
Vienna
Vienna was the capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire until 1918; the Ringstraße, a circular boulevard opened in place of the old walls in the late 19th century under Franz Joseph I, redrew the city along a modern axis and lined up the great public institutions — the State Opera, the Stock Exchange, the Parliament, the Museums — along a single circle. Schönbrunn Palace, summer residence of the Habsburgs, is an imperial complex of 1,441 rooms; Mozart, at six years old, gave his first concert there before Maria Theresa. The Upper Belvedere holds The Kiss, painted by Gustav Klimt in 1907–1908. The Vienna State Opera, which programmes a different production every night, remains one of the most active opera stages in the world. The 19th-century cafés — Central, Sperl, Landtmann — continue the Viennese coffeehouse culture, inscribed since 2011 on the UNESCO list of intangible heritage; a Melange in the cup, a strudel in the middle of the table, Vienna has not changed this rhythm.





