Brown Mountain range in his reduction towards the valley of the Guadalquivir. In 1.996 it counted on a population of 1,419 inhabitants.
At Roman time, this zone was occupied by small villages little populated, whose inhabitants dedicated themselves to the cattle ranch, the hunting and the mining operation. At Arab time, establishment certainty does not exist, although perhaps there was it. The present population can have its origin in century XIV, like village of farmers who would occupy the immediate surroundings of the two sales of "the Hoarse one", being able to be repoblada in century XV. Thanks to the sales and to the adjacent operations greater importance becomes a small population, reaching during century XVI, when the zone is crossing site for the merchandise that from Seville leave to Extremadura and Castile. The Sale of the Hoarse one would be located in the present Seat of the Constitution, being the axis around as it would be woven the framework of houses, commerce and establishments of rest that are giving form to the urban nucleus. The locality belongs at the end of Santa Olalla de Cala until principles of the century XIX, in which the title of Villa is reached. The present name is the diminutivo of the nickname of the proprietor of the two sales.
The urban nucleus is crossed of north to the south by the N-630 highway (Seville-Me'rida), that works like estructurante axis of the locality. The sector located to the west of the passage is something greater than the Eastern one, although a certain development in the direction of the cemetery and throughout the highway begins to take place that takes to the dam of Cove. Most of the urban plot is formed by irregular apples. In the suroccidental sector, next to the highway, a small zone of unifamiliares villas exists.
Between its constructions of artistic historical interest they emphasize the church of the Divine Salvador (century XVII, with later remodelings) and the hermitage of Our Lady of Grace (century XVI).