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Austria Travel Guide - Overview
Austria is a country of startling contrasts,
from the Alps in the west to the
Danube Basin in the east. One of the
world's premier skiing regions, it is
also noted for its historical buildings, world-class
museums and
galleries, and breathtaking mountain
scenery.
The country's glorious architectural riches include reminders of the
once-powerful Hapsburgs, who dominated
central
Europe for seven
centuries. The capital, Vienna, is
magnificent with its ornate Opera House and the imperial Hofburg.
Austria's other cities are similarly infused with historical magic,
notably Mozart's birthplace, Salzburg,
with stunning baroque churches set before a backdrop of snow-covered
peaks, and Innsbruck, in the centre of
Austria's Alps.
Austria has produced and inspired a catalogue of cultural figures.
During the 17th and 18th centuries, Austria - and, in particular, Vienna
- became a focal point of the cultural renaissance. Remnants of
Mozart's legacy are everywhere. However,
Austria has also yielded people such as artists
Klimt and Schiele, composers
Mahler and
Schubert, psychologists Freud
and Rank, and philosophers such as
Husserl and
Wittgenstein.
Austria is a hothouse of striking contemporary
architecture and is at the forefront of engineering, invention
and design. It enjoys an enduring reputation for music, literature and
the arts; visitors are just as likely
to find Alpine New Wave punk-rock as they are yodelling. Gourmet culture
is evident in the cafes where coffee-drinking has been raised to a high
art. Nightlife is versatile, offering
laid-back taverns, beer gardens and excellent après-ski,
trendy clubs and dance venues.
Celebrations marking events such as the
recent 250th anniversary of Mozart's death and Haydn's 200th anniversary
in 2009 underline Austria's desire to embrace its rich past. Yet it also
proudly fosters its contemporary cultural and social scene. Regardless,
staring at a classic Austrian landscape is a reminder that some things
are timeless.
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