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HABSBURGER QUIZ
Frage des Tages | 23.5.2012
Um welche Uhrzeit pflegte Kaiser Franz Joseph aufzustehen?
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Coach for transporting people, luggage and mail, 19th century
Coach for transporting people, luggage and mail, 19th century
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‘Yes, but are they allowed to?’ – The revolution of 1848
The new ordering of Europe in 1814/15
The German Confederation and the German question
‘In the name of the holy and indivisible Trinity’
An empire in two halves: the Compromise with Hungary
‘To My Peoples’
An atmosphere of upheaval in the Monarchy
What is a constitution?
Constitutional experiments. Paper plans and social practice
The peasant is free
How noblemen became ‘Centralists’ and ‘Federalists’…
From revolution to the formation of classes
Rights and duties in the archducal house
‘I’m a Habsburg – get me out of here!’
Johann Orth: Habsburg (ret’d)
Secret marriage in Switzerland
The suspended crown princess
Ludwig Salvator: ‘King of Mallorca’
Ludwig Viktor: Archduke ‘Lutzi Wutzi’
Franzl and Sisi, the prototype imperial couple
Franz II (I) and the Metternich System
The Emperor who was incapable of governing: Ferdinand I
Franz Joseph, the supreme bureaucrat
The whole world against the Emperor?
The old gentleman of Schönbrunn on the path to the First World War
Karl I: The peace emperor?
A warlike Habsburg: Archduke Albrecht
War over Italy
The final decisive battle against Prussia
Colonization attempt in the Balkans
The Last Days of Mankind
Downfall and rebirth
Producing a dynasty
The marriages of the ‘useful’ emperor
Be fruitful and multiply
The favourite daughter and the patron of the arts
The Queen of Naples and Sicily
The Queen of France
Marriage with the devil
No lengthy mourning – remarriage in the Biedermeier era
The Empress of Brazil
Love is free
To love and honour her, till death do you part?
Potential for conflict amongst the people: the struggle begins…
Citizens take heart! The first public speeches
Initial successes. The abolition of censorship
A courageous vanguard. The Republic is proclaimed
The right of assembly and association is gained
Austrian women fighting for women’s rights
Victor Adler: the ‘Aulic Councillor of the Revolution’
Karl Lueger’s rise to Mayor of Vienna
A classless civil society? Or: the price of democracy
Winning over the masses
The Prater – from imperial hunting ground to metropolitan leisure amenity
Face to face – an audience with Franz Joseph
The Emperor in the classroom
The changing of the palace guard or ‘The Palace Growl’
The pillars of Maria Theresa’s throne
Precariously close
Archdukes in holy orders
Metternich: ‘coachman’ and ‘rock’
Archduchess Sophie: the ‘only man’ at court?
Playing cards with the Habsburgs
In the shadow of an iron lady: Archduke Franz Karl
The King’s Deputy: Archduke Josef, ‘József nádor’
Emperor Karl on his way into exile
The ‘Reich’s idle rotter’: Archduke Johann
The failed Emperor of Mexico
CSI Mayerling – How did the crown prince really die?
Death of a European traveller
Luigi Lucheni: the man behind the file
The fatal assassination in Sarajevo
Maria Theresa: Empress and mother of her peoples
Maria Theresa: the ‘great reformer’
The old versus the new social order
A new start for the dynasty: Franz I
Rule by mother and son: Joseph II and Maria Theresa
The useful emperor: Joseph II
The short-term emperor and would-be reformer: Leopold II
‘Please wake me tomorrow at half-past three!’
The ‘Brick Bohemians’ of Wienerberg and imperial building projects
Back to square one: Franz II (I)
Refined manners and genteel conduct
Welcome to the Biedermeiers!
The new trend: the nuclear family as luxury commodity
Angelo Soliman
A ‘noble’ robber, and no respecter of borders
Crossing Borders
Habsburgs à la turca. A political issue (Part 1)
The classic ‘Other’. Habsburgs à la turca (Part 2)
The new Austrian anti-Semitism (Part I)
The new Austrian anti-Semitism (Part 2)
The Iwakura Mission 1871/73 – the Japanese in Europe
From the Logbook of Kume Kunitake
‘Water taken in moderation is not harmful’
The battle against smallpox
For the benefit and comfort of the sick
Anatomical wax models und tobacco enemas – the Josephinum as a training institution for medical students
The commitment of Emperor Joseph II to the ‘care of the insane’
Cholera as a salutary process of natural selection?
Prostitution. A case for the Morality Police
‘All my libido is for Austria-Hungary’
Pension provision appropriate to station
Who is overseeing whom? – The bureaucratic state of Joseph II
The peasant as ‘provider for the people’
Discipline to keep the population in order
The Vienna Foundling Home between welfare and population policy
Torture and execution
How unemployment became a social problem
Reformist bishops – the forerunners of the Enlightenment
Before the French Revolution: Horea and the Romanian Peasants’ Revolt of 1784
‘Viennese tolerated Jews’ as future business magnates
Marriage and divorce
Weaver in winter, bricklayer in summer
Civil rights produce citizens
Everyone learns their times tables!
School instead of work
The first schoolbooks are printed
Bohemian industrial classes as a model
The ‘school machine’ of Joseph II
Read, read, read …
Maria Theresia and the moral crusade
Enforced retirement for the Jesuits
From monk to pastor
Recycling, even in death
The idea of tolerance
By your leave, my name is …
Settlement projects for Jews and Protestants
The Habsburg heiress versus the European world of men
The peace-loving mother-figure versus the neurotic megalomaniac?
Employer: His Imperial and Royal Apostolic Majesty, the Emperor
Classes for the masses: hierarchies of service at the imperial Court
Yet another war against the Turks – but this time it was for the last time
The people versus the useful emperor
On the edges of power – the four highest ceremonial Court ranks
The Court Kitchens – dining at the emperor's behest
The emperor as only one person saw him: the valet de chambre and the human sides of the monarch
In the shadow of imperial splendour – the Emperor's difficulties with his staff
The Seven Years’ (World) War
A war over plums and potatoes
A place in the sun: Joseph II, the Augarten and how the Viennese spent their leisure time
Liberté, égalité, fraternité – Liberty, Equality, Fraternity
A family presents itself - Maria Theresa and the image of the dynasty
The Franzensburg – the ‘citizen-emperor’s’ chivalric fantasy
Against the ‘Jacobin conspiracy’
Archduke Johann: back to nature – the Tyrolean Garden at Schönbrunn
Forwards into history – The ‘Maria-Theresian style’
Aux armes, citoyens – Citizens, to arms!
Battles between ‘emperors’ and ‘peoples’
The victor of Aspern
His Imperial Majesty deigns to announce ... the Court and the public domain
The Kapuzinergruft – last residence of the Habsburgs
Resistance in the ‘holy land’ of Tyrol: a Tyrolean Taliban?
The bad guy defeated by the worse ones
Franz Joseph and Elisabeth – and they lived happily ever after?
The tender shoots of love: the imperial honeymoon at Laxenburg
Elisabeth and the constraints of courtly life
Fresh milk from happy cows – the Kammermeierei
The Achilleon on Corfu – Elisabeth’s flight into antiquity
Old times, new times: the coronation of Joseph II in Frankfurt
A wedding album – the marriage of Joseph II to Isabella of Parma
The Austro-Hungarian Dual Monarchy: the coronation of the Hungarian royal couple
The last act – stately obsequies
Schönbrunn – imperial research laboratory
South-Sea reveries – traces of the exotic at Schönbrunn
When an emperor prepared his inventory … … then the population was counted
‘The Austro-Hungarian Monarchy in Words and Pictures’
An encyclopaedia of the Monarchy
A difficult relationship – Maria Theresa’s Prague legacy
Theresienstadt
Reichstadt – a comfortable retreat for former rulers
‘When Bohemia still belonged to Austria …’
Eljen király – Long live the king! Maria Theresa and Hungary
The castle in Buda – symbol of the Compromise
Gödöllö Palace – Country residence of the Hungarian royal couple
Miramare – ‘A beautiful house on the seashore’
Schloss Hof – aristocratic country residence and Habsburg family palace
Laxenburg – the Habsburg Arcadia
The Hermes Villa – a private residence funded by the state?
Bad Ischl – heaven on earth
From Sarajevo to Artstetten – Franz Ferdinand’s final resting place
Palais Augarten: a place of recreation for Archduke Otto
Flushing out woodcock and chasing wild boar – Franz Joseph and his passion for the chase
A myth is created – Maria Theresa and Schönbrunn
With pomp and circumstance – Schönbrunn as the arena of the Imperial Court
In the company of gods and heroes – the Habsburgs, Schönbrunn and classical antiquity
Private – No Entry!
Schönbrunn – final glory and last arena of the Monarchy
Schönbrunn in the inter-war period – a palace without an emperor
Schönbrunn after the Second World War – nostalgia and imperial cult
Wolferl and Nannerl at Court
A genius in search of a position
Mozart vs. Salieri 0:1 – a musical contest at the imperial Court
Turks in Vienna! The Abduction from the Seraglio at Vienna’s Burgtheater
The pianist: Mozart as virtuoso performer
The Marriage of Figaro, the tale of a revolutionary barber
The longed-for position at court: Mozart as Imperial-Royal Court Composer
La clemenza di Tito – but no clemency for Mozart
‘O Isis and Osiris!’ The Masonic opera, The Magic Flute
Mozart’s last composition
Turquerie – the reception of the Orient in Europe
Maria Theresa in Turkish dress
Impaling Turks’ heads at Court
The first opera at the imperial Viennese Court
Pomp and state: Baroque festivities at the Viennese court
Party-time: The marriage of Leopold I and Margarita of Spain
An emperor as composer
A musical family
Domestic music-making instead of festive operas – the end of the Baroque opera
The party continues: private performances by the imperial children
A private stage: the theatre at Schönbrunn Palace
From real tennis court to Court Theatre
A traffic obstruction: the Kärntnertortheater
Noble entertainment, loss-making ventures
‘Woeful taste’: German-language theatre in need of censorship
Kasperl versus Sonnenfels: the ‘Hanswurst controversy’
An Emperor as theatre director and talent scout
Happy endings: a ‘Viennese’ ending for Hamlet & Co.
Conserving the old from fear of the new
The Heldenberg: a monument to patriotism
The Vienna Arsenal – from Hall of Fame of the Austrian army to centre of the sciences
God saved the Emperor – and Vienna got the Votivkirche
Two men on horseback preside over ‘Heroes’ Square’
Historic rallies on Heldenplatz
Habsburg heroes, heroines and sons of the Muses – monuments on the Ringstrasse
City walls, bastions and glacis – protection or hindrance?
From fortification to promenade
Protection from the proletariat
‘It is my will’
The construction of the Ringstrasse
Military drill must continue!
Ringstrasse palaces
Live like a prince, party like an artist
The Corso of the Viennese bourgeoisie
The Ringstrasse as stage: a pageant for Emperor and people
The Viennese coffee house
Grand Hotels on Vienna’s boulevard
Is the Emperor rich? Where the Habsburgs got their money from
Not creditworthy – Habsburgs ‘plagued’ by money worries
Gulden and krone, coins and paper. Or: How did the Empress pay?
A Fortune loses its owners – Habsburg assets after 1918
Thrifty Court and expensive army – State expenditure
Tax matters – State revenue
The palace of money – Where does all the money come from?
The Emperor’s savings book and the State’s financiers – Banks and insurance in the Monarchy
Quick money versus old aristocracy
Crisis in the highest circles – Economic boom and stock exchange crash
Consumption goes to town – The capital as a ‘city of consumption’
Shopping venues – Inequalities in consumption
If your company wants to use the imperial coat of arms. The Imperial-Royal Court Suppliers
Exclusive items and buying in bulk – What the Habsburgs ordered from the Suppliers to the Imperial-Royal Court
30 kg of salami or how much does an emperor eat? How the Court was supplied with food
Naked archduke at Court supplier Sacher! A headline that is also good publicity
What do Franz Joseph and a woman revolutionary have in common?
To every region its task? ‘Division of labour’ in the Habsburg lands
A museum, a university and spies for Franz II (I) – Economic promotion under Franz II (I)
Mass products at the imperial Court – Some indicators of industrial production
Exhibit the world – Vienna as World Exhibition venue
For progress or against technology – Contemporary opinions of technical inventions
Habsburg and Co. Ltd. – Habsburgs as industrialists
Named for Imperial Highnesses – Railways create new mobility
All ways lead to Vienna – Trains mean quick journeys over long distances
Two rulers in an ‘automobile’ – Of means of transport for the emperor and for his people
A princess on a bicycle – Bicycles in the crowded streets
New in the catalogue: apartments with running water – Too little and too much water in Vienna
Let there be light - Gas and electricity light up Vienna
Living in a top location – Neighbours of the Habsburgs
Does industry go with monarchy? Factories and their workers are kept at arm’s length
It is forbidden to wear clogs! Saving energy under Maria Theresa and Joseph II
Coal instead of wood – Coal as an alternative supplier of energy
Through the Monarchy by mail coach – Improvements to the road network
The Danube flows in the wrong direction – Waterways as a form of transport with obstacles
Unidentified flying object approaching from Prague – Balloon journeys as a spectacular show
The Emperor is spinning, the Empress is peeved – Workshops and Habsburg economic policy
Cottage industry – Outwork and ‘putting out’
‘Spinning Jenny’ versus the workshops or ‘manufactories’ – Of workshops and new machines
With needle and thread – The invention of the sewing machine
The guilds as tax collectors – Eighteenth-century craft reforms
Does competition stimulate trade? Journeymen in Vienna protest against the ‘manufactories’
If you earn money you can go shopping – The link between the manufactories and consumerism
St Nicholas’ Day gifts and a fortune ‘under the mattress’ – What Maria Theresa earned and did with her money
More state, less private enterprise. Or: Marrying can make you rich!
The ‘fat lady’ in Ethiopia - Maria Theresa’s likeness on its travels
Money of paper – Financial necessity is the mother of invention
Let speculation commence ... The founding of the Vienna Stock Exchange
Joseph II’s ‘sacred’ plough – The Emperor as farmer
Survey the country and put a tax on land – The Josephinian land register was used for a new system of taxation
More land for agriculture – The search for arable land
Dead sparrows and prayers against locusts – Measures to increase yields
What is put on the table is eaten! A short history of the potato
Attention: End of customs area! Customs borders as economic obstacles
Tolls are not there for fun – Anyone going on a journey had to pay tolls
Tolls are not there for fun
Coach for transporting people, luggage and mail, 19th century
Who is protected by protective tariffs? Sealing off the Monarchy as a form of economic programme
At the Hungarian border things came to a stop – Hungary is given the role of the Monarchy’s granary
Go forth and multiply! The Habsburgs’ human capital
Measure the masses – Of ‘descriptions of souls’ and house numbers
More people – Population growth in the Monarchy
For the happiness of the population? State welfare and tax systems
It is not (only) a matter of size – The population must work more
The last knight: Maximilian I
Sympathetic towards Protestants: Maximilian II
The Habsburg ‘fraternal quarrel’: Rudolf II against Matthias
The tripartite division of the Austrian inheritance
Charles V and the empire ‘on which the sun never set’
The birth of the Austrian line: Ferdinand I
Maximilian and the preservation of his memory
28 The ‘Black Men’ and an emperor
A medieval ‘freelancer’: Albrecht Dürer
The ‘completer’: Ferdinand I
Depicting imperial might in pictures – with fruit
Who am I?
The horn of a unicorn and the Holy Grail: the Habsburg treasure
Theatrum mundi: the whole world contained in a single chamber
The Ambras Kunstkammer
The Kunst- und Wunderkammer of Emperor Rudolf II
Collecting among the middle classes
Systematization: how the Habsburg art collections came to form the basis of modern museums
The counter-reformers: Charles II of Inner Austria and Ferdinand II
Art and the Thirty Years’ War
Monastic institutions in Austria
Foreign dominance in the Austrian painting sector
A house in the country
Stately architecture – Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach
The importance of art and artists for the Habsburgs
Freelance artists in the sixteenth century
Working at Court I: pro and contra
Working at Court II: conditions of production
Art in the service of power
Marry me – the functions of portraiture
The beloved family
This portrait is enchanting fair – portraiture as a source of income
Private insights
The fascination of the past
An anthem for the emperor
Franz Joseph’s portrait
Money from the ‘New World’ – sources of money and taxation under the Habsburgs
Wars are an expensive business – Defence against the Turks as a burden on Habsburg finances
Turning lead into silver – Experiments in alchemy at the Imperial Court
‘Sponsored by Fugger’ – Trading houses as financial backers
(In)voluntary loans – The Jews as financial backers
White gold – The Habsburgs’ salt monopoly
Salt sites – Where the Habsburgs produced their salt
The land of silver and coins – Mining silver and minting coins in Tyrol
Old iron – The iron and arms industries in the early modern period
The knife’s edge – Scythes and knives as big sellers
Merry on wine and beer – Tales of inns and taverns
Brewing beer, growing wine and providing revenue for the authorities – Of breweries and vineyards
Aristocrats with a sweet tooth – How chocolate ‘conquered’ Vienna
Therapeutic, luxurious and a stimulant – Coffee and tea are put on the menu
As sweet as sugar – from luxury item to article of mass consumption
The joys of smoking versus addiction to tobacco – From nobleman to farmer’s wife, smoking is for everyone
When non-smoking threatened the Monarchy – The non-smokers of Lombardy
Good sight – Spectacles are put on noses
Measuring time – Of large tower clocks and small pocket watches
Punctual town dwellers, timeless peasants, leisurely women – Or: why clock time is not for everyone
A look at the starry heavens – Sights and insights through the telescope
Oxen at knock-down prices - peasant levies
Fish on the table – Fish ponds as a source of income
Rags and rag collectors – On making paper
Crystal clear – Glass production in the early modern period
Speculation in foodstuffs in the early modern period – The links between weather, manorial estates and grain prices
Guaranteed cheap and definitely not stolen – Flea markets in the early modern period
Everything one’s heart desires – Europe’s commercial arteries
Of markets and fairs – and their importance for trade
Not a global player after all – On overseas trade
The Court as ‘liberator’ – Of Court craftsmen and craftsmen ‘exempted by the Court’
Worries about the younger generation: Charles VI
Reforming zeal in the Baroque: Joseph I
Another Ferdinand: Ferdinand III
Leopold I: ‘Türkenpoldl’
Persecutor of the Protestants: Ferdinand II
A question of priorities
Vienna Gloriosa: The grandiose projects of Charles VI
The Ceremonial Apartments
The Presidential Chancellery and the long shadow of the double eagle
The subtle distinction: Court Ball and Ball at Court
The public banquet – a visual feast for the crowd
The Court as the source of power
A closed society
Noblesse oblige – aristocratic career paths
Faith and power – the nobility and the Catholic Church
Vienna – the city as stage for the display of aristocratic status
Governors thrown out of window
The Czech trauma of Bílá Hora
Emperor Ferdinand II intoxicated by power
‘Heja Sverige’: The Swedes are coming
Wallenstein: death by murder
The war’s terrible final phase
Peace at last
A new great power in south-east Europe: the Ottoman Empire
The Emperor and his Court
‘Blood enmity’ with France: Charles V against Francis I
The omnipotence of etiquette – ceremonial at the Viennese Court
‘The Turk’ at the gates of Vienna: Episode 1
(Minor) hostilities along the Military Frontier
Members only – the right of admission to Court
Habsburg versus the Sun King
‘The Turk’ at the gates of Vienna: Episode 2
A question of honour – receiving the diplomatic corps
Honorary services at Court – it’s being there that counts!
The battle for the Spanish inheritance
On the 'Empress’s side' – women at Court
Prince Eugene, the ‘noble knight’
Imperial ‘downtime’: the Habsburg passion for hunting
The emperor’s new clothes – Joseph II’s break with tradition
Happy imperial holidays – summer residences around Vienna
Marrying into Burgundy: Maximilian I and Mary of Burgundy
Marrying into Spain: Philip the Fair and Joan the Mad
Marrying into Bohemia and Hungary with a double wedding in Vienna
Daughters and sisters, get married!
Schönbrunn before ‛Schönbrunn’ – the beginnings
From castle in the air to château de plaisance – Schönbrunn and Fischer von Erlach
The allure of the exotic – Habsburgs and the fashion for all things Chinese
The Hradčany – the castle at Prague
Pressburg – the capital of exile
Graz – a bulwark of faith
The Golden Fleece
The Neugebäude – an idealist’s dream
The Habsburgs’ Spanish dream
The Escorial
Rudolf II and the ‛Golden City’
The new Rome: Fischer von Erlach and the 'Kaiserstil'
The Karlskirche
Wanted: gravediggers!
Syphilis – an American disease?
Dealing in drugs and herbs. A lucrative business
Popular medical treatments – cupping, bleeding and purging
Imbalances of the humours and the nervous system: the beginning of the campaigns against onanism
Hosts, patron saints and books of miracles. White magic for Christians
A robot in Prague and an elixir for Rudolf II
In league with the devil
Healing with herbs. Theriac and other remedies
Washing, drawing, lancing – the requisite skills for a barber-surgeon in early modern times
From the Hutterites to the Amish
With the caroja to the auto-da-fé. The Spanish Inquisition
Counting the days afresh
Tertius gaudens – when two quarrel, a third rejoices
Horn: town of insurgent Estates
The Wiener Neustädter Blutgericht – the hanging tribunal at Wiener Neustadt
Anti-Fuggerians in the mines
‘When Adam delved and Eve span …’
Making war pay
Life in the towns and cities
Jesuits evangelize the world
Tour de France and Giro d’Italia: popular tours even before the days of the racing bike
Peasants on border patrol
Croatian colonists for a devastated (Burgen)land
The ‘legs’ of the community: Of pedlars and the imperial Taxis Post
Monarch of all he surveys. The patriarchal household
Living (like) in a commune?
Childbearing and childrearing. Women in the household
Like father, like son …
The Church has its say. New standards of morality for the household-family
The natural history collections
Ostarrîchi: Austria under the Babenbergs
The Habsburgs’ origins as a Swiss noble family
Rudolf I of Habsburg: From ‘poor count’ to King of the Romans
King Ottokar’s Fortune and End
The Habsburgs take over Austria
A king and his murderer
Forgery à la Habsburg: the Privilegium maius
If I were King ... – Duke Rudolf IV ‘the Founder’
Fraternal strife and territorial partitioning
Anything holy will fetch a good price – The medieval trade in religious relics
Good business under the protection of saints – Markets in monasteries and cemeteries
Monastery business matters – Monasteries and trade in the Middle Ages
Off to the ‘holy places’ – Pilgrims and pilgrimages in the Middle Ages
‘The end of the world is nigh’ – The people of Europe beset by natural disasters
‘Mortalitas magna’ – the ‘Great Death’ – the plague epidemic of 1348-9
Large areas of land completely deserted – Demographic trends and agricultural production
Lord of the manor has vacancies for peasants, with possible tenure for life – The origin of the peasant class
Of maids and day labourers, craftsmen and the ‘unhoused’ – Social groups in the countryside
Peasants versus the lords of the manor – Rural revolts
‘High society’ – How having the rights of a burgher went hand in hand with social status
On the fringes of town – beggars, prostitutes, hangmen
Craftsmen are men – and women? Work for women and men in the world of urban crafts and trades
Tuesday and Saturday are market days – crafts, markets and food supplies in medieval Vienna
Persecution of the Jews in the Middle Ages – With social and economic motives and religious and ideological legitimation
Ancient connections: Swiss monasteries as Habsburg loci of remembrance
The Holy Roman Empire and the divine order of the world
Schloss Eckartsau: Emperor Karl on his way into exile
What do the Emperor’s apartments look like?
The emperor’s furniture – the Hofmobiliendepot
Signs of imperial majesty: the Crown of Rudolf
A cathedral without a bishop: St Stephen’s in Vienna
Almost a crown: The Austrian archducal coronet
Pious religious zeal as a sovereign virtue
The quest for ‘blue blood’ – the Habsburgs’ fictitious ancestors
AEIOU
The House of Austria – the Habsburgs and the Empire
The double-headed eagle: the omnipresent emblem of the Habsburgs
The struggle for peoples’ souls – the Habsburgs and the Counter-Reformation
Magna Mater Austriae – the veneration of the Virgin as the Habsburg state cult
Marks of presence: ecclesiastical endowments of the Habsburgs in Vienna
Mauerbach and Gaming: the rise and fall of two Habsburg monastic foundations
Under the sign of the Cross
The Habsburg Court monastery – St Augustine’s
New spirit in old buildings: religious houses in the Baroque era
The question of utility: The ‘Klostersturm’ under Joseph II
The Erbhuldigung – The act of Hereditary Homage
The Corpus Christi procession – ‘God’s Court Ball’
The beginnings – the medieval Hofburg
The spiritual centre: the Hofburg Chapel
In humility: the foot-washing ceremony
Wiener Neustadt – the ‘forever loyal’ city
The Habsburg heaven: patron saints of lands and dynasty
Innsbruck – Residence with Alpine panorama
For God, Emperor and Fatherland
The textualization of the world
If only I could read
Places of learning: schools
A Viennese institution: the Collegium civium
Book production in the Middle Ages
What did people read in the Middle Ages? Courtly and middle-class reading matter
The invention of the printing press
The secularization of education
I want more! The revolution in reading in the eighteenth century
Pirate editions commissioned by the state
A university for Vienna
Teachers and students at Vienna University
‘Bursen’ and ‘Koderien’ – the student hostels of the Middle Ages
Septem artes liberales: What was studied in the Middle Ages?
Winds of change – humanism arrives at Vienna University
More state influence: Gerard van Swieten’s reform of the university
Revolution! Academic freedom for the university and women in the lecture halls
A travelling orchestra for Maximilian I
An official post at last! The secularization of the Hofmusikkapelle
A difficult legacy? The Hofmusikkapelle on its journey to the present day
Courtly and popular pleasures
Viennese masquerades
Historicism – the architectural style of the Ringstrasse
The glory that was Rome – Franz Joseph’s dream of an Imperial Forum
The emperor’s architects
The palaces of art and science
It’s a record! 15,527 visitors on one day at the Kunsthistorisches Museum
Buried alive? The new Burgtheater on Vienna’s Ringstrasse
The ‘sunken chest’: The building of the Vienna Court Opera on the Ring
A new venue: the Redoute Rooms
The bears are out! Bloodthirsty pleasures at the Hetz amphitheatre
The Biedermeier mania for dancing
The Viennese coffee house
The Viennese waltz
The Strauss dynasty – a family business
Roll up, roll up! Entertainments in the Prater
Vienna’s new art-loving bourgeoisie
Censored!
Singing a chorus for freedom in the police state
The home of opera: The Kärntnertortheater
Musical life in the new opera house on the Ring
Serious and dangerous entertainments
Weh dem, der lügt! Censorship in the theatre
A social hotspot: the Burgtheater
'Our revels now are ended': the old Burgtheater moves to its new premises on the Ring
The theatre-makers
Maria Theresa, empress and interior designer
Trying out comfort and cosiness for a change: Biedermeier at Court
‘Dispensing with all unnecessary pomp’
… And what about middle-class households?
A ‘Turkish Salon’ in the Vienna Hofburg
Leopoldine: Sunday’s child
1816 – A fateful year for Leopoldine
An enquiry from Rio de Janeiro
An expedition to the tropics
A Portuguese fairy-tale prince?
Family life in Rio de Janeiro
The English governess: Maria Graham
January 9, 1822: Fico – I am staying
2nd September 1822 – Brazil becomes an independent empire
A masterpiece of diplomacy
Leopoldina – a Brazilian patriot
Mission accomplished...
Emperor Franz II/I and Napoleon
Marie Louise – a childhood spent in the shadows of world politics
Napoleon at Schönbrunn Palace
Marie Louise and the Duke of Reichstadt
Habsburg occupation of the royal throne
The posthumous prince and his guardian
A weak yet tenacious emperor: Frederick III
Fraternal strife: Emperor Frederick III versus Duke Albrecht VI
The Hungarians are coming: Emperor Frederick III versus Matthias Corvinus
The reuniting of the Habsburg lands: Maximilian I
Frederick of the Empty Pockets and the Tyroleans
Napoleon seeks a wife
Napoleon and Marie Louise: Courtship and wedding in Vienna
The handover of the bride
First meeting and wedding in Paris
The Court Linen Room
The Feast of St Nicholas
Christmas down the ages
O Christmas Tree – the Habsburgs and the Christmas tree
Christmas in the imperial family
A year at Court – the Court Calendar
The 'first tier' of society - social interaction in the aristocracy
An all too closed society
Following in Sisi’s footsteps: the imperial park at Bad Ischl
The emperor on his summer retreat: the imperial villa at Ischl
The problem of the succession
Franz Joseph and Franz Ferdinand – a tense relationship
Karl – the unexpected crown prince
Charles V and the vision of universal monarchy
A very special Christmas concert: Joseph Haydn and the Russian grand duchess
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