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  1. Vienne est l’une des quatre provinces autrichiennes qui pratiquent la viticulture. 1,6 % de la superficie est occupée par des vignobles. Les zones forestières couvrent 17,8 % et 14,8 % de la zone urbaine est utilisée pour l’agriculture. Carte interactive des arrondissements de Vienne.

  2. Sign reads "Here Empress Elisabeth of Austria was assassinated on 10 September 1898" in Geneva, Switzerland (2022) The funeral procession in Vienna (17 September 1898) In 1898, despite warnings of possible assassination attempts, the 60-year-old Elisabeth traveled incognito to Geneva, Switzerland.

  3. Adolf Hitler committed suicide on 30 April 1945, one week before the end of war in Europe. The Austrian Nazi and, briefly, Chancellor of Austria, Arthur Seyss-Inquart, was condemned to death at the Nuremberg Trials and executed in 1946. However, many Austrian Nazis escaped prosecution altogether.

  4. In 1280, Jans der Enikel wrote the "Fürstenbuch", a first history of the city. With the Luxembourg emperors, Prague became the imperial residence and Vienna stood in its shadow. The early Habsburgs attempted to extend it in order to keep up. Duke Albert II, for example, had the gothic choir of the Stephansdom built.

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  6. Apr 12, 2024 · Vienna death records (Sterberegister), 1648-1920. Includes name, date and place of death, residence, age, spouse's name, sometimes parents' names. Alphabetical by death year. Vienna hospital deaths (Totenverzeichnis), 1868-1942, Includes name, date and place of death, residence, age, spouse's name, sometimes parents' names. Arranged by death date.

  7. Once called an “aphrodisiac for necrophiles” by artist André Heller, Vienna’s Central Cemetery is the second largest burial site in Europe (after Ohlsdorf Cemetery in Hamburg), with an area of 2.4 square kilometers and over 300,000 graves in which three million people are laid to rest. At the same time, it is a profoundly Viennese ...

  8. Mar 27, 2024 · Vienna, city and federal state, the capital of Austria. Of the country’s nine states, Vienna is the smallest in area but the largest in population. From 1558 to 1918 it was an imperial city—until 1806 the seat of the Holy Roman Empire and then the capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

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