Difference between revisions of "Vienna"

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[[Image:Stephansdom.jpg|thumb|right|250px|St. Stephens Cathedral under renovation in 2007.]]
 
[[Image:Stephansdom.jpg|thumb|right|250px|St. Stephens Cathedral under renovation in 2007.]]
  
'''Vienna''' ([[German]]: Wien) is the capital of [[Austria]]. With 1,600,000 inhabitants, it's by far the biggest city of Austria - [[Graz]] (population: 250,000) comes second. The [[Danube]] flows through Vienna.
+
'''Vienna''' ([[German]]: Wien, [[Hungarian]]: Bécs) is the capital of [[Austria]]. With 1,600,000 inhabitants, it's by far the biggest city of Austria - [[Graz]] (population: 250,000) comes second. The [[Danube]] flows through Vienna.
  
 
Today, Vienna is home to several important international organizations: the [[United Nations]], [[OPEC]], and the International Atomic Energy Association.
 
Today, Vienna is home to several important international organizations: the [[United Nations]], [[OPEC]], and the International Atomic Energy Association.
  
 
Amongst its most impressive landmarks is the imposing 12th-century masterpiece of [[Gothic]] architecture,  [http://europeforvisitors.com/switzaustria/articles/st_stephens_cathedral_vienna.htm St. Stephen's Cathedral].
 
Amongst its most impressive landmarks is the imposing 12th-century masterpiece of [[Gothic]] architecture,  [http://europeforvisitors.com/switzaustria/articles/st_stephens_cathedral_vienna.htm St. Stephen's Cathedral].
 +
 +
<br>
  
 
==History and Culture==
 
==History and Culture==
First settled by the Celts around 500 B.C., Vienna was an important settlement in the Roman Empire, which called it Vindobona. By the 17th century - when the court was moved from [[Prague]] to Vienna -  it was the seat of the [[Holy Roman Empire]], ruled by the Hapsburg dynasty, which continued to reign into the early years of the 20th-century. In the "Anschluss" of 1938, Vienna capitulated under control of the [[Third Reich]]. After [[WWII]], the city  was governed by the [[Allied Commission for Austria]]  for three years. (Like Germany, Austria became divided into an American, British, French and Russian zone, and this division was mimicked by the administration of Vienna.) Since 1948, Vienna has been the capital of the Republic of Austria.
+
First settled by the Celts around 500 B.C., Vienna was an important settlement in the Roman Empire, which called it Vindobona. By the 17th century - when the court was moved from [[Prague]] to Vienna -  it was the seat of the [[Holy Roman Empire]], ruled by the Hapsburg dynasty, which continued to reign into the early years of the 20th-century. In the "Anschluss" of 1938, Vienna capitulated under control of the [[Third Reich]]. After [[WWII]], the city  was governed by the [[Allied Commission for Austria]]  for ten years. (Like Germany, Austria became divided into an American, British, French and Russian zone, and this division was mimicked by the administration of Vienna.) Since 1955, Vienna has been the capital of the Republic of Austria.
  
Vienna has one of the richest cultural histories of any city in [[Europe]], with a particularly impressive musical tradition - the First Viennese School of composers consisted of [[Haydn]], [[Mozart]], [[Beethoven]] and [[Schubert]], whilst later the [[Waltz|waltzes]] and operettas of [[Johann Strauss]] Jr. came to epitomize the city's imperial grandeur and elegance. Johannes [[Brahms]] also made his home in Vienna, whose streets he claimed to know inside-and-out from his long walks around the city. Anton Bruckner, the composer of nine symphonies, taught harmony at the Vienna Academy for Music and Dramatic Arts; his admirer  [[Gustav Mahler]] became conductor of the Vienna State Opera in 1897 and wrote his nine symphonies evoking Vienna's peculiar juxtaposition of the urban and the pastoral.
+
Vienna has one of the richest cultural histories of any city in [[Europe]], with a particularly impressive musical tradition - the First Viennese School of composers consisted of [[Haydn]], [[Mozart]], [[Beethoven]] and [[Schubert]], whilst later the [[waltz]]es and operettas of [[Johann Strauss]] Jr. came to epitomize the city's imperial grandeur and elegance. Johannes [[Brahms]] also made his home in Vienna, whose streets he claimed to know inside-and-out from his long walks around the city. Anton Bruckner, the composer of nine symphonies, taught harmony at the Vienna Academy for Music and Dramatic Arts; his admirer  [[Gustav Mahler]] became conductor of the Vienna State Opera in 1897 and wrote his nine symphonies evoking Vienna's peculiar juxtaposition of the urban and the pastoral.
  
During the long reign of [[Kaiser]] Franz Joseph I, who occupied the throne from just after the revolution of 1848 to his death in 1916, Vienna enjoyed a golden age of culture. Franz Joseph was responsible, among other things, for taking down the city walls and commissioning numerous grand buildings on the "Ringstrasse," the name for the circular street which encompasses the city center. Among these numerous stunning examples of imperial architecture are the State Opera House, City Hall, the Musikverein (home of the Vienna Philhamonic), the symmetrical pair of museums known as the Museum of Historical Art and Natural History, the Parliament building, and the Votive Church (commissioned in neo-Gothic style as a thanks to God after a failed assassination attempt in 1853).
+
During the long reign of [[Kaiser]] Franz Joseph I, who occupied the throne from just after the revolution of 1848 to his death in 1916, Vienna enjoyed a golden age of culture. Franz Joseph was responsible, among other things, for taking down the city walls and commissioning numerous grand buildings on the "Ringstrasse," the name for the circular street which encompasses the city center. Among these numerous stunning examples of imperial architecture are the State Opera House, City Hall, the Musikverein (home of the Vienna Philharmonic), the symmetrical pair of museums known as the Museum of Historical Art and Natural History, the Parliament building, and the Votive Church (commissioned in neo-Gothic style as a thanks to God after a failed assassination attempt in 1853).
  
Toward the end of the Austrian empire, new currents in art centered in Vienna showed undercurrents of unease and dread. In painting, the [[Expressionist]] works of [[Egon Schiele]] and [[Gustav Klimt]] seemed to foreshadow the city's decline. In Music, the Second Viennese School comprising [[Arnold Schoenberg]], [[Alban Berg]], and [[Anton von Webern]] stretched tonal dissolution and thematic complexity all the way past its breaking point, and after the First World War tried to put it back together again under new rules, in much the same way that Vienna was searching for her relevance after the fall of the empire.
+
As the empire's power waned in the first two decades of the 20th century, new developments in art centered in Vienna showed undercurrents of unease and dread. In painting, the [[Expressionist]] works of [[Egon Schiele]] and [[Gustav Klimt]] seemed to foreshadow the city's decline. In music, the Second Viennese School comprising [[Arnold Schoenberg]], [[Alban Berg]], and [[Anton Webern]] stretched tonal dissolution and thematic complexity all the way past its breaking point, and after the First World War tried to put it back together again under new rules, in much the same way that Vienna was searching for her relevance after the fall of the empire.
  
 
==Geography and Layout==
 
==Geography and Layout==
Line 22: Line 24:
  
 
The other 22 districts also have long histories as suburbs or villages, and each accordingly has a distinct architectural flavor. For example, the third district, just east of the city center, is named "Landstrasse," or "Country Road," and accordingly contains many 18th and 19th-century buildings which were country estates, including the house on Ungargasse where Beethoven finished his 9th symphony. As another example, the second district, Leopoldstadt, was a Jewish ghetto from the early 17th-century through the [[WWII|second world war]], and thus has a strikingly different style of architecture.
 
The other 22 districts also have long histories as suburbs or villages, and each accordingly has a distinct architectural flavor. For example, the third district, just east of the city center, is named "Landstrasse," or "Country Road," and accordingly contains many 18th and 19th-century buildings which were country estates, including the house on Ungargasse where Beethoven finished his 9th symphony. As another example, the second district, Leopoldstadt, was a Jewish ghetto from the early 17th-century through the [[WWII|second world war]], and thus has a strikingly different style of architecture.
 +
 +
==Vienna Today==
 +
As with many European cities, the population of Vienna is growing rapidly as a result of immigration.<ref>Between 2006 and 2007, the net migration increased by 25%, see http://www.wien.gv.at/english/politics/statistics/pdf/vienna-in-figures.pdf</ref> The city boasts one of Europe's most active cultural landscapes, with 70 museums and 44 theaters putting on a total of 3,777 performances a year.<ref>http://www.wien.gv.at/english/politics/statistics/pdf/vienna-in-figures.pdf Vienna in Figures</ref> Its citizens enjoy a very high quality of life, and was given the #1 ranking in Mercer's 2009 Quality of Life index.<ref>http://www.mercer.com/qualityofliving Quality of Living</ref>
  
 
{{Clear}}
 
{{Clear}}
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</center>
 
</center>
  
==See Also==
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==See also==
 
*[[London]]
 
*[[London]]
 
*[[Art cities]]
 
*[[Art cities]]
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*[http://europeforvisitors.com/switzaustria/planner/blp_at_vienna_museums.htm Vienna Museums]
 
*[http://europeforvisitors.com/switzaustria/planner/blp_at_vienna_museums.htm Vienna Museums]
 
*[http://europeforvisitors.com/switzaustria/articles/schoenbrunn_palace.htm Schönbrunn Palace]
 
*[http://europeforvisitors.com/switzaustria/articles/schoenbrunn_palace.htm Schönbrunn Palace]
 +
==Bibliography==
 +
* ''Vienna'' (Eyewitness Travel Guides) by Stephen Brook (2003) [http://www.amazon.com/Vienna-Eyewitness-Travel-Guides-Stephen/dp/0789495759/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1240430867&sr=1-1 excerpt and text search]
 +
* ''The Rough Guide to Vienna'' by Rob Humphreys (2008) [http://www.amazon.com/Rough-Guide-Vienna-Travel-Guides/dp/1858286204/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1240430867&sr=1-3 excerpt and text search]
 +
* Tolman, Rolf, et al. ''Vienna: Art and Architecture'' (2008) [http://www.amazon.com/Vienna-Art-Architecture-Rolf-Toman/dp/0841602905/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1240431641&sr=1-1 excerpt and text search]
  
[[Category:Capital Cities]]
+
* Beller, Steven. ''Vienna and the Jews, 1867-1938: a Cultural History.'' (1989). 271 pp.
[[Category:Europe]]
+
* Borsi, Franco and Godoli, Ezio. ''Vienna 1900: Architecture and Design.'' (1986). 351 pp.
 
+
* Boyer, John W. ''Political Radicalism in Late Imperial Vienna: Origins of the Christian Social Movement, 1848-1897.'' (1981). 577 pp.
<gallery perrow="5">
+
* Boyer, John W. ''Culture and Political Crisis in Vienna: Christian Socialism in Power, 1897-1918.'' (1995). 702 pp.
Image:Vienna Schönbrunn.jpg|Schönbrunn.
+
* Duinda, Jeroen. ''Vienna and Versailles: The Courts of Europe's Dynastic Rivals, 1550-1780'' (2003) [http://www.amazon.com/Vienna-Versailles-Dynastic-1550-1780-European/dp/0521822629/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1240431462&sr=1-3 excerpt and text search]
Image:Vienna graben.jpg|Graben street.
+
* Francis, Mark, ed. ''The Viennese Enlightenment.'' (1985). 168 pp.
Image:Vienna City Hall.JPG|City Hall.
+
* Geehr, Richard S. ''Karl Lueger: Mayor of Fin de Siècle Vienna.'' (1990). 408 pp.
Image:Vienna Graben.jpg|Graben street.
+
* Gruber, Helmut. ''Red Vienna. Experiment in Working-Class Culture, 1919-1934.'' (1991). 270 pp.
Image:Vienna inner Hofburg.jpg|Hofburg.
+
* Haiko, Peter. ''Vienna 1850-1930: Architecture.'' (1992). 264 pp.
</gallery>
+
* Hofmann, Paul. ''The Viennese: Splendor, Twilight, and Exile.'' (1988). 336 pp.
 
+
* Johnston, William M. ''Vienna, Vienna: The Golden Age, 1815- 1914.'' (1981). 332 pp.
 
+
* Landon, H. C. Robbins. ''Mozart and Vienna.'' (1991). 208 pp.
[[Image:Vienna Museum of historical art.jpg|500px]]
+
* LeRider, Jacques. ''Modernity and Crises of Identity: Culture and Society in Fin-de-Siècle Vienna.'' (1993). 380 pp.
 
+
* Morton, Frederic. ''Thunder at Twilight: Vienna 1913/1914.'' (1989). 416 pp.
Museum of historical art.
+
* Morton, Frederic. ''A Nervous Splendor: Vienna, 1888/1889.'' (1979). 283 pp.
</center>
+
* Murrow, Mary Sue. ''Concert Life in Haydn's Vienna: Aspects of a Developing Musical and Social Institution.'' (1989). 552 pp.
 
+
* Rotenberg, Robert. ''Landscape and Power in Vienna.'' (1995). 385 pp.
==See Also==
+
* Rotenberg, Robert. ''Time and Order in Metropolitan Vienna.'' (1992). 262 pp.
*[[London]]
+
* Rozenblitt, Marsha L. ''The Jews of Vienna, 1867-1914: Assimilation and Identity.'' (1984). 284 pp.
*[[Art cities]]
+
* Schorske, Carl E. ''Fin-De-Siecle Vienna: Politics and Culture'' (1980), circa 1900. [http://www.amazon.com/Fin-Siecle-Vienna-Politics-Culture/dp/0394744780/ref=sr_1_7?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1240430867&sr=1-7 excerpt and text search]
*[[Congress of Vienna]]
+
* Seebohm, Andrea, ed. ''The Vienna Opera.'' (1987). 280 pp.
 
+
* Spielman, John P. ''The City and the Crown: Vienna and the Imperial Court, 1600-1740.'' (1993). 264 pp.
== External links ==
+
* Waissenberger, Robert, ed. ''Vienna, 1890-1920.'' (1984). 276 pp.
 
+
* Wegs, J. Robert. ''Growing Up Working Class: Continuity and Change among Viennese Youth, 1890-1938.'' (1989).
*[http://europeforvisitors.com/switzaustria/planner/blp_at_vienna_museums.htm Vienna Museums]
+
* Yates, W. E. ''Theatre in Vienna: A Critical History, 1776-1995.'' (1996). 328 pp.
*[http://europeforvisitors.com/switzaustria/articles/schoenbrunn_palace.htm Schönbrunn Palace]
+
  
 +
==References==
 +
{{reflist}}
 +
{{AUBundeslaender}}
 
[[Category:Capital Cities]]
 
[[Category:Capital Cities]]
[[Category:Europe]]
+
[[Category:Austrian Cities and Towns]]
 +
[[Category:German History]]

Revision as of 21:24, July 13, 2016

St. Stephens Cathedral under renovation in 2007.

Vienna (German: Wien, Hungarian: Bécs) is the capital of Austria. With 1,600,000 inhabitants, it's by far the biggest city of Austria - Graz (population: 250,000) comes second. The Danube flows through Vienna.

Today, Vienna is home to several important international organizations: the United Nations, OPEC, and the International Atomic Energy Association.

Amongst its most impressive landmarks is the imposing 12th-century masterpiece of Gothic architecture, St. Stephen's Cathedral.


History and Culture

First settled by the Celts around 500 B.C., Vienna was an important settlement in the Roman Empire, which called it Vindobona. By the 17th century - when the court was moved from Prague to Vienna - it was the seat of the Holy Roman Empire, ruled by the Hapsburg dynasty, which continued to reign into the early years of the 20th-century. In the "Anschluss" of 1938, Vienna capitulated under control of the Third Reich. After WWII, the city was governed by the Allied Commission for Austria for ten years. (Like Germany, Austria became divided into an American, British, French and Russian zone, and this division was mimicked by the administration of Vienna.) Since 1955, Vienna has been the capital of the Republic of Austria.

Vienna has one of the richest cultural histories of any city in Europe, with a particularly impressive musical tradition - the First Viennese School of composers consisted of Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven and Schubert, whilst later the waltzes and operettas of Johann Strauss Jr. came to epitomize the city's imperial grandeur and elegance. Johannes Brahms also made his home in Vienna, whose streets he claimed to know inside-and-out from his long walks around the city. Anton Bruckner, the composer of nine symphonies, taught harmony at the Vienna Academy for Music and Dramatic Arts; his admirer Gustav Mahler became conductor of the Vienna State Opera in 1897 and wrote his nine symphonies evoking Vienna's peculiar juxtaposition of the urban and the pastoral.

During the long reign of Kaiser Franz Joseph I, who occupied the throne from just after the revolution of 1848 to his death in 1916, Vienna enjoyed a golden age of culture. Franz Joseph was responsible, among other things, for taking down the city walls and commissioning numerous grand buildings on the "Ringstrasse," the name for the circular street which encompasses the city center. Among these numerous stunning examples of imperial architecture are the State Opera House, City Hall, the Musikverein (home of the Vienna Philharmonic), the symmetrical pair of museums known as the Museum of Historical Art and Natural History, the Parliament building, and the Votive Church (commissioned in neo-Gothic style as a thanks to God after a failed assassination attempt in 1853).

As the empire's power waned in the first two decades of the 20th century, new developments in art centered in Vienna showed undercurrents of unease and dread. In painting, the Expressionist works of Egon Schiele and Gustav Klimt seemed to foreshadow the city's decline. In music, the Second Viennese School comprising Arnold Schoenberg, Alban Berg, and Anton Webern stretched tonal dissolution and thematic complexity all the way past its breaking point, and after the First World War tried to put it back together again under new rules, in much the same way that Vienna was searching for her relevance after the fall of the empire.

Geography and Layout

Vienna is located east of the Austrian Alps, in the Vienna Basin, and immediately to the west of the city lie the Vienna Woods, which were immortalized in waltz form by Johann Strauss Jr. in Tales from the Vienna Woods. The Danube and Danube canal run northwest to southeast through the city.

The old city, which was walled until the second half of the 19th-century, is in a circular shape, with St. Stephen's Cathedral marking the precise center of the circle. It is today known as the first of 23 municipal districts. Most of the main historical attractions are located either within first district, or just outside of it on the Ringstrasse. The whole district is bisected north to south by the famous shopping street Kärntnerstrasse which becomes Rotenturmstrasse after passing by St. Stephen's. Running perpendicular to this street is the Graben (or "Grave"), which contains a memorial to the Black Plague.

The other 22 districts also have long histories as suburbs or villages, and each accordingly has a distinct architectural flavor. For example, the third district, just east of the city center, is named "Landstrasse," or "Country Road," and accordingly contains many 18th and 19th-century buildings which were country estates, including the house on Ungargasse where Beethoven finished his 9th symphony. As another example, the second district, Leopoldstadt, was a Jewish ghetto from the early 17th-century through the second world war, and thus has a strikingly different style of architecture.

Vienna Today

As with many European cities, the population of Vienna is growing rapidly as a result of immigration.[1] The city boasts one of Europe's most active cultural landscapes, with 70 museums and 44 theaters putting on a total of 3,777 performances a year.[2] Its citizens enjoy a very high quality of life, and was given the #1 ranking in Mercer's 2009 Quality of Life index.[3]


Vienna Museum of historical art.jpg

Museum of historical art.

See also

External links

Bibliography

  • Beller, Steven. Vienna and the Jews, 1867-1938: a Cultural History. (1989). 271 pp.
  • Borsi, Franco and Godoli, Ezio. Vienna 1900: Architecture and Design. (1986). 351 pp.
  • Boyer, John W. Political Radicalism in Late Imperial Vienna: Origins of the Christian Social Movement, 1848-1897. (1981). 577 pp.
  • Boyer, John W. Culture and Political Crisis in Vienna: Christian Socialism in Power, 1897-1918. (1995). 702 pp.
  • Duinda, Jeroen. Vienna and Versailles: The Courts of Europe's Dynastic Rivals, 1550-1780 (2003) excerpt and text search
  • Francis, Mark, ed. The Viennese Enlightenment. (1985). 168 pp.
  • Geehr, Richard S. Karl Lueger: Mayor of Fin de Siècle Vienna. (1990). 408 pp.
  • Gruber, Helmut. Red Vienna. Experiment in Working-Class Culture, 1919-1934. (1991). 270 pp.
  • Haiko, Peter. Vienna 1850-1930: Architecture. (1992). 264 pp.
  • Hofmann, Paul. The Viennese: Splendor, Twilight, and Exile. (1988). 336 pp.
  • Johnston, William M. Vienna, Vienna: The Golden Age, 1815- 1914. (1981). 332 pp.
  • Landon, H. C. Robbins. Mozart and Vienna. (1991). 208 pp.
  • LeRider, Jacques. Modernity and Crises of Identity: Culture and Society in Fin-de-Siècle Vienna. (1993). 380 pp.
  • Morton, Frederic. Thunder at Twilight: Vienna 1913/1914. (1989). 416 pp.
  • Morton, Frederic. A Nervous Splendor: Vienna, 1888/1889. (1979). 283 pp.
  • Murrow, Mary Sue. Concert Life in Haydn's Vienna: Aspects of a Developing Musical and Social Institution. (1989). 552 pp.
  • Rotenberg, Robert. Landscape and Power in Vienna. (1995). 385 pp.
  • Rotenberg, Robert. Time and Order in Metropolitan Vienna. (1992). 262 pp.
  • Rozenblitt, Marsha L. The Jews of Vienna, 1867-1914: Assimilation and Identity. (1984). 284 pp.
  • Schorske, Carl E. Fin-De-Siecle Vienna: Politics and Culture (1980), circa 1900. excerpt and text search
  • Seebohm, Andrea, ed. The Vienna Opera. (1987). 280 pp.
  • Spielman, John P. The City and the Crown: Vienna and the Imperial Court, 1600-1740. (1993). 264 pp.
  • Waissenberger, Robert, ed. Vienna, 1890-1920. (1984). 276 pp.
  • Wegs, J. Robert. Growing Up Working Class: Continuity and Change among Viennese Youth, 1890-1938. (1989).
  • Yates, W. E. Theatre in Vienna: A Critical History, 1776-1995. (1996). 328 pp.

References