fbpx
Wikipedia

Viennese coffee house

The Viennese coffee house (German: das Wiener Kaffeehaus, Bavarian: as Weana Kafeehaus) is a typical institution of Vienna that played an important part in shaping Viennese culture.

The Café Hawelka coffee house on a quiet Thursday morning

Since October 2011 the "Viennese Coffee House Culture" is listed as "Intangible Cultural Heritage" in the Austrian inventory of the "National Agency for the Intangible Cultural Heritage", a part of UNESCO. The Viennese coffee house is described in this inventory as a place, "where time and space are consumed, but only the coffee is found on the bill."[1]

Viennese coffee house culture edit

 
Coffee house culture: the newspaper, the glass of water and the marble tabletop
 
Café Central in Vienna

The social practices, rituals, and elegance create the very specific atmosphere of the Viennese café.[2] Coffee Houses entice with a wide variety of coffee drinks, international newspapers, and pastry creations. Typical for Viennese Coffee Houses are marble tabletops, Thonet chairs, newspaper tables and interior design details in the style of Historicism.[3]

The Austrian writer Stefan Zweig described the Viennese Coffee House as an institution of a special kind, "actually a sort of democratic club, open to everyone for the price of a cheap cup of coffee, where every guest can sit for hours with this little offering, to talk, write, play cards, receive post, and above all consume an unlimited number of newspapers and journals."[4] Zweig in fact attributed a good measure of Vienna's cosmopolitan air to the rich daily diet of current and international information offered in the coffee houses.

In many classic cafés (for example Café Central and Café Prückel) piano music is played in the evening and social events like literary readings are held. In warmer months, customers can often sit outside in a Schanigarten. Almost all coffee houses provide small food dishes like sausages as well as desserts, cakes and tarts, like Apfelstrudel, Millirahmstrudel, Punschkrapfen and Linzer torte.

Unlike some other café traditions around the world, it is completely normal for a customer to linger alone for hours and study the omnipresent newspaper. Along with coffee, the waiter will serve an obligatory glass of cold tap water and during a long stay will often bring additional water unrequested, with the idea to serve the guest with an exemplary sense of attention.

In the late 19th and early 20th century, leading writers of the time became attached to the atmosphere of Viennese cafés and were frequently seen to meet, exchange and to even write there. Literature composed in cafés is commonly referred to as coffee house literature, the writers thereof as coffee house poets. The famous journal Die Fackel ("The Torch") by Karl Kraus is said to have been written in cafés to a large extent. Other coffee house poets include Arthur Schnitzler, Alfred Polgar, Friedrich Torberg, and Egon Erwin Kisch. Famous writer and poet Peter Altenberg even had his mail delivered to his favorite café, the Café Central.

 
Caffè San Marco in Trieste, where James Joyce got his coffee too.

In Prague, Budapest, Sarajevo, Krakow, Trieste and Lviv and other cities of the Austro-Hungarian empire there were also many coffee houses according to the Viennese model. The Viennese coffee house culture then spread throughout Central Europe and created a special multicultural climate. Because here writers, artists, musicians, intellectuals, bon vivants and their financiers met. The Habsburg coffeehouses were then largely deprived of their cultural base by the Holocaust and the expulsions of National Socialism and the economic prerequisites by communism.

This special atmosphere was only able to persist in Vienna and in a few other places. In particular in Trieste, which has been "forgotten" for a long time since 1918 and the many upheavals, there are still many of the former Viennese coffee houses (Caffè Tommaseo, Caffè San Marco, Caffè degli Specchi, Caffè Tergesteo, Caffè Stella Polare) in which the former lifestyle has been preserved by the locals.[5][6]

History edit

 
Einspänner Coffee: A viennese specialty. It is a strong black coffee served in a glass topped with whipped cream, it comes with powder sugar served separately.
 
Café Schwarzenberg in Vienna
 
Café Dommayer in Vienna

Legend has it that soldiers of the Polish-Habsburg army, while liberating Vienna from the second Turkish siege in 1683, found a number of sacks with strange beans that they initially thought were camel feed and wanted to burn. The Polish king Jan III Sobieski granted the sacks to one of his officers named Jerzy Franciszek Kulczycki, who started the first coffee house. This story was published by the Catholic Priest Gottfried Uhlich in 1783 in his History of the second Turkish Siege, and he took some liberties. In reality,[editorializing] Kulczycki's coffee house missed being the first by more than a year. A more factual account has been reported by Karl Teply.[7]

After some experimentation, the legend goes on, Kulczycki added some sugar and milk, and the Viennese coffee tradition was born. This achievement has been recognized in many modern Viennese coffeehouses by hanging a picture of Kulczycki in the window.[8] Another account is that Kulczycki, having spent two years in Ottoman captivity, knew perfectly well what coffee really was and tricked his superiors into granting him the beans that were considered worthless.[9]

According to recent research, Vienna's first coffee house was in fact opened by an Armenian businessman named Johannes Diodato in 1685.[10][11][12][13] 15 years later, four Greek owned coffeehouses had the privilege to serve coffee.[14][verification needed]

The new drink was well received, and coffee houses began to pop up rapidly. In the early period, the various drinks had no names, and customers would select the mixtures from a colour-shaded chart.

The heyday of the coffee house was the turn of the nineteenth century when writers like Peter Altenberg, Alfred Polgar, Egon Friedell, Karl Kraus, Hermann Broch and Friedrich Torberg made them their preferred place of work and pleasure. Many famous artists, scientists, and politicians of the period such as Arthur Schnitzler, Stefan Zweig, Egon Schiele, Gustav Klimt, Adolf Loos, Theodor Herzl, and Alfred Adler.[15] Joseph Stalin, Adolf Hitler, Leon Trotsky and Josip Broz Tito were all living in Vienna in 1913, and they were constant coffee house patrons.

In the 1950s, the period of "coffee house death" began, as many famous Viennese coffee houses had to close. This was due to the popularity of television and the appearance of modern espresso bars. Nevertheless, many of these classic Viennese coffee houses still exist. A renewed interest in their tradition and tourism have prompted a comeback. Some relatively modern Viennese coffee houses have emerged in North America, such as Julius Meinl Chicago and Kaffeehaus de Châtillon in the greater Seattle area and Cafe Sabarsky in Manhattan. In Jerusalem there is a Viennese coffee house in the Austrian Hospice.

Notable coffee houses edit

 
The Café Prückel at night
 
The original 1950s interior of the Café Prückel
  • Aida, a chain of traditional Viennese coffee and pastry shops with locations all over the city; one popular location is right beside Stephansplatz.
  • Café Bräunerhof, Stallburggasse 2
  • Café Central, in Vienna, in the Palais Ferstel, Herrengasse 14 (corner of Strauchgasse) – Peter Altenberg's favorite café and at times his primary address
  • Café Demel, Kohlmarkt 14 – the most famous sweet bakery, less of a typical café
  • Café Griensteidl, Michaelerplatz 2 – the favourite café of Leon Trotsky and many writers of that era, closed June 2017
  • Café Hawelka, Dorotheergasse 6
  • Café Landtmann, Universitätsring 4 – Sigmund Freud's preferred café
  • Café Museum, Operngasse 7
  • Café Sacher, Philharmonikerstraße 4 (a café part of the Hotel Sacher)
  • Café Savoy, Linke Wienzeile 36
  • Café Schwarzenberg, Kärntner Ring 17 (at Schwarzenbergplatz)
  • Café Sperl, Gumpendorferstraße 11
  • Kaffee Alt Wien, Bäckerstraße 9
  • Vollpension, generational-bridging cafés in the 1st and 4th district that offer seniors a way out of financial and contact poverty

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Intangible Cultural Heritage in Austria: Viennese Coffee House Culture
  2. ^ about.com Viennese Coffee House Culture
  3. ^ Intangible Cultural Heritage in Austria: Viennese Coffee House Culture
  4. ^ Robert Edward Norton: Secret Germany: Stefan George and his circle (Google books)
  5. ^ Helmut Luther "Warum Kaffeetrinken in Triest anspruchsvoll ist" In: Die Welt, 16 February 2015.
  6. ^ "San Marco: Triests Literatencafé" In: Trieste 24, 27.11.2018.
  7. ^ Karl Teply: The introduction of coffee in Vienna. Georg Franz Koltschitzky. Johannes Diodato. Isaac de Luca. In: Society for History of the City of Vienna; Felix Czeike (ed.): research and contributions to the Viennese city's history. 6, Kommissionsverlag Youth and Culture, Vienna - Munich 1980 ISBN 3-7005-4536-3 (208 pages, 15 illustrations
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on May 17, 2008.
  9. ^ Krystyna Bockenheim, Przy polskim stole, Wroclaw 2003, p. 69
  10. ^ Markman Ellis (12 May 2011). The Coffee-House: A Cultural History. Orion. p. 67. ISBN 978-1-78022-055-0.
  11. ^ Csendes, Peter (1999). Historical Dictionary of Vienna. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. p. 47. ISBN 9780810835627.
  12. ^ Krondl, Michael (2011). Sweet Invention: A History of Dessert. Chicago: Chicago Review Press. p. 274. ISBN 9781556529542.
  13. ^ McCabe, Ina Baghdiantz (2008). Orientalism in Early Modern France: Eurasian Trade, Exoticism and the Ancien Regime. Oxford: Berg. p. 196. ISBN 9781845203740.
  14. ^ Teply, Karl: Die Einführung des Kaffees in Wien. Verein für Geschichte der Stadt Wien, Wien 1980, Vol. 6. p. 104. cited in: Seibel, Anna Maria: Die Bedeutung der Griechen für das wirtschaftliche und kulturelle Leben in Wien. p. 94 online available under: https://utheses.univie.ac.at/detail/1675 (.pdf)
  15. ^ Hoffman, E. (1994). The Drive for Self: Alfred Adler and the founding of Individual Psychology. Reading, MA: Addison Wesley, pp. 52, 77, 85-86, 101

References edit

  • Wurmdobler, Christopher (2005). Kaffeehäuser in Wien. Ein Führer durch eine Wiener Institution. Klassiker, moderne Cafés, Konditoreien, Coffeeshops. Falter Verlag. ISBN 3-85439-332-6.
  • Béatrice Gonzalés-Vangell, Kaddish Et Renaissance - La Shoah Dans Les Romans Viennois (1991–2001) De Robert Schindel, Robert Menasse Et Doron Rabinovici, Presses Universitaires Du Septentrion, 2005, 328 pages. ISBN 2-85939-900-3
  • Michael Rössner (Ed.): Literarische Kaffeehäuser, Kaffeehausliteraten. Böhlau, 1999, ISBN 3-205-98630-X.

External links edit

  Media related to Cafés in Vienna at Wikimedia Commons

viennese, coffee, house, german, wiener, kaffeehaus, bavarian, weana, kafeehaus, typical, institution, vienna, that, played, important, part, shaping, viennese, culture, café, hawelka, coffee, house, quiet, thursday, morningsince, october, 2011, viennese, coff. The Viennese coffee house German das Wiener Kaffeehaus Bavarian as Weana Kafeehaus is a typical institution of Vienna that played an important part in shaping Viennese culture The Cafe Hawelka coffee house on a quiet Thursday morningSince October 2011 the Viennese Coffee House Culture is listed as Intangible Cultural Heritage in the Austrian inventory of the National Agency for the Intangible Cultural Heritage a part of UNESCO The Viennese coffee house is described in this inventory as a place where time and space are consumed but only the coffee is found on the bill 1 Contents 1 Viennese coffee house culture 2 History 3 Notable coffee houses 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksViennese coffee house culture edit nbsp Coffee house culture the newspaper the glass of water and the marble tabletop nbsp Cafe Central in ViennaThe social practices rituals and elegance create the very specific atmosphere of the Viennese cafe 2 Coffee Houses entice with a wide variety of coffee drinks international newspapers and pastry creations Typical for Viennese Coffee Houses are marble tabletops Thonet chairs newspaper tables and interior design details in the style of Historicism 3 The Austrian writer Stefan Zweig described the Viennese Coffee House as an institution of a special kind actually a sort of democratic club open to everyone for the price of a cheap cup of coffee where every guest can sit for hours with this little offering to talk write play cards receive post and above all consume an unlimited number of newspapers and journals 4 Zweig in fact attributed a good measure of Vienna s cosmopolitan air to the rich daily diet of current and international information offered in the coffee houses In many classic cafes for example Cafe Central and Cafe Pruckel piano music is played in the evening and social events like literary readings are held In warmer months customers can often sit outside in a Schanigarten Almost all coffee houses provide small food dishes like sausages as well as desserts cakes and tarts like Apfelstrudel Millirahmstrudel Punschkrapfen and Linzer torte Unlike some other cafe traditions around the world it is completely normal for a customer to linger alone for hours and study the omnipresent newspaper Along with coffee the waiter will serve an obligatory glass of cold tap water and during a long stay will often bring additional water unrequested with the idea to serve the guest with an exemplary sense of attention In the late 19th and early 20th century leading writers of the time became attached to the atmosphere of Viennese cafes and were frequently seen to meet exchange and to even write there Literature composed in cafes is commonly referred to as coffee house literature the writers thereof as coffee house poets The famous journal Die Fackel The Torch by Karl Kraus is said to have been written in cafes to a large extent Other coffee house poets include Arthur Schnitzler Alfred Polgar Friedrich Torberg and Egon Erwin Kisch Famous writer and poet Peter Altenberg even had his mail delivered to his favorite cafe the Cafe Central nbsp Caffe San Marco in Trieste where James Joyce got his coffee too In Prague Budapest Sarajevo Krakow Trieste and Lviv and other cities of the Austro Hungarian empire there were also many coffee houses according to the Viennese model The Viennese coffee house culture then spread throughout Central Europe and created a special multicultural climate Because here writers artists musicians intellectuals bon vivants and their financiers met The Habsburg coffeehouses were then largely deprived of their cultural base by the Holocaust and the expulsions of National Socialism and the economic prerequisites by communism This special atmosphere was only able to persist in Vienna and in a few other places In particular in Trieste which has been forgotten for a long time since 1918 and the many upheavals there are still many of the former Viennese coffee houses Caffe Tommaseo Caffe San Marco Caffe degli Specchi Caffe Tergesteo Caffe Stella Polare in which the former lifestyle has been preserved by the locals 5 6 History edit nbsp Einspanner Coffee A viennese specialty It is a strong black coffee served in a glass topped with whipped cream it comes with powder sugar served separately nbsp Cafe Schwarzenberg in Vienna nbsp Cafe Dommayer in ViennaLegend has it that soldiers of the Polish Habsburg army while liberating Vienna from the second Turkish siege in 1683 found a number of sacks with strange beans that they initially thought were camel feed and wanted to burn The Polish king Jan III Sobieski granted the sacks to one of his officers named Jerzy Franciszek Kulczycki who started the first coffee house This story was published by the Catholic Priest Gottfried Uhlich in 1783 in his History of the second Turkish Siege and he took some liberties In reality editorializing Kulczycki s coffee house missed being the first by more than a year A more factual account has been reported by Karl Teply 7 After some experimentation the legend goes on Kulczycki added some sugar and milk and the Viennese coffee tradition was born This achievement has been recognized in many modern Viennese coffeehouses by hanging a picture of Kulczycki in the window 8 Another account is that Kulczycki having spent two years in Ottoman captivity knew perfectly well what coffee really was and tricked his superiors into granting him the beans that were considered worthless 9 According to recent research Vienna s first coffee house was in fact opened by an Armenian businessman named Johannes Diodato in 1685 10 11 12 13 15 years later four Greek owned coffeehouses had the privilege to serve coffee 14 verification needed The new drink was well received and coffee houses began to pop up rapidly In the early period the various drinks had no names and customers would select the mixtures from a colour shaded chart The heyday of the coffee house was the turn of the nineteenth century when writers like Peter Altenberg Alfred Polgar Egon Friedell Karl Kraus Hermann Broch and Friedrich Torberg made them their preferred place of work and pleasure Many famous artists scientists and politicians of the period such as Arthur Schnitzler Stefan Zweig Egon Schiele Gustav Klimt Adolf Loos Theodor Herzl and Alfred Adler 15 Joseph Stalin Adolf Hitler Leon Trotsky and Josip Broz Tito were all living in Vienna in 1913 and they were constant coffee house patrons In the 1950s the period of coffee house death began as many famous Viennese coffee houses had to close This was due to the popularity of television and the appearance of modern espresso bars Nevertheless many of these classic Viennese coffee houses still exist A renewed interest in their tradition and tourism have prompted a comeback Some relatively modern Viennese coffee houses have emerged in North America such as Julius Meinl Chicago and Kaffeehaus de Chatillon in the greater Seattle area and Cafe Sabarsky in Manhattan In Jerusalem there is a Viennese coffee house in the Austrian Hospice Notable coffee houses edit nbsp The Cafe Pruckel at night nbsp The original 1950s interior of the Cafe PruckelAida a chain of traditional Viennese coffee and pastry shops with locations all over the city one popular location is right beside Stephansplatz Cafe Braunerhof Stallburggasse 2 Cafe Central in Vienna in the Palais Ferstel Herrengasse 14 corner of Strauchgasse Peter Altenberg s favorite cafe and at times his primary address Cafe Demel Kohlmarkt 14 the most famous sweet bakery less of a typical cafe Cafe Griensteidl Michaelerplatz 2 the favourite cafe of Leon Trotsky and many writers of that era closed June 2017 Cafe Hawelka Dorotheergasse 6 Cafe Landtmann Universitatsring 4 Sigmund Freud s preferred cafe Cafe Museum Operngasse 7 Cafe Sacher Philharmonikerstrasse 4 a cafe part of the Hotel Sacher Cafe Savoy Linke Wienzeile 36 Cafe Schwarzenberg Karntner Ring 17 at Schwarzenbergplatz Cafe Sperl Gumpendorferstrasse 11 Kaffee Alt Wien Backerstrasse 9 Vollpension generational bridging cafes in the 1st and 4th district that offer seniors a way out of financial and contact povertySee also editKarlsbad coffee nbsp Coffee portal nbsp Drink portal nbsp Austria portalNotes edit Intangible Cultural Heritage in Austria Viennese Coffee House Culture about com Viennese Coffee House Culture Intangible Cultural Heritage in Austria Viennese Coffee House Culture Robert Edward Norton Secret Germany Stefan George and his circle Google books Helmut Luther Warum Kaffeetrinken in Triest anspruchsvoll ist In Die Welt 16 February 2015 San Marco Triests Literatencafe In Trieste 24 27 11 2018 Karl Teply The introduction of coffee in Vienna Georg Franz Koltschitzky Johannes Diodato Isaac de Luca In Society for History of the City of Vienna Felix Czeike ed research and contributions to the Viennese city s history 6 Kommissionsverlag Youth and Culture Vienna Munich 1980 ISBN 3 7005 4536 3 208 pages 15 illustrations Coffee Timeline Archived from the original on May 17 2008 Krystyna Bockenheim Przy polskim stole Wroclaw 2003 p 69 Markman Ellis 12 May 2011 The Coffee House A Cultural History Orion p 67 ISBN 978 1 78022 055 0 Csendes Peter 1999 Historical Dictionary of Vienna Lanham Maryland Scarecrow Press p 47 ISBN 9780810835627 Krondl Michael 2011 Sweet Invention A History of Dessert Chicago Chicago Review Press p 274 ISBN 9781556529542 McCabe Ina Baghdiantz 2008 Orientalism in Early Modern France Eurasian Trade Exoticism and the Ancien Regime Oxford Berg p 196 ISBN 9781845203740 Teply Karl Die Einfuhrung des Kaffees in Wien Verein fur Geschichte der Stadt Wien Wien 1980 Vol 6 p 104 cited in Seibel Anna Maria Die Bedeutung der Griechen fur das wirtschaftliche und kulturelle Leben in Wien p 94 online available under https utheses univie ac at detail 1675 pdf Hoffman E 1994 The Drive for Self Alfred Adler and the founding of Individual Psychology Reading MA Addison Wesley pp 52 77 85 86 101References editWurmdobler Christopher 2005 Kaffeehauser in Wien Ein Fuhrer durch eine Wiener Institution Klassiker moderne Cafes Konditoreien Coffeeshops Falter Verlag ISBN 3 85439 332 6 Beatrice Gonzales Vangell Kaddish Et Renaissance La Shoah Dans Les Romans Viennois 1991 2001 De Robert Schindel Robert Menasse Et Doron Rabinovici Presses Universitaires Du Septentrion 2005 328 pages ISBN 2 85939 900 3 Michael Rossner Ed Literarische Kaffeehauser Kaffeehausliteraten Bohlau 1999 ISBN 3 205 98630 X External links edit nbsp Media related to Cafes in Vienna at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Viennese coffee house amp oldid 1186962556, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.