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The beginnings of the Viennese Christmas Market date back to more than 7 centuries! Starting November 17, the Advent season will descend upon Vienna again. The aromas of candied fruits, cotton candy and other delicacies like Christmas punch and roasted chestnuts wafting around the small wooden market stalls still retain their magical power. While children warm their hands on paper bags containing hot chestnuts, parents can sip their mulled wine and ponder on the way that the Christmas market has retained all of its childhood fascination. Read More
In Austria, the custom of setting up crèches, or Krippen, in churches is thought to have started in Graz in 1579 with the Jesuits and spread rapidly throughout the country. Early scenes were simple, limited to figures of Mary, Joseph, the Christ Child in a manger, a cow and an ass all inside a rough cave-like stable. But as this tradition grew, other biblical scenes were added, for example, the arrival of the shepherds and the giving of gifts by the Three Kings. As the years passed, the scenes themselves expanded to include the whole village of Bethlehem, though depicted with Austrian landscapes and the figures dressed in local Austrian clothing. Read More
When the
Christmas tree came to Austria
Advent Calendars, one of the most widely celebrated advent traditions is having an advent calendar. The Advent calendar finds its origins in the 19th Century from the protestant area of Germany. Protestant Christian families made a chalk line for every day in December until Christmas Eve. Before long, commercial entrepreneurs started replacing the ephemeral chalk lines with printed calendars. The first known Advent calendar is for the advent of 1851. Christmas Trees, during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, in Austria & Germany were the tops of evergreens which were cut and hung upside down in a living room corner. They were decorated with apples, nuts and strips of red paper.
Mistletoe
12
Days of Christmas" Carol
The
Poinsettia
Christmas is a time for contemplation and togetherness. For this special time of year, Austria, the Land of Music, has a wealth of traditional Christmas songs in store for you. Read More
Four Austrian towns, Mariazell, St. Wolfgang, Velden, and Seefeld stage four incomparable Advent weekends. Read More
During wintertime Steyr, the Christkindl Town, is a special attraction. Visit Steyrs pilgrimage place of Christkindl, named after the Christ child. A perfect way to get in the right mood for Christmas is to admire the elaborate Steyr Crèche and the elaborate Pöttmesser Crib. Read More
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No sooner has November drawn a thick curtain of drizzle and fog across the heavens and the days become steadily shorter, then some places sink into a deep melancholy. But not Vienna. Here the weeks leading up to Christmas are romantic and idyllic. The city shimmers in a mild glow of candles while the sweet aromas of gingerbread, mulled wine and Christmas baking pervade the air. The streets and shops are festively decorated and Christmas markets enchant young and old alike. Year in, year out. November 17th, 2007 starts the rich Austrian Advent traditions. This section is to introduce you to the customs and events that make up this joyous and fun-filled season in the beautiful and romantic city on the Danube.
The first Advent weekend is the traditional beginning of the Christmas season. Advent (Latin for "arrival, coming") is the four-week period leading up to Christmas. Advent, the period of preparation for the festival honoring the birth of Christ, begins its first Sunday on November 30 this year. This is the day when in living rooms all over the country, whether in small mountain farms or in elegant city villas, advent wreaths, woven from evergreen twigs and decorated with ribbons and traditionally four candlesthree purple and one rose (even though you will see candles with other color often red or white) are hung or prominently placed. The three purple candles in the Advent wreath symbolize hope, peace, and love. These candles are lit on the first, second, and fourth Sundays of Advent. The rose candle, which symbolizes joy, is usually lit on the third Sunday. On each of the four Sundays leading up to Christmas, one more candle on the wreath is lit at dinnertime, many families pray, read Christmas stories or sing carols together. For kids Advent is a great test of patience. The time leading up to Christmas Eve passes all too slowly even when each day they are allowed to open one of the 24 windows on their Advent calendar to discover little pictures or gifts. Still, they can hardly wait till Christmas to see if their letters to the Christkind (baby Jesus) have been answered: "Dear Christkind, I drink my cocoa every morning and don't pull the cat's tail. Please bring me a model train."
The Feast of the Immaculate Conception is a national holiday in Austria. It celebrates Anne's conception of Mary. Anne and her husband Joachim were old and childless. When Joachim attempted to sacrifice at the temple, his offering was refused because he and Anne were childless. Joachim fled to the fields to be with his sheep where an angel appeared and told him that his wife would bear a child and to go and meet her at the Golden Gate of Jersusalem. Another angel gave Anne the same message. Thus Mary was conceived immaculately, i.e., without original sin. St. Anne is the patron saint of pregnant women and invoked during childbirth. Celebration of the Immaculate Conception was stopped as a public holiday by the Nazis during the war years, but following a national referendum in the 1950s, the Immaculate Conception Day was reinstituted as a national holiday
The Christmas tree comes to Austrian homes only on Christmas Eve, December 24. While the children are out, at a Christmas show at the theater or with older relatives or friends of the family who are then invited over to share in the celebration, parents set up the tree, decorate it and then lock the room. After dusk, the ringing of a bell announces that the Christkindl has just flown by and instructed the helping angels to leave the presents for the little ones. The door opens, the room is bathed in the warm, flickering light of the (almost always real) candles, everyone sings a verse or two of Silent Night, and the cheerful giving and unwrapping begins. Stores close in the afternoon and don't reopen until December 27. Christmas is celebrated with a festive meal and distribution of presents provided by the Christ child (Christkind). While Santa Claus (Weihnachtsmann) has taken over as gift giver in some homes, many families maintain the old tradition. Theaters, cinemas and concert halls are closed, but there is a Christmas concert at City Hall (Rathaus) in the early afternoon. Roman Catholics celebrate the day with midnight Mass, the culmination of which is the singing of "Silent Night" ("Stille Nacht").
Christmas Day, December 25th, is one of quiet celebration and happy reunions with relatives and friends. As is true of most important occasions in Austria, the Christmas holiday is fueled by a variety of tempting specialties to eat and drink. In some housholds after the Christmas Day feast the Christmas tree is lit again, and everyone joins in singing carols. St. Stephens Day Like Christmas Day is a holidays filled with children playing with new toys, families and friends visiting back and forth, extra-elaborate meals being served, gala concerts and opera performances being offered in deference to the season. As St. Stephen is Viennas Patron saint, the day is an occasion for more celebrating in the capital. Special exhibitions illustrate the customs and traditions of this time of the year.
Vienna on New Year's Eve offers an explosive mixture of events as the city lets its hair down for an all-night party. There are marquees and live performances, rock 'n' roll, disco and old-fashioned waltzes. The New Year's Trail points the way from one attraction to the next. Everything stops on the stroke of midnight as the 'Pummerin' bell in St. Stephen's Cathedral booms in the New Year, before the revelers continue to party on right through the night. Read More
The traditional Vienna Philharmonic Concert, featuring the music of the Strausses, begins a 11 AM. The New Year's concert was inaugurated on New Year's Eve in 1939 as a concert honoring the work of Johann Strauss. The next concert, held on January 1, 1941, evolved into the New Year's Concert which is renowned in the world today. If you want to attend, you must order tickets from a ticket agency at least a year in advance, or you can stay home and watch the live worldwide TV broadcast as you recover from the previous night's celebrating. Stores are closed.
Christmas Saints As Matchmakers And other odd bits in old Austrian Advent Customs and traditions. While seeming rather quaint today, these old folk beliefs and customs do reflect the importance a young woman's matrimonial prospects held in former times. Young maidens had one career possibility in life and that was marriage. Alternatives weren't nearly as attractive. It was only natural that young maidens were preoccupied with trying to determine just who their future husbands might be. Read More
The nibbling of mice on the organ bellows of St. Nikolaus Church in the small Austrian village of Oberndorf near Salzburg threatened to ruin Christmas Eve mass in the year 1818. Since none of the available music was suitable without an organ as accompaniment, the curate had to compose a substitute - or face a silent Christmas. That is how ''Stille Nacht, Heilige Nacht'' (''Silent Night, Holy Night''), one of the most popular Christmas carols ever written, came into being. Read More In Austria "Stille Nacht" is considered a national treasure. Traditionally the song may not be played publicly before Christmas Eve, and any commercial use of the 180-year-old carol is verboten.
The charming little village "Christkindl" near Steyr in Upper Austria has got something very unusual, i.e. its name, which means Infant Jesus; according to Austrian tradition, "Christkindl" brings Christmas presents to children. For over fifty years now, Österreichische Post AG has its special "Christkindl" Post Office Read More
The presentation of the birth of Christ on the altar painting of the Gothic winged altar of Oberwöllan has been selected as the motif for the 2007 Christmas stamp. This precious altar dates from 1519 and, following its renovation, is now on loan to the Diocesan Museum in Klagenfurt. The altar has survived in full, and it is a veritable jewel of the museum. The central painting of this altar is in the form of a relief shrine and presents the Christmas story in both painted and carved form. A young Mary is kneeling before the child. Joseph stands devoutly next to her, holding a candle in his hand. The ox and the donkey are breathing on the small child to keep him warm. Read More |
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