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International Mozart Foundation
The International Mozart Foundation’s home houses the 800 seat large concert hall, where most of the Foundation’s concerts take place, and the smaller Viennese hall, which is used for chamber concerts. Both performance spaces are also used during the Salzburg Festival.
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Jesuit Church
Also known as the University Church, this Roman Catholic Church was originally built in the 1620’s on the site of an earlier chapel, when the Jesuit College merged with the University of Vienna’s philosophy and theology faculty.
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Jewish Museum
Although closed by the Nazis in 1938 this intriguing museum opened once again in 1989. The emphasis is obviously on Vienna but an overall picture of Jewish cultural and religious life is portrayed here.
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Jews’ Square
From 1294 to 1421 this was the centre of Vienna’s Jewish quarter and included a school, synagogue and hospital. The square was also a centre for Jewish traders, bankers and scholars but all that came to an end in the early 15th century.
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Johann Strauss Museum
Recreating the atmosphere and interior of the period, this museum was once home to the ‘Waltz King’, the composer Johann Strauss. He resided here with his first wife, the singer Jetty Treffz, from 1863 until her death in 1878.
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Josefskirche
This Baroque church was once thought to be the site of a celebration of mass by Jan Sobieski, in 1683, before he lead his army down the Kahlenberg mountain to relieve Vienna from the Turkish siege.
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Julius Meinl am Graben
Treat yourself by visiting the ‘Harrods of Vienna’; the Julius Meinl am Graben store. This is an epicentre of gastronomic delights and sells more than 16,000 of the finest ingredients and delicacies from around the world.
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Kahlenberg
Standing at 484 metres (1588 ft) high, the Kahlenberg mountain lies in the Wienerwald and is one of the finest places from which to view the city of Vienna.
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Kaiser-Franz-Josefs-Höhe Visitors’ Centre
The Besucherzentrum Kaiser-Franz-Josefs-Höhe is a 1000 m² exhibition showing everything of interest about Autria’s highest mountain. The visitor’s centre is on a number of floors, each one devoted to different aspects of the Grossglockner.
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Kammer Castle
Schloss Kammer was built by Baron Dietrich von Kuen Kuen-Belasy who bought the property from Peter Kammerer in 1582. The original buildings consisted of a castle and a chapel. In 1617 the chapel was inaugurated by Bischop Johann Paulus Ciuletti.
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