HOFBURG, Michaelerplatz
- Audio File length: 2.35
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Language: English / USA
The main façade of the Hofburg is a striking, dramatic complex of architecture and decoration conceived in the last years of the 19th century in exuberant neo-Baroque style.
Like a veritable theatrical backdrop, the façade, topped by a dome, is arranged in a semicircle to embrace an entire side of the bustling Michaelerplatz. At the ends of the façade, you can see two fountains crowded with statues representing "dominion over land and seas" by the Habsburg empire.
The square, in the subsoil of which archaeological remains of the ancient Vindobona (Roman Vienna) were found, is named after the historic Church of St. Michael, of medieval origin. Although the church has undergone many changes over time, it still retains some Romanesque and Gothic parts inside, highlighted by recent restorations. Beneath the church is an underground area that forms the Michaelergruft (St. Michael's crypt), used between the 16th and 18th centuries as a burial place for aristocrats and personages of the imperial court.
Predominant in the square is the eclectic and monumental style beloved by Emperor Franz Joseph, with magnificent, elaborately decorated palaces and historic meeting places, such as Café Griensteidl, frequented by writers and intellectuals between the 19th and 20th centuries....