Morón de la Frontera, city, Sevilla provincia (province), in the Andalusia comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), southwestern Spain, lying in the valley of the Guadalquivir River near the northwestern foothills of the Baetic Cordillera. It was founded by the Phoenicians and settled by the Romans, who called it Arunci. The Arabs later gave it a hybrid name from the Hebrew moram, meaning “elevated site,” and the Spanish frontera, referring to its 250-year position at the border of the Muslim kingdom of Granada. Reconquered by Melén Rodríguez Gallinato for Ferdinand III of León and Castile, it was ceded to Sevilla for repopulation by Christians after its Muslim inhabitants had been driven out. On a hill above the city stand the ruins of a Moorish castle, abandoned in the 17th century and partly destroyed by the French in 1812. Basically an agricultural community, Morón produces olives, olive oil, wheat, and liquors, as well as construction materials. A North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) military base is located in Morón. Pop. (2007 est.) mun., 28,165.