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Vienna Central Cemetery


The Vienna Central Cemetery (German: Wiener Zentralfriedhof) is one of the largest cemeteries in the world by number of interred, and is the most well-known cemetery among Vienna's nearly 50 cemeteries. The cemetery's name is descriptive of its significance as Vienna's biggest cemetery, not of its geographic location, as it is not in the city center of the Austrian capital, but on the southern outskirts, in the outer city district of Simmering.

Vienna Central Cemetery
The St. Charles Borromeo Cemetery Church in the middle of the Vienna Central Cemetery
Details
Established1863
Location
Simmering, Vienna, Austria
CountryAustria
Coordinates48°09′09″N 16°26′24″E / 48.15250°N 16.44000°E / 48.15250; 16.44000
TypePublic
Size2.4 square kilometres (590 acres)
No. of gravesover 330,000 graves
No. of interments3 million
Find a GraveVienna Central Cemetery

History and description

Unlike many others, the Vienna Central Cemetery is not one that has evolved slowly. The decision to establish a new, big cemetery for Vienna came in 1863 when it became clear that – due to industrialization – the city's population would eventually increase to such an extent that the existing communal cemeteries would prove to be insufficient. City leaders expected that Vienna, then capital of the large Austro-Hungarian Empire, would grow to four million inhabitants by the end of the 20th century, as no-one foresaw the Empire's collapse in 1918. The city council therefore assigned an area significantly outside of the city's borders and of such large dimension, that it would suffice for a long time to come. They decided in 1869 that a flat area in Simmering should be the site of the future Central Cemetery. The cemetery was designed in 1870; according to the plans of the Frankfurt landscape architects Karl Jonas Mylius and Alfred Friedrich Bluntschli who were awarded for their project per angusta ad augusta (from dire to sublime).[1]

The cemetery was opened on All Saints' Day in 1874. However the consecration of the cemetery was not without controversy: the interdenominational character of the new cemetery – the different faith groups being interred on the same ground – met with fierce resistance, especially in conservative circles of the Roman Catholic Church.[2]

This argument became even more aggressive when the city announced that it did not want an official Catholic opening of the new cemetery – but gave a substantial amount of money toward the construction of a segregated Jewish section. In the end, the groups reached an agreement resulting in the Catholic representatives opening the Central Cemetery with a small ceremony. Due to refraining from having a large public showing, the new cemetery was inaugurated almost unnoticed in the early morning of 31 October 1874 by Vienna Mayor Baron Cajetan von Felder and Cardinal Joseph Othmar Rauscher to avoid an escalation of the public controversy. The official opening of the Central Cemetery occurred the following day. The first burial was that of Jacob Zelzer, followed by 15 others that day. The grave of Jacob Zelzer still exists near the administration building at the cemetery wall.[3]

The cemetery spans 2.5 km2 (620 acres) with 330,000 interments and up to 25 burials daily. It is also the second largest cemetery, after the 4 km2 (990 acres) of Hamburg's Ohlsdorf Cemetery, which is the largest in Europe by number of interments and area.

A Viennese joke has it that the Central Cemetery is "half the size of Zurich, but twice as much fun", (German: Halb so groß wie Zürich – aber doppelt so lustig ist der Wiener Zentralfriedhof!).[4]

Opposite the cemetery's main gate, across Simmeringer Hauptstrasse, is the Feuerhalle Simmering, Vienna's first crematorium, which was built by Clemens Holzmeister in 1922 in the style of an oriental fortress.[5]

St. Charles Borromeo Cemetery Church is the central church of the cemetery. It used to be called Dr. Karl-Lueger-Gedächtniskirche (Karl Lueger Memorial Church) because of the crypt of the former mayor of Vienna below the high altar. This church in Art Nouveau style was built in 1908–1910 by Max Hegele. The crypt of Austrian presidents is situated in front of the church. The burial vault is located beneath the sarcophagus, with stairs leading down to a circular room whose walls are lined with niches where urns or coffins can be interred.

Ehrengräber

In its early incarnations, the cemetery was unpopular because of its distance from the city centre. This forced authorities to think of ways to make it more attractive: Hence honorary graves (German: Ehrengrab) as a way of attracting tourists were established.

Interred in the Central Cemetery are notables such as Ludwig van Beethoven and Franz Schubert, who were moved to the Central Cemetery from "Währinger Ostfriedhof" in 1888; Johannes Brahms; Antonio Salieri; Johann Strauss II and Arnold Schoenberg. A cenotaph honours Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, who is buried in nearby St. Marx Cemetery.

Interdenominational character

In addition to the Catholic section, the cemetery houses a Protestant cemetery (opened 1904) and two Jewish cemeteries.

Although the older of the two, established in 1863, was destroyed by the Nazis during the Kristallnacht, around 60,000 graves remain intact. Cemetery records indicate 79,833 Jewish burials as of 10 July 2011. Prominent burials here include those of the Rothschild family and that of the author Arthur Schnitzler. The second Jewish cemetery was built in 1917 and is still in use today. There were 58,804 Jewish burials in the new section as of 21 November 2007.[6] Officials discovered the desecration of 43 Jewish graves in the two Jewish sections on 29 June 2012, allegedly as an anti-Semitic act – the stones and slabs were toppled or damaged.[7]

Since 1876, Muslims have been buried at Vienna's Zentralfriedhof. The dead are buried according to Austrian law, in a coffin, in contrast to the Islamic ritual practice: burial in a shroud. The opening of the new Islamic cemetery of the Islamic Faith Community took place on 3 October 2008 in Liesing.

The cemetery also contains Russian Orthodox burial grounds (Saint Lazarus chapel, 1894) and plots dedicated for the use of various Eastern Orthodox churches. Since 1869, members of the Greek Orthodox community have been buried in Section 30 A, just west of Gate 2, near the arcades. The Romanian Orthodox community is near Gate 3 in Section 38 as are members of the Bulgarian Orthodox churches. The Serbian Orthodox community received portions of Sections 68 B and 69 C, near Gate 3. Section 27 A contains the tombs of the Coptic Orthodox Church.[8]

The Protestant section on the east side is dedicated for the use of both confessions-parts of the Evangelical Protestant church in Austria, the Lutheran A.B (Evangelische Kirche Augsburger Bekenntnis) and Calvinist H.B (Evangelische Kirche Helvetisches Bekenntnis). The cemetery was inaugurated in the presence of the President of the Evangelical Protestant Church, Dr. Rudolf Franz on 14 November 1904. The cemetery was expanded in 1926, 1972 and 1998. The Protestant section consists of 6,000 graves and 300 family vaults.[9]

In 2000, a Baby burial ground opened in Section 35 B near Gate 3 where stillborn infants, dead babies, and young children up to 110 centimetres (43 in) of height are interred.[10]

Europe's first Buddhist cemetery was established in the Vienna Central Cemetery in May 2005. An area of the Central Cemetery has been set aside for this purpose centered around a stupa, and was consecrated by a Tibetan monk.[11]

The new Anatomy Memorial opened in Section 26, on 5 March 2009, for interments of the Institute of Anatomy of the Medical University of Vienna and for the people who donated their bodies to science.[12]

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Austria celebrated the dedication of a hectare-sized plot set apart for the Mormon deceased in the Vienna Central Cemetery 19 September 2009.

Access

Private car traffic is allowed on the cemetery grounds every day of the year except 1 November (All Saint's Day), although vehicles must pay a toll. Because of the large number of visitors on 1 November, private vehicles are not permitted. A public "cemetery bus" line (Route 106) operates on the grounds with several stops. The old Simmering horse tram was replaced by an electric tram, running from Schwarzenbergplatz to the Central Cemetery, in 1901 and it was renumbered as "71" (der 71er) in 1907; it remains the most popular route to the cemetery by public transport. The "Zentralfriedhof" stop on the Vienna S-Bahn (metro suburban railway) is close to the old Jewish part of the cemetery. The closest underground stop is "Simmering" (Vienna U-Bahn, line U3), about 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) from the cemetery.

Gallery

Cultural references

The cemetery is the scene of Harry Lime's fake and real funeral at the beginning and end of The Third Man.[13] The musician Wolfgang Ambros credited the cemetery in his 1975 song Es lebe der Zentralfriedhof ("Long live the Central Cemetery"), marking with it the 100th anniversary of its opening.

Notable interments

References

  1. ^ "Zentralfriedhof – Central Cemetery (Vienna, Austria)". Association of Significant Cemeteries of Europe. Retrieved 2014-11-03.
  2. ^ [Info Service: Vienna Central Cemetery] (in German). Friedhoefe wien. Archived from the original on 2015-08-22. Retrieved 2014-11-03.
  3. ^ [Around the Cemetery Area: Facts and Figures] (in German). Friedhoefe wien. Archived from the original on 2014-11-04. Retrieved 2014-11-03. 2023-02-16 not retrievable
  4. ^ "Wien und der Tod – eine Geschichte des Wiener Zentralfriedhofs" [Vienna and death – a history of the Viennese central cemetery] (in German). Wiensehen.at. Retrieved 2014-11-03.
  5. ^ "Undertakers' Museum". Vienna Direct. Retrieved 2014-11-03. And less than 20% of the predominantly Catholic Viennese choose cremation, the rest hoping for a schöne Leiche (dialect: a schene Leich', a beautiful corpse).
  6. ^ "JOWBR Cemetery Inventory". Jewishgen.org. 18 July 2014. Retrieved 2014-11-03.
  7. ^ "Austria: 43 Jewish graves desecrated in Vienna". The Boston Globe. Associated Press. 29 June 2012. Retrieved 2014-11-03.
  8. ^ "Führungen Zentralfriedhof Wien – Die christlich-orthodoxen Begräbnisstätten" [A place for everyone at the Vienna Central Cemetery – the Christian – Orthodox burial sites] (in German). Wiensehen.at. Retrieved 2014-11-03.
  9. ^ [History of Vienna's Central Cemetery] (in German). Friedhoefewien.at. Archived from the original on 2015-05-11. Retrieved 2014-11-03.
  10. ^ . Friedhöfe Wien. Archived from the original on December 1, 2017. Retrieved January 16, 2016.
  11. ^ [Austria Buddhist Religion Society] (in German). Buddhismus-austria.at. Archived from the original on 2014-11-04. Retrieved 2013-09-07.
  12. ^ [Anatomy group 26] (in German). Friedhoefewien.at. Archived from the original on 2015-05-11. Retrieved 2014-11-03.
  13. ^ "Location shots in Vienna of The Third Man (1949)". University of British Columbia Physics Department. 13 July 2014. Retrieved 2014-11-03.
  14. ^ Heral Saraçi (2012-09-29), Kush ishin drejtuesit e Partisë Nacionaliste [Who were the leaders of the Nationalist Party] (in Albanian), Gazeta Republika, retrieved 9 February 2014
  15. ^ Hazir Mehmeti (7 May 2013), [Hysni Curri, the voice that calls to repose in the homeland] (in Albanian), AlbanianPress, archived from the original on 1 December 2017, retrieved 9 February 2014
  16. ^ "KASRA'I, Siavash". iranicaonline.org. Encyclopædia Iranica. Retrieved 2021-04-06.

External links

  •   Media related to Vienna Central Cemetery at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website  
  • Vienna Central Cemetery at Find a Grave  

vienna, central, cemetery, central, cemetery, redirects, here, other, uses, central, cemetery, disambiguation, zentralfriedhof, redirects, here, cemetery, friedrichsfelde, berlin, zentralfriedhof, friedrichsfelde, german, wiener, zentralfriedhof, largest, ceme. Central Cemetery redirects here For other uses see Central Cemetery disambiguation Zentralfriedhof redirects here For the cemetery in Friedrichsfelde Berlin see Zentralfriedhof Friedrichsfelde The Vienna Central Cemetery German Wiener Zentralfriedhof is one of the largest cemeteries in the world by number of interred and is the most well known cemetery among Vienna s nearly 50 cemeteries The cemetery s name is descriptive of its significance as Vienna s biggest cemetery not of its geographic location as it is not in the city center of the Austrian capital but on the southern outskirts in the outer city district of Simmering Vienna Central CemeteryThe St Charles Borromeo Cemetery Church in the middle of the Vienna Central CemeteryDetailsEstablished1863LocationSimmering Vienna AustriaCountryAustriaCoordinates48 09 09 N 16 26 24 E 48 15250 N 16 44000 E 48 15250 16 44000TypePublicSize2 4 square kilometres 590 acres No of gravesover 330 000 gravesNo of interments3 millionFind a GraveVienna Central Cemetery Contents 1 History and description 2 Ehrengraber 3 Interdenominational character 4 Access 5 Gallery 6 Cultural references 7 Notable interments 8 References 9 External linksHistory and description EditUnlike many others the Vienna Central Cemetery is not one that has evolved slowly The decision to establish a new big cemetery for Vienna came in 1863 when it became clear that due to industrialization the city s population would eventually increase to such an extent that the existing communal cemeteries would prove to be insufficient City leaders expected that Vienna then capital of the large Austro Hungarian Empire would grow to four million inhabitants by the end of the 20th century as no one foresaw the Empire s collapse in 1918 The city council therefore assigned an area significantly outside of the city s borders and of such large dimension that it would suffice for a long time to come They decided in 1869 that a flat area in Simmering should be the site of the future Central Cemetery The cemetery was designed in 1870 according to the plans of the Frankfurt landscape architects Karl Jonas Mylius and Alfred Friedrich Bluntschli who were awarded for their project per angusta ad augusta from dire to sublime 1 The cemetery was opened on All Saints Day in 1874 However the consecration of the cemetery was not without controversy the interdenominational character of the new cemetery the different faith groups being interred on the same ground met with fierce resistance especially in conservative circles of the Roman Catholic Church 2 This argument became even more aggressive when the city announced that it did not want an official Catholic opening of the new cemetery but gave a substantial amount of money toward the construction of a segregated Jewish section In the end the groups reached an agreement resulting in the Catholic representatives opening the Central Cemetery with a small ceremony Due to refraining from having a large public showing the new cemetery was inaugurated almost unnoticed in the early morning of 31 October 1874 by Vienna Mayor Baron Cajetan von Felder and Cardinal Joseph Othmar Rauscher to avoid an escalation of the public controversy The official opening of the Central Cemetery occurred the following day The first burial was that of Jacob Zelzer followed by 15 others that day The grave of Jacob Zelzer still exists near the administration building at the cemetery wall 3 The cemetery spans 2 5 km2 620 acres with 330 000 interments and up to 25 burials daily It is also the second largest cemetery after the 4 km2 990 acres of Hamburg s Ohlsdorf Cemetery which is the largest in Europe by number of interments and area A Viennese joke has it that the Central Cemetery is half the size of Zurich but twice as much fun German Halb so gross wie Zurich aber doppelt so lustig ist der Wiener Zentralfriedhof 4 Opposite the cemetery s main gate across Simmeringer Hauptstrasse is the Feuerhalle Simmering Vienna s first crematorium which was built by Clemens Holzmeister in 1922 in the style of an oriental fortress 5 St Charles Borromeo Cemetery Church is the central church of the cemetery It used to be called Dr Karl Lueger Gedachtniskirche Karl Lueger Memorial Church because of the crypt of the former mayor of Vienna below the high altar This church in Art Nouveau style was built in 1908 1910 by Max Hegele The crypt of Austrian presidents is situated in front of the church The burial vault is located beneath the sarcophagus with stairs leading down to a circular room whose walls are lined with niches where urns or coffins can be interred Ehrengraber EditMain article Ehrengrab In its early incarnations the cemetery was unpopular because of its distance from the city centre This forced authorities to think of ways to make it more attractive Hence honorary graves German Ehrengrab as a way of attracting tourists were established Interred in the Central Cemetery are notables such as Ludwig van Beethoven and Franz Schubert who were moved to the Central Cemetery from Wahringer Ostfriedhof in 1888 Johannes Brahms Antonio Salieri Johann Strauss II and Arnold Schoenberg A cenotaph honours Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart who is buried in nearby St Marx Cemetery Interdenominational character EditIn addition to the Catholic section the cemetery houses a Protestant cemetery opened 1904 and two Jewish cemeteries Although the older of the two established in 1863 was destroyed by the Nazis during the Kristallnacht around 60 000 graves remain intact Cemetery records indicate 79 833 Jewish burials as of 10 July 2011 Prominent burials here include those of the Rothschild family and that of the author Arthur Schnitzler The second Jewish cemetery was built in 1917 and is still in use today There were 58 804 Jewish burials in the new section as of 21 November 2007 6 Officials discovered the desecration of 43 Jewish graves in the two Jewish sections on 29 June 2012 allegedly as an anti Semitic act the stones and slabs were toppled or damaged 7 Since 1876 Muslims have been buried at Vienna s Zentralfriedhof The dead are buried according to Austrian law in a coffin in contrast to the Islamic ritual practice burial in a shroud The opening of the new Islamic cemetery of the Islamic Faith Community took place on 3 October 2008 in Liesing The cemetery also contains Russian Orthodox burial grounds Saint Lazarus chapel 1894 and plots dedicated for the use of various Eastern Orthodox churches Since 1869 members of the Greek Orthodox community have been buried in Section 30 A just west of Gate 2 near the arcades The Romanian Orthodox community is near Gate 3 in Section 38 as are members of the Bulgarian Orthodox churches The Serbian Orthodox community received portions of Sections 68 B and 69 C near Gate 3 Section 27 A contains the tombs of the Coptic Orthodox Church 8 The Protestant section on the east side is dedicated for the use of both confessions parts of the Evangelical Protestant church in Austria the Lutheran A B Evangelische Kirche Augsburger Bekenntnis and Calvinist H B Evangelische Kirche Helvetisches Bekenntnis The cemetery was inaugurated in the presence of the President of the Evangelical Protestant Church Dr Rudolf Franz on 14 November 1904 The cemetery was expanded in 1926 1972 and 1998 The Protestant section consists of 6 000 graves and 300 family vaults 9 In 2000 a Baby burial ground opened in Section 35 B near Gate 3 where stillborn infants dead babies and young children up to 110 centimetres 43 in of height are interred 10 Europe s first Buddhist cemetery was established in the Vienna Central Cemetery in May 2005 An area of the Central Cemetery has been set aside for this purpose centered around a stupa and was consecrated by a Tibetan monk 11 The new Anatomy Memorial opened in Section 26 on 5 March 2009 for interments of the Institute of Anatomy of the Medical University of Vienna and for the people who donated their bodies to science 12 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints in Austria celebrated the dedication of a hectare sized plot set apart for the Mormon deceased in the Vienna Central Cemetery 19 September 2009 Access EditPrivate car traffic is allowed on the cemetery grounds every day of the year except 1 November All Saint s Day although vehicles must pay a toll Because of the large number of visitors on 1 November private vehicles are not permitted A public cemetery bus line Route 106 operates on the grounds with several stops The old Simmering horse tram was replaced by an electric tram running from Schwarzenbergplatz to the Central Cemetery in 1901 and it was renumbered as 71 der 71er in 1907 it remains the most popular route to the cemetery by public transport The Zentralfriedhof stop on the Vienna S Bahn metro suburban railway is close to the old Jewish part of the cemetery The closest underground stop is Simmering Vienna U Bahn line U3 about 2 kilometres 1 2 mi from the cemetery Gallery Edit Buddhist burial ground Muslim section Protestant section with funerary chapel Russian Orthodox chapel Anatomy Memorial Military section Mausoleum of the architect Max Fleischer 1841 1905 in the old Jewish section Mortuary buildingCultural references EditThe cemetery is the scene of Harry Lime s fake and real funeral at the beginning and end of The Third Man 13 The musician Wolfgang Ambros credited the cemetery in his 1975 song Es lebe der Zentralfriedhof Long live the Central Cemetery marking with it the 100th anniversary of its opening Notable interments EditFurther information Category Burials at the Vienna Central Cemetery Alfred Adler 1870 1937 psychiatrist and psychologist founder of individual psychology Wolf Albach Retty 1906 1967 Austrian actor Rudolf von Alt 1812 1905 painter Alois Ander 1821 1864 Bohemian born operatic tenor Franz Antel 1913 2007 film director writer and producer Leon Askin 1907 2005 actor Franz von Bayros 1866 1924 artist Ludwig van Beethoven 1770 1827 composer Erna Berger 1900 1990 opera singer Ulrich Bettac 1897 1959 actor Hedy Bienenfeld 1907 1976 Austrian American Olympic swimmer Theodor Billroth 1829 1894 surgeon Ludwig Boltzmann 1844 1906 physicist mathematician Eugen von Bohm Bawerk 1851 1914 Austrian economist Sergei Bortkiewicz 1877 1952 composer with his wife Elisabeth Johannes Brahms 1833 1897 composer Adolf von Brudermann 1854 1945 Austro Hungarian general Rudolf von Brudermann 1851 1941 Austro Hungarian general Ignaz Brull 1846 1907 composer Carl Czerny 1791 1857 piano teacher and composer Elfi von Dassanowsky 1924 2007 singer and film producer Georg Decker 1818 1894 portrait artist Karl Decker 1921 2005 Austrian football player and manager Otto Erich Deutsch 1883 1967 musicologist Heinrich Elbogen 1872 1927 Austrian sports shooter who competed in the 1912 Summer Olympics Falco civil name Johann Hans Holzel 1957 1998 rock singer Anton Dominik Fernkorn 1813 1878 sculptor Leopold Figl 1902 1965 statesman Viktor Frankl 1905 1997 neurologist psychiatrist and Holocaust survivor Egon Friedell 1878 1938 Austrian philosopher historian journalist actor cabaret performer and theatre critic Edgar Froese 1944 2015 musician artist composer Dorothea Gerard 1855 1915 novelist Carl von Ghega 1802 1860 engineer Alexander Girardi 1850 1918 actor Christoph Willibald Gluck 1714 1787 composer Karl Goldmark 1830 1915 composer Alfred Grunfeld 1852 1924 pianist Cecil van Haanen 1844 1914 artist Baron Theophil von Hansen 1813 1891 architect Anton Heiller 1923 1979 organist and composer Johann von Herbeck 1831 1877 composer Hysni Curri 1925 Albanian revolutionary 14 15 Gert Jonke 1946 2009 poet playwright and novelist Curd Jurgens 1912 1982 actor Emmerich Kalman 1882 1953 composer Vera Karalli 1889 1972 ballerina and actress Siavash Kasrai 1927 1996 Persian Marxist poet 16 Wilhelm Kienzl 1857 1941 composer Thomas Klestil 1932 2004 Austrian president 1992 2004 Bruno Kreisky 1911 1990 statesman Karl Kraus 1874 1936 writer Werner Johannes Krauss 1884 1959 stage and film actor Hedy Lamarr 1914 2000 actress and inventor Joseph Lanner 1801 1843 composer Lotte Lehmann 1888 1976 opera singer Gyorgy Ligeti 1923 2006 composer Theo Lingen 1903 1978 actor director Emanuel List 1888 1967 opera singer Guido von List 1848 1919 19th century mystic Germanic and Runic revivalist Adolf Loos 1870 1933 architect Max Lorenz 1901 1975 German tenor Luigi Lucheni 1873 1910 Italian assassin Karl Lueger 1844 1910 politician Julius Madritsch 1906 1984 Austrian Righteous Among the Nations Hans Moser 1880 1964 actor Siegfried Marcus 1831 1898 automobile pioneer Karl Millocker 1842 1899 composer Karl Eugen Neumann 1865 1915 European pioneer of Buddhism Walter Nowotny 1920 1944 World War II Luftwaffe pilot Georg Wilhelm Pabst 1885 1967 film director Ida Laura Pfeiffer 1797 1858 explorer Hans Pfitzner 1869 1949 composer Clemens von Pirquet 1874 1929 scientist and pediatrician Paula von Preradovic 1887 1951 writer Helmut Qualtinger 1928 1986 actor Julius Raab 1891 1964 statesman Geli Raubal 1908 1931 Adolf Hitler s half niece Karl Renner 1870 1950 statesman Richard Reti 1889 1929 chess grandmaster Josef Karl Richter 1880 1933 composer Hans Riemer politician Albert Salomon von Rothschild 1844 1911 financier Helen Scheu Riesz 1880 1970 publisher women s rights and peace activist Nathaniel Mayer Anselm von Rothschild 1836 1905 financier Leonie Rysanek 1926 1998 opera singer Antonio Salieri 1750 1825 composer Friedrich Schilcher 1811 1881 painter Franz Schmidt 1874 1939 composer Arthur Schnitzler 1862 1931 writer Arnold Schoenberg 1874 1951 composer Franz Schubert 1797 1828 composer Margarete Schutte Lihotzky 1897 2000 architect David Schwarz 1852 1897 aviation pioneer Alma Seidler 1899 1977 actress Ignaz Seipel 1876 1932 statesman Austrian chancellor Matthias Sindelar 1903 1939 footballer Robert Stolz 1880 1975 composer Eduard Strauss 1835 1916 composer Johann Strauss I 1804 1849 composer Johann Strauss II 1825 1899 composer Josef Strauss 1827 1870 composer Franz von Suppe 1819 1895 composer Heinrich Schenker 1868 1935 music theorist Friedrich Torberg 1908 1979 writer Kurt Waldheim 1918 2007 U N secretary general Austrian president Franz Werfel 1890 1945 poet Franz West 1947 2012 artist Anton Wildgans 1881 1932 poet Hugo Wolf 1860 1903 composer Fritz Wotruba 1907 1975 sculptor Joe Zawinul 1932 2007 jazz keyboardist and composer Alexander von Zemlinsky 1871 1942 composer Ludwig van Beethoven s grave Ludwig Boltzmann s grave Johannes Brahms s grave Arnold Schoenberg s grave Franz Schubert s grave Johann Strauss I grave Franz Werfel s grave Hedy Lamarr s grave References Edit Zentralfriedhof Central Cemetery Vienna Austria Association of Significant Cemeteries of Europe Retrieved 2014 11 03 Info Service Wiener Zentralfriedhof Info Service Vienna Central Cemetery in German Friedhoefe wien Archived from the original on 2015 08 22 Retrieved 2014 11 03 Rund um das Friedhofsareal Daten und Fakten Around the Cemetery Area Facts and Figures in German Friedhoefe wien Archived from the original on 2014 11 04 Retrieved 2014 11 03 2023 02 16 not retrievable Wien und der Tod eine Geschichte des Wiener Zentralfriedhofs Vienna and death a history of the Viennese central cemetery in German Wiensehen at Retrieved 2014 11 03 Undertakers Museum Vienna Direct Retrieved 2014 11 03 And less than 20 of the predominantly Catholic Viennese choose cremation the rest hoping for a schone Leiche dialect a schene Leich a beautiful corpse JOWBR Cemetery Inventory Jewishgen org 18 July 2014 Retrieved 2014 11 03 Austria 43 Jewish graves desecrated in Vienna The Boston Globe Associated Press 29 June 2012 Retrieved 2014 11 03 Fuhrungen Zentralfriedhof Wien Die christlich orthodoxen Begrabnisstatten A place for everyone at the Vienna Central Cemetery the Christian Orthodox burial sites in German Wiensehen at Retrieved 2014 11 03 Geschichte des Wiener Zentralfriedhofs History of Vienna s Central Cemetery in German Friedhoefewien at Archived from the original on 2015 05 11 Retrieved 2014 11 03 The Baby Lot at Vienna Central Cemetery Friedhofe Wien Archived from the original on December 1 2017 Retrieved January 16 2016 Osterreichische Buddhistische Religionsgesellschaft Austria Buddhist Religion Society in German Buddhismus austria at Archived from the original on 2014 11 04 Retrieved 2013 09 07 Anatomie Gruppe 26 Anatomy group 26 in German Friedhoefewien at Archived from the original on 2015 05 11 Retrieved 2014 11 03 Location shots in Vienna of The Third Man 1949 University of British Columbia Physics Department 13 July 2014 Retrieved 2014 11 03 Heral Saraci 2012 09 29 Kush ishin drejtuesit e Partise Nacionaliste Who were the leaders of the Nationalist Party in Albanian Gazeta Republika retrieved 9 February 2014 Hazir Mehmeti 7 May 2013 Hysni Curri zeri qe therret prehjen ne Atdhe Hysni Curri the voice that calls to repose in the homeland in Albanian AlbanianPress archived from the original on 1 December 2017 retrieved 9 February 2014 KASRA I Siavash iranicaonline org Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 2021 04 06 External links Edit Media related to Vienna Central Cemetery at Wikimedia Commons Official website Vienna Central Cemetery at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vienna Central Cemetery amp oldid 1145524509, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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