- Alternate meanings: See places and things
named after Vienna
Vienna (German Wien) is
the capital of Austria, and also one of
Austria's nine federal states (Bundesland Wien). It is
situated on the river Danube, and is surrounded
by the Austrian federal state of Lower Austria. With a population of
about 1.5 million, Vienna is the largest city and the cultural and political centre of Austria.
The United Nations Industrial Development Organization, the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries and the International Atomic Energy Agency are situated in Vienna.
History
Vienna was originally a Celtic city founded around 500 BC. In 15 BC, it became a frontier city ("Vindobona") guarding the Roman Empire against the German tribes to the north. In the Middle Ages, it became the home of the Babenberg and, later,
the Habsburg dynasties and through the latter the capital of the Holy Roman Empire and later the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The Ottoman Turkish invasions of Europe in the 16th and
17th centuries were stopped at Vienna. See the Battle of Vienna (1683). In 1815, Vienna was the site of the Congress of Vienna which redrew national boundaries in Europe after the defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte at Waterloo.
During the Cold War, Vienna was a hotbed of international espionage owning to
its location in neutral Austria, between the Western and Eastern blocs.
Other famous Viennese items include the Lippizaner stallions, the Vienna Boys' Choir (Wiener Sängerknaben), Wiener
Schnitzel, Sachertorte, and Danish pastries. Viennese cafes claim to have invented the process of filtering coffee from the captured baggage after the second Turkish siege of 1683.
Historical population
1800: 231,900 inhabitants
1830: 338,700
1850: 446,400
1880: 724,800
1900: 1,675,000
1925: 1,869,000
Districts
The city itself is composed of 23 districts (Bezirke), which although they all have their own names are numbered for
the sake of convenience:
- Innere Stadt (city centre)
- Leopoldstadt
- Landstraße
- Wieden
- Margareten
- Mariahilf
- Neubau
- Josefstadt
- Alsergrund
- Favoriten
- Simmering
- Meidling
- Hietzing
- Penzing
- Rudolfsheim-Fünfhaus
- Ottakring
- Hernals
- Währing
- Döbling
- Brigittenau
- Floridsdorf
- Donaustadt
- Liesing
Looking at the postal code one can easily find out in which district the given address can be found; 1XXA - 1 denotes Vienna,
XX the district number (if it is a single digit then with a leading zero), A is the number of the post office (irrelevant in this
case, usually zero). Example: 1070 for Neubau (which, incidentally, is the only place in Austria with a Green majority).
To the south-east of the city is the Prater amusement
park. This park is the site of a large Ferris wheel, built originally in 1897, and made
famous as the location where Orson Welles, in his role as Harry Lime in the
film The Third Man, looked down upon the people beneath and
compared them to ants.
Trams are widely used in Vienna.
Intellectual Life
Turn of the century Vienna was home to a thriving intellectual scene. Most prominent was the father of psychoanalysis,
Sigmund Freud. Other famous products were the philosophers Franz Brentano, Bernard
Bolzano, Ernst Mach and Edmund Husserl.
The University of Vienna was the cradle of the Austrian School of economics.
The founders of this school who studied here included Carl Menger, Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk, Friedrich von Wieser, Joseph
Schumpeter,Ludwig von Mises and Friedrich A. von Hayek.
They were a somewhat more liberal crowd compared to other German speaking intellectuals in Prussia (indeed the very term
Austrian was a term of abuse used to suggest a provincial outlook, see Methodenstreit). Simply put in Germany the influence of Hegel led academics to try to "overcome" the ideas of Western Europe, Austrian scholars used
these ideas as a basis for their own theories.
See also the Vienna Circle.
Culture
For many centuries, Vienna has been a center of classical music
and opera. Christoph Willibald Gluck, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Joseph Haydn,
Ludwig van Beethoven, Franz Schubert, Johannes Brahms, Gustav Mahler and Anton
Bruckner among others, worked in Vienna, and Antonio Vivaldi died
there. Johann Strauss II and his family created their waltzes
here. Later, the city became the home of the so called Second Viennese School, with Arnold
Schoenberg, Alban Berg and Anton Webern all being born there. It's also home to the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra.
Vienna is also noted for its art and architecture. Many Baroque buildings exist
although every time period is represented. The summer palace of the emperors, Schönbrunn, was built to rival Versailles but while huge and
ornate, never quite became as large. Tiergarten Schönbrunn Zoo Vienna is located in the palace area. The Cathedral of St.
Stephen (or Stephansdom), which was built in the 12th century, is also
notable. The modern architect Friedensreich
Hundertwasser has constructed some buildings in the city in his idiosyncratic style.
"Sezession" and
Jugendstil were twentieth
century art movements related to art nouveau important in Vienna.
Gustav Klimt worked here.
Many of Vienna's great individuals are buried at the Zentralfriedhof.
Events
See also: Vienna International
Airport
External links
Other names
|