Schonbrunn and Mozart

Today’s adventure first took me on the UBahn (Metro) about 7 km (5.5 miles) out of the Ringstrasse and the center of the city the Schonbrunn Palace. The Palace was the summer home of the Hapsburg dynasty and has over 1400 rooms. In 1569,Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian II purchased the land and lived in an existing mansion. Work started as early as the mid-17th century until the Palace in its current form was completed in the 1750s.

As you can see it was another wet, dreary day. It actually rained harder today so I borrowed an umbrella from the front desk. There is also another Christmas Market in the open area in front of the Palace.

Since I had purchased a combo ticket yesterday at Hofburg, I was able to skip the long line at the ticket office and go right into the Palace.

The covering on the left side of the chair is original. The one on the right is refurbished and is what the chair would have looked like in the days of the Emperors.
The Emperor’s study. All of these chairs have been refurbished.
Portraits of the last occupants of the Palace… Franz Joseph and Elizabeth (also known as Sisi). For him it was a love match, but historians aren’t sure about how Sisi felt. She was only 16 when she was married. She traveled extensively throughout her life and was assassinated by an Italian anarchist in 1898.
Emperor Franz Joseph died in this bed in 1916.
A sitting area. This room would give me nightmares with the busy floral pattern.
A family dining room.

You haven’t seen any pictures of the ceilings because except for one room, they were very plain. The room with the fancy ceiling is the Grand Salon, where large parties were held.

The Grand Salon
More of the ceiling than my face which always looks so big in selfies.

While crowded, it was nothing like yesterday when people were shoulder to shoulder. I think it was because this Palace is much larger so there was more room to spread out.

After touring the Palace, I went back out into the rain and walked around the market where I found a new sweet treat.

This was dough on sticks covered in sweet stuff. I tried the 3rd from the left which was milk chocolate with Oreo cookie pieces. It was good but I didn’t like it as much as some of the others. The vendor was nice, though.
This market also had a small Ferris wheel as well as a carousel.

Then it was back to the UBahn for the relatively short trip home where I unloaded my bag and headed out to lunch.

My home away from home in Vienna. It’s in a perfect location, just steps from St. Stephen’s Cathedral and the UBahn. I’d stay here again in a heartbeat.

I tried to go to have lunch at an Austrian restaurant where supposedly schnitzel was born but I couldn’t get in without a reservation. Since there are no reservations available until after I leave, I’ll have to find my schnitzel somewhere else. I still have tomorrow. So, I went with my favorite food in world… pizza. This place is just a few blocks from my house and has a pizza menu of over 30 types of pizza, even tuna. Seriously?? Who does that to pizza. Typically, the wider variety of pizzas the better the food. It usually means that they know how to make a good pizza. And they do. It was delicious.

Prosciutto and fungi.

After lunch I walked less than 10 minutes to the Anker Clock. The Anker Insurance Company built the clock in 1914 as part of the expansion of the headquarters. The company is now Helvetia Insurance, and the headquarters is still in this building.

It probably does something special at the top of the hour, but it was only 2:07 so I didn’t want to hang around to find out. It’s only a few minutes from the hotel, though, so I may try to get there at the top of an hour tomorrow.

My last stop of the day was the Mozart House Museum. Mozart lived in 13 different places during his time in Vienna but this house is the only one still standing in its original form. The plaque I saw yesterday was probably the location of one of the flats that no longer exists.

The museum is on 3 floors but his flat was on the 1st floor. Remember they start counting on the ground floor so his flat was one flight up. He lived here from 1784 to 1787. He died in 1891.

While none of the furniture belonged to Mozart, historians have his property list so they put things in the house that are similar as to what’s on the list.

This is the type of table Wolfgang and his wife, Costanza, would have played games on.

The manuscripts are copies of the originals which are in the British Museum.

A page from the Marriage of Figaro which he wrote while living in this flat. He typically wrote 6 pages per day, which is a lot of writing for one day.
The study where he did all his writing.

The walls and ceiling of the flat were plainly decorated except the for room adjacent to the study. Historians think it was the main bedroom.

The ceiling of the bedroom was done in Baroque style 50 years before Mozart lived there.

That was my day. Tomorrow will be cold (upper 30s to low 40s) and cloudy, but no rain is predicted. Even so, I think I may go back to the long silk underwear for extra warmth. I have a few last things to see before I head to Prague on Sunday. Tonight I think I’ll wander to the market by the Cathedral for one last look. Never know what I’ll find.

Have a great night everyone.

Wait, I had already posted this when I realized I forgot to tell you about last night’s concert. In short…. it was amazing! Music was provided by a string quartet plus bass, percussion, piano, flute and clarinet. They played mostly waltzes but a few of Mozart’s works as well. There was no filming during the show but here’s are a couple of pics I was able to take.

The Kursalon is in a park just a short walk from the hotel. We were in the uppermost part of the building where the lights are shining.
Just before the concert. The room seats about 400-450 and it was about 90% filled.

It was a wonderful way to spend the evening. Beautiful music in a beautiful setting. OK, now I’m done for real.

2 thoughts on “Schonbrunn and Mozart”

  1. You really need to open up your own travel agency. You’ve traveled the globe & you meticulously plan your travel & overnight accommodations. We could be your first clients!

    1. Actually, you’d be my 4th client. I’ve already helped several other friends with travel plans. I helped some good friends plan their trip to Italy for spring 2025including finding VRBO accommodations. I had a ball doing it. Let me know where you’re going and I’m happy to help.

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