Like us on Facebook

MENU
Europe
Austria
Abtenau
Achenkirch
Alpbach
Altaussee
Amstetten
Annaberg-Lungötz
Altenmarkt im Pongau
Altmunster
Anif
Arzl im Pitztal
Au
Aschau im Zillertal
Axams
Baden
Bad Aussee
Bad Gastein
Bad Gleichenberg
Bad Goisern
Bad Hofgastein
Bad Ischl
Bad Kleinkirchheim
Bad Mitterndorf
Bad Radkersburg
Bad Schallerbach
Bad Tatzmannsdorf
Bad Waltersdorf
Berwang
Bezau
Bichlbach
Bludenz
Bodensdorf
Bramberg am Wildkogel
Brand
Braunau am Inn
Bregenz
Brixen im Thale
Bruck
Damüls
Deutschlandsberg
Döbriach
Dorfgastein
Dornbirn
Drobollach am Faakersee
Durnstein
Eben im Pongau
Ebensee
Ebbs
Ehrwald
Eisenstadt
Enns
Faak am See
Faistenau
Feldkirch
Feldkirchen
Fieberbrunn
Filzmoos
Finkenberg
Fiss
Flachau
Flattach
Fügen
Fulpmes
Fuschl am See
Galtur
Gamlitz
Gänserndorf
Gargellen
Gaschurn
Gerlos
Gerasdorf bei Wien
Gmuend
Gmunden
Going
Golling an der Salzach
Gosau
Göstling an der Ybbs
Grän
Graz
Greinburg
Gröbming
Großarl
Grünau im Almtal
Grundlsee
Gumpoldskirchen
Guntramsdorf
Hall in Tirol
Hallein
Hallstatt
Hartberg
Haus
Heiligenblut
Hermagor
Hinterstoder
Hintertux
Hippach
Hirschegg
Hohenems
Hollersbach im Pinzgau
Hopfgarten im Brixental
Igls
Illmitz
Imst
Innervillgraten
Innsbruck
Ischgl
Itter
Jerzens
Jochberg
Kals am Großglockner
Kaltenbach
Kapfenberg
Kappl
Kaprun
Kartitsch
Kaunertal
Kirchberg
Kirchdorf in Tirol
Kitzbühel
Klagenfurt
Kleinarl
Klosterneuburg
Korneuburg
Kössen
Kötschach-Mauthen
Kramsach
Krems an der Donau
Krimml
Kufstein
Kühtai
Ladis
Landeck
Längenfeld
Lech
Leibnitz
Leoben
Leogang
Lermoos
Leutasch
Leutschach
Lienz
Linz
Lofer
Loipersdorf
Maishofen
Mallnitz
Maria Alm
Mariapfarr
Mariazell
Matrei in Osttirol
Maurach
Mauterndorf
Mayrhofen
Melk
Mieders
Mieming
Millstatt
Mittelberg
Mittersill
Mödling
Mondsee
Mörbisch
Mühlbach am Hochkönig
Murau
Nauders
Neukirchen am Großvenediger
Neusiedl am See
Neustift im Stubaital
Niederau
Niedernsill
Oberau
Obergurgl
Oberndorf
Obertauern
Obertilliach
Obertraun
Oberwart
Oetz
Ossiach
Perchtoldsdorf
Pertisau
Pettneu am Arlberg
Pfunds
Pichl
Piesendorf
Podersdorf am See
Portschach am Worther See
Prägraten am Großvenediger
Radstadt
Ramsau am Dachstein
Rauris
Ried im Zillertal
Reith bei Seefeld
Reith im Alpbachtal
Rennweg
Reutte
Ried Im Innkreis
Riezlern
Rohrmoos-Untertal
Rust
St Anton am Arlberg
St Gilgen
St Jakob in Defereggen
St Johann in Tirol
St Leonhard
St Leonhard im Pitztal
St Martin am Tennengebirge
St Wolfgang
Saalbach-Hinterglemm
Saalfelden am Steinernen Meer
Sankt Gallenkirch
Sankt Johann im Pongau
Sankt Kanzian
Sankt Margarethen im Lungau
Sankt Pölten
Salzburg
Schärding
Scheffau am Wilden Kaiser
Schladming
Schoppernau
Schruns
Schwaz
Schwechat
See
Seeboden
Seefeld in Tirol
Seewalchen am Attersee
Semmering
Serfaus
Sillian
Sölden
Söll
Sonnenalpe Nassfeld
Spital am Pyhrn
Spittal an der Drau
Spitz
Steinbach am Attersee
Steyr
Strobl
Stumm
Tamsweg
Tannheim
Tauplitz
Telfs
Thiersee
Treffen
Tropolach
Tschagguns
Tulln an der Donau
Turracher Höhe
Tux
Uderns
Umhausen
Unterach am Attersee
Uttendorf
Velden am Worther See
Vent
Viehhofen
Vienna
Villach
Virgen
Voecklabruck
Wagrain
Waidring
Walchsee
Wald im Pinzgau
Wals
Warth
Weissenkirchen
Weissensee
Weiz
Wels
Wenns
Werfenweng
Westendorf
Weyregg am Attersee
Wiener Neustadt
Wolfsberg
Wörgl
Zauchensee
Zell am See
Zell im Zillertal
Zürs
Zwettl
Things to do in Vienna
Best things to do in Austria


PLACE NAMES




Vienna
Albertinaplatz/Maysedergasse - Tel.: +43 (0)1-24 555
info@vienna.info

Vienna is the capital and largest city of Austria, and one of the nine states of Austria. Vienna is Austria's primary city, with a population of about 1.757 million (2.4 million within the metropolitan area, more than 20% of Austria's population), and is by far the largest city in Austria, as well as its cultural, economic, and political centre. It is the 9th-largest city by population within city limits in the European Union. Until the beginning of the 20th century it was the largest German-speaking city in the world, and before the splitting of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in World War I the city had 2 million inhabitants.

Vienna is host to many major international organizations, including the United Nations and OPEC. The city lies in the east of Austria and is close to the borders of the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Hungary. These regions work together in a European Centrope border region. Along with nearby Bratislava, Vienna forms a metropolitan region with 3 million inhabitants. In 2001, the city centre was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Apart from being regarded as the City of Music because of its musical legacy, Vienna is also said to be "The City of Dreams" because it was home to the world's first psycho-analyst - Sigmund Freud.

The city's roots lie in early Celtic and Roman settlements that transformed into a Medieval and Baroque city, the capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. It is well known for having played an essential role as a leading European Music Centre, from the great age of Viennese Classicism through the early part of the 20th century. The Historic centre of Vienna is rich in architectural ensembles, including Baroque castles and gardens, as well as the late-19th-century Ringstrasse lined with grand buildings, monuments and parks.

In a 2005 study of 127 world cities, the Economist Intelligence Unit ranked the city first (in a tie with Vancouver, Canada) for the world's most livable cities (in the 2012 survey of 140 cities Vienna was ranked number two, behind Melbourne).

For four consecutive years (2009 to 2012), the human-resource-consulting firm Mercer ranked Vienna first in its annual "Quality of Living" survey of hundreds of cities around the world.

Monocle's 2012 "Quality of Life Survey" ranked Vienna fourth on a list of the top 25 cities in the world "to make a base within" (up from sixth in 2011 and eighth in 2010).

The city was ranked 1st globally for its culture of innovation in 2007 and 2008, and fifth globally (out of 256 cities) in the 2011 Innovation Cities Index, which analyzed 162 indicators in covering 3 areas: culture, infrastructure and markets. Vienna regularly hosts urban planning conferences and is often used as a case study by urban planners.

Each year since 2005, Vienna has been the world's number one destination for international congresses and conventions. Vienna attracts about five million tourists a year.

The English name Vienna is borrowed from the Italian name Vienna. "Vienna" and the official German name Wien, and the names of the city in most languages, are thought to be derived from the Celtic word "windo-", meaning bright or fair - as in the Irish "fionn" and the Welsh "gwyn" - but opinions vary on the precise origin. Some claim that the name comes from Vedunia, meaning "forest stream," which subsequently became Venia, Wienne and Wien. Others claim that the name comes from the Roman settlement of Celtic name Vindobona (Celtic "windo-bona"), probably meaning "white base/bottom [land]," which became Vindovina, Víden (Czech) and Wien.

The name of the city in Hungarian (Bechs), Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian (Bec) and Ottoman Turkish (Bech) appears to have a different, Slavonic origin, and originally referred to an Avar fort in the area.

In Slovene, the city is called Dunaj, which in other Slavic languages means the Danube River, on which it is located.

Evidence of continuous habitation has been found since 500 BC, when the site of Vienna on the Danube River was settled by the Celts. In 15 BC, the Romans fortified the frontier city they called Vindobona to guard the empire against Germanic tribes to the north.

Close ties with other Celtic peoples continued through the ages. The Irish monk Saint Colman (or Koloman, Irish Colman, derived from colm "dove") is buried in Melk Abbey and Saint Fergil (Virgil the Geometer) was Bishop of Salzburg for forty years, and twelfth-century monastic settlements were founded by Irish Benedictines. Evidence of these ties are still evident in Vienna's great Schottenstift monastery, once home to many Irish monks.

During the Middle Ages, Vienna was home to the Babenberg dynasty; in 1440, it became the resident city of the Habsburg dynasties. It eventually grew to become the de facto capital of the Holy Roman Empire (1483/1806) and a cultural centre for arts and science, music and fine cuisine. Hungary occupied the city between 1485–1490.

In the 16th and 17th centuries, the Ottoman armies were stopped twice outside Vienna (see Siege of Vienna, 1529 and Battle of Vienna, 1683). A plague epidemic ravaged Vienna in 1679, killing nearly a third of its population.

In 1804, during the Napoleonic wars, Vienna became the capital of the Austrian Empire and continued to play a major role in European and world politics, including hosting the 1814 Congress of Vienna. After the Austro-Hungarian Compromise of 1867, Vienna remained the capital of what was then the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The city was a centre of classical music, for which the title of the First Viennese School is sometimes applied.

During the latter half of the 19th century, the city developed what had previously been the bastions and glacis into the Ringstrasse, a new boulevard surrounding the historical town and a major prestige project. Former suburbs were incorporated, and the city of Vienna grew dramatically. In 1918, after World War I, Vienna became capital of the Republic of German-Austria, and then in 1919 of the First Republic of Austria.

From the late 19th century to 1938, the city remained a centre of high culture and modernism. A world capital of music, the city played host to composers such as Brahms, Bruckner, Mahler and Richard Strauss. The city's cultural contributions in the first half of the 20th century included, among many, the Vienna Secession movement, psychoanalysis, the Second Viennese School, the architecture of Adolf Loos and the philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein and the Vienna Circle. Within Austria, it was seen as a centre of socialist politics, for which it was sometimes referred to as "Red Vienna". The city was a stage to the Austrian Civil War of 1934, when Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss sent the Austrian Army to shell civilian housing occupied by the socialist militia.

In 1938, after a triumphant entry into Austria, Austrian-born Adolf Hitler spoke to the Austrian Germans from the balcony of the Neue Burg, a part of the Hofburg at the Heldenplatz. Between 1938 (after the Anschluss) and the end of the Second World War, Vienna lost its status as a capital to Berlin.

On 2 April 1945, the Soviets launched the Vienna Offensive against the Germans holding the city and besieged it. British and American air raids and artillery duels between the SS and Wehrmacht and the Red Army crippled infrastructure, such as tram services and water and power distribution, and destroyed or damaged thousands of public and private buildings. Vienna fell eleven days later. Austria was separated from Germany, and Vienna was restored as the republic's capital city, but the Soviet hold on the city remained until 1955.

After the war, Vienna was part of Soviet-occupied Eastern Austria until September, 1945. As in Berlin, Vienna in September, 1945 was divided into sectors by the four powers: the USA, the UK, France and the Soviet Union and supervised by an Allied Commission. The four-power occupation of Vienna differed in one key respect from that of Berlin: the central area of the city, known as the first district, constituted an international zone in which the four powers alternated control on a monthly basis. The control was policed by the four powers on a defacto day to day basis, the famous "four soldiers in a jeep" method. The Berlin Blockade of 1948 raised allied concerns that the Russians might repeat the blockade in Vienna. The matter was raised in the UK House of Commons, "What plans have the Government for dealing with a similar situation in Vienna? Vienna is in exactly a similar position to Berlin. It is surrounded by a Soviet Zone of occupation and we have our sector of responsibility in Vienna the same as the Americans and the French. What plans have the Government to deal with a similar situation arising in Vienna in the near future? I hope we shall have an answer, because this is of vital importance." - Sir Anthony Nutting, Honourable Member for Melton, 30 June 1948, House of Commons, London.

There was a lack of airfields in the Western sectors, and authorities drafted contingency plans to deal with such a blockade. Plans included the laying down of metal landing mats at Schonbrunn. The Soviets did not embark on a wholesale blockade of the city. Some historians have argued that the Potsdam Agreement included written rights of land access to the western sectors, whereas no such written guarantees had covered the western sectors of Berlin. During the 10 years of the four-power occupation, Vienna became a hot-bed for international espionage between the Western and Eastern blocs. In the wake of the Berlin Blockade, the Cold War in Vienna took on a different dynamic. While accepting that Germany and Berlin would be divided, the Russians had decided against allowing the same state of affairs to arise in Austria and Vienna. Here the Soviet forces controlled the districts 2, 4, 10, 20, 21 and 22 and all areas incorporated into Vienna in 1938.

They put up barbed wire fences around the perimeter of West Berlin in 1953, but not in Vienna. By 1955, the Russians by signing the State Treaty agreed to relinquish their occupation zones in Eastern Austria as well as their sector in Vienna. In exchange they had required that Austria declares its permanent neutrality clause after the allied powers had left the country. Thus they ensured that Austria would not be a member of NATO and that NATO forces would therefore not have direct communications between Italy and West Germany.

The atmosphere of four-power Vienna is captured very well in the Graham Greene screenplay for the film The Third Man (1949), directed by Carol Reed. Later he adapted the screenplay as a novel and published it. Occupied Vienna is also colourfully depicted in the Philip Kerr novel, "A German Requiem." This title is misleading and reflects a common misunderstanding that the Viennese are "German" which to a Viennese of after 1945 is offensive. Whilst some authors will claim that the German language includes Vienna as within the "Deutschraum" the Viennese themselves do not identify with Germany as they did in 1918, or indeed with the rest of Austria in a defacto cultural, social or political sense.

The four-power control of Vienna lasted until the Austrian State Treaty was signed in May 1955. That year, after years of reconstruction and restoration, the State Opera and the Burgtheater, both on the Ringstraße, reopened to the public. The Soviet Union signed the State Treaty only after having been provided with the political guarantee by the federal government to declare Austria's neutrality after the withdrawal of the allied troops. This law of neutrality, passed in late October 1955 (and not the State Treaty itself), ensured that modern Austria would align with neither NATO nor the Soviet bloc, and is considered one of the reasons for Austria's late entry into the European Union.

In the 1970s, Austrian Chancellor Bruno Kreisky inaugurated the Vienna International Centre, a new area of the city created to host international institutions. Vienna has regained all of its former international stature by hosting international organizations, such as the United Nations (United Nations Industrial Development Organization, United Nations Office at Vienna and United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime), the Preparatory Commission for the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization, the International Atomic Energy Agency, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, and the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe and the United European Gastroenterology Federation.

Because of the industrialization and migration from other parts of the Empire, the population of Vienna increased sharply during its time as the capital of Austria-Hungary (1867-1918). In 1910, Vienna had more than two million inhabitants, and was the fourth largest city in Europe after London, Paris and Berlin. Around the start of the 20th century, Vienna (Czech Viden, Hungarian Bechs) was the city with the second-largest Czech population in the world (after Prague). At the height of the migration, about one-third of the Viennese population was of Slavic or Hungarian origin. After World War I, many Czechs and Hungarians returned to their ancestral countries, resulting in a decline in the Viennese population. After World War II, the Soviets used force to repatriate key workers of Czech and Hungarian origins to return to their ethnic homelands to further the Soviet bloc economy.

In 1923, there were 201,513 Jews living in Vienna, which had become the third-largest Jewish community in Europe. 65,000 Jewish people were deported and murdered in concentration camps by Nazi forces, approximately 130,000 fled.

By 2001, 16% of people living in Austria had nationalities other than Austrian, nearly half of whom were from former Yugoslavia, primarily Serbs; the next most numerous nationalities in Vienna were Turks (39,000; 2.5%), Poles (13,600; 0.9%) and Germans (12,700; 0.8%).

As of 2012, an official report from Statistics Austria showed that more than 660,000 (38.8%) of the Viennese population have full or partial migrant background, mostly from Czechoslovakia, Hungary, ex-Yugoslavia, Turkey and Germany. This is reflected today in the telephone list of the city where there is an eclectic list of surnames.



leonedgaroldbury@yahoo.co.ukFeel free to Email me any additions or corrections


LINKS AVAILABLE TO YOUR SITE