VIENNA, City and Province, Austria

vēĕnˈə, Ger. Wien, city and province (1991 pop. 1,539,848), 160 sq mi (414 sq km), capital and largest city of Austria and administrative seat of Lower Austria, NE Austria, on the Danube River. The former residence of the Holy Roman emperors and, after 1806, of the emperors of Austria, Vienna is one of the great historic cities of the world and a melting pot of the Germanic, Slav, Italian, and Hungarian peoples and cultures.

Located on a plain surrounded by the Wienerwald (Vienna Woods) and the Carpathian foothills, it is a cultural, industrial, commercial, and transportation center. The city is divided into 23 districts grouped roughly in two semicircles around the Innere Stadt, or Inner City. Vienna's industries, mainly concentrated on the left bank of the Danube and in the southern districts, produce electrical appliances, machine tools, paper, and clothing. There are also large oil refineries, breweries, and distilleries. The annual Wiener Messe, an industrial fair (est. 1921), attracts buyers from all over the world. Vienna's musical and theatrical life, its parks, coffeehouses, and museums, make it a great tourist attraction; tourism is of great signficance for the city's economy.

The modern city dates from Francis Joseph's reign (1848–1916). By 1860 the old ramparts around the inner city had been replaced by the famous boulevard, the Ringstrasse. The principal edifices on or near the Ringstrasse are the neo-Gothic Rathaus, with many statues and a tower 320 ft (98 m) high; the domed museums of natural history and of art, in Italian Renaissance style; the Votivkirche, one of the finest of modern Gothic churches; the parliament buildings, in Greek style; the palace of justice; the famous opera house and the Burgtheater, both in Renaissance style; the Künstlerhaus, with painting exhibitions; the Musikverein, containing the conservatory of music; and the Academy of Art. Among Vienna's many other museums are the Albertina, a state museum housed in an 18th-century building, and the Kunstforum, a bold contemporary exhibition space. In the late 20th. cent, Danube Island was developed as one of the largest urban parks in Europe; the neighboring Danube City development includes many modern buildings.

History

Originally a Celtic settlement, Vienna, then called Vindobona, became an important Roman military and commercial center; Emperor Marcus Aurelius resided there and died there (a.d. 180). After the Romans withdrew (late 4th cent.), it rapidly changed hands among the invaders who overran the region. The Magyars, who gained possession of Vienna early in the 10th cent., were driven out by Leopold I of Babenberg, the first margrave of the Ostmark (see Austria). Construction on Vienna's noted Cathedral of St. Stephen began c.1135.

Several decades later Henry Jasomirgott, first duke of Austria, transferred his residence to the town, made it capital of the duchy, and erected a castle, Am Hof. The town was fortified by Ottocar II of Bohemia, who conquered Austria in 1251. In 1282, Vienna became the official residence of the house of Hapsburg. The city was occupied (1485–90) by Matthias Corvinus of Hungary and was besieged by the Turks for the first time in 1529. In the critical second siege (1683) by the Turks under Kara Mustafa and their Hungarian allies under Thokoly, the city, heroically defended by Ernst von Starhemberg, was on the verge of starvation when it was saved by John III (John Sobieski) of Poland.

Early in the 18th cent. a new circle of fortifications was built around the city, and many magnificent buildings were erected. Bernhard Fischer von Erlach drew up new plans for the Hofburg (the imperial residence) and built the beautiful Karlskirche; Johann von Hildebrandt designed St. Peter's Church, the Belvedere (summer residence of Prince Eugene of Savoy), and the Kinsky Palace; together they planned the Schwarzenburg Palace and the winter residence of Prince Eugene. Empress Maria Theresa (reigned 1740–80) enlarged the old university, founded in 1365, and completed the royal summer palace of Schönbrunn, started by her father, Charles VI (1711–40). Joseph II (1765–90) opened the Prater, a large imperial garden, which now contains an amusement park, to the public. Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven, and Schubert lived in Vienna and gave it lasting glory.

In 1805 and 1809, Vienna was occupied by Napoleon. In the early 19th cent. Vienna was famous for the waltzes of Joseph Lanner and the Strauss family, and for the farces of Nestroy, the comedies of Raimund, and the tragic dramas of Grillparzer. During the revolutions of 1848, revolutionists in Vienna forced Metternich to resign, but they were eventually suppressed by Windischgrätz.

In the late 19th and early 20th cent., Vienna flourished again as a cultural and scientific center. Rokitansky, Wagner-Jauregg, and Billroth (to whom Brahms dedicated the string quartets Op. 51) worked at the General Hospital; at the same time Freud was developing his theory of psychoanalysis. Vienna attracted Brahms, Mahler, Richard Strauss, and Arnold Schoenberg and his disciples, who gave it a further period of musical greatness. Krauss, Werfel, Hofmannsthal, Schnitzler, and Wassermann dominated the literary scene.

Vienna suffered hardships during World War I. Amidst food shortages and revolution it became, at the end of the war, the capital of the small republic of Austria. In 1922, Vienna became an autonomous province (Bundesland) of Austria. The highly successful Social Democratic city government headed by Mayor Karl Seitz (1923–34) initiated a program of municipal improvements. In public housing Vienna set an example for the world. Model apartment houses for workers, notably the huge Karl Marx Hof, began to replace the city's slums. The projects were badly damaged in the civil war of Feb., 1934, between Viennese Socialists and the Austrian government of Chancellor Dollfuss.

On Mar. 15, 1938, Adolf Hitler triumphantly entered Vienna, and Austria was annexed to Germany. During World War II the city suffered considerable damage. The Jewish population (115,000 in 1938), residing mainly in the Leopoldstadt district (designated the official ghetto in the 17th cent.), was reduced through extermination or emigration to 6,000 by the end of the war. The Russian army entered Vienna in Apr., 1945. Vienna and Austria were divided into four occupation zones by the victorious Allies. The occupation lasted until 1955, when, by treaty, the four powers reunited Austria as a neutral state.

Vienna became the headquarters of the International Atomic Energy Agency in 1957; it is the headquarters for several other international organizations, including the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. The city also has been a neutral site for international talks, such as those between President Kennedy and Premier Khrushchev in 1961.

Bibliography

See A. J. May, Vienna in the Age of Franz Josef (1966); I. Lehne and L. Johnson, Vienna—The Past in the Present (1985).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Vienna City and Province Austria  - 9382 results

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...articulated with Austrias social conservatism...the aging city evidenced...cultural scenes, Vienna was characterized...cultural fields, Viennas municipal...office in city hall. For over four decades, Austrias Second Republic...existence. Austrias politicians...In 1947, Viennas Socialist...defended the city and its population...
...when Anton Bruckner died, the city of Vienna announced his passing and the...Royal Capital and Residential City of Vienna, filled with deep sorrow, reports...passing reached the Town Hall, the City of Vienna . . . voted him a grave of honour...
...Schorskes idea that Austrian liberalism had...but not in the provinces. Outside of Vienna, liberalism as...image, cheerful Vienna, which has...surpassed in Austrian cultural historiography...very symbol of a city that for the most...
...on each city. Its organization...Paris, and Vienna during the...growing in the Austrian capital so...Politics was the province only of small...As in the Austrian capital...common as in Vienna and usually...them. The city compared...principally in the provinces, not in...Paris, and Vienna. The capital city middle class...
...permitted to live within the city walls. That the clerical basis for Austrian anti-Semitism did not yield...1967, 441 . The Jews of Vienna were a very visible minority...percent of the population of the province of Lower Austria Tartakower...
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journal articles on: Vienna City and Province Austria  - 105 results

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...people from the city to Steinhof...spires of Vienna in the east...the Lower Austrian government.14 The province had already...village west of Vienna. The process...reform of Lower Austrias policies regarding...bringing the province to the forefront...
...position with Austrias Vienna- based Jewish establishment...liberty to mold the province in their image...power within the province -- won by exchanging Polish votes in Vienna for provincial...not recognized by Austrian law); Polish leaders...
...the Austrian "province") and the presentation...obvious in Austria. The three exhibitions...event in the city to a more or...In many provinces these exhibitions...Lower and Upper Austria very quickly...1000 Years of Austria which was organized...participation of all provinces. Folk culture...
...construction of treaties is the peculiar province of the judiciary."(217) While the federal...board a Belgian steamship docked in Jersey City. He was subsequently arrested and charged...Argentina instituted an action against the city of New York seeking the return of property...
...joint effort, led by the Scottish Monastery in Vienna, to reclaim for the city a symbolic centrality in the struggles against...Meanwhile the Jews, though officially absent from Austrian lands, figured ever more prominently in the fantasy...
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magazine articles on: Vienna City and Province Austria  - 31 results

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...become Ostmark, a province of the Reich...the team name "Austria" would go. Many...the match, at Viennas Prater Stadium...throughout the city. The star, it...manners of the city: shadows, secrets...circulating in Vienna. Take the police...war, says the Austrian national archive...
...established in the west of Austria, alongside those more widely known in Vienna and Graz. The result has been...electricity substation for the inner city. A second building to receive...architecture anywhere in the province. Photographs by Daniel Fugenschuh...
...the heart of one of Austrias most important digs...the University of Viennas Institute for Archaeological...the capital of the province Pannonia Superior...Kandler from the Austrian Archaeological Institute in Vienna, who has been making...
...Egypt, to rule the Ottoman province of Syria. By refusing to go...empire against the House of Austria. It had begun in 1525 after...schools and colleges of the city helped educate the elites that...international cities such as Vienna and Prague were becoming avowedly...
...the west of the country the province of Tirol has made its own contribution...point for the Trails is the city of Innsbruck which Maximilian...wives. Meanwhile, visitors to Austria can enjoy the wider aspects...Grenzen, Mahlerstrasse 3, A-1010, Vienna, Austria. Fax: +43 1 513 8671...
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newspaper articles on: Vienna City and Province Austria  - 15 results

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...came in second in the election for Viennas City Council. ANTI-POLITICIAN VOTE "In the last 20 years, Austrians got used to economic prosperity and...1991, he was ousted as governor of the province of Carinthia after saying the Nazis...
...Austria rsquo;s principal city as well as its cultural, economic...spent the next three days in Vienna exploring the Hofburg (former...different memorials dedicated to Austria rsquo;s great composers, architects...her art following in Tyrol Province.In business, Filipino-Austrian...
...the countrys capital and largest city. Filipino-Austrian relations have always been based...government established its Embassy in Vienna in 1973 while the Austrian Embassy...professionals employed in Tyrol province in the late 60s and early 70s...
...Forum in New York City, designed by Austrian-born American...Raimund Abraham. Vienna once more is becoming...the exclusive province of Viennese high...easy to book for city The Austrian Tourist Office...cultural tours to Vienna for travel in...
...provoking more international wrath. Vienna, an ornate city of Hapsburg palaces, is bracing...the crucial issue confronting Austria. That is how to convince the...strings as governor in his powerbase province of Carinthia. He has reluctantly...
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encyclopedia articles on: Vienna City and Province Austria  - 11 results

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VIENNA , city and province, Austria veen...city and province (1991 pop...and largest city of Austria and administrative...Austria, Vienna is one of...In 1922, Vienna became an autonomous province ( Bundesland ) of Austria. The highly...Democratic city government...
...Baden-bei-Wien bi-ven , city (1991 pop. 23,176), Lower Austria province, E Austria, on the Schwechat River, near Vienna. The hot sulfur springs of this picturesque city have been frequented...military headquarters for Austria...
...Romans and became part of the province of Noricum. After the fall...history followed that of the city of Salzburg. An ancient Celtic...Schonbrunn (1809). The Congress of Vienna (1814 15) returned it to Austria. ____________________ Copyright...
...historic region and province (21,292 sq mi/55,146...Napoca is the chief city; other major urban centers...succession of Ferdinand of Austria (later Emperor Ferdinand...the Turkish defeat near Vienna (1683), Transylvania vainly battled the growing Austrian influence, and its alliance...
...Pomerelia was organized into the province of West Prussia , and the...1815). At the Congress of Vienna, Prussia gained, in addition...by following the lead of the Austrian chancellor, Metternich, in...Schleswig-Holstein, and the free city of Frankfurt am Main. The German...
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