Imperial Habsburg Burial Ceremony
Includes translation. Click the cc button for the english subtitles
This is the traditional Imperial burial ceremony in Austria. This occured in 2011 during the funeral for Otto von Habsburg. The Austrian government has stated that he will be the last Habsburg to be treated this way.
This takes place at the Capuchin Cloister, where the Imperial Crypt is sited, there, under the modest yellow church building, Otto von Habsburg’s mighty ancestors are buried.
I do not own anything in this video.Credit for audio, images and footage go to their rightful owners. This video is for educational and informative use only.
HISTORICAL PLACES OF AUSTRIA IN GOOGLE EARTH PART TWO ( 2/2 )
CASTLE, SALZBURG 47°47'41.89N 13° 2'51.60E
NEUE BURG, VIENNA 48°12'20.64N 16°21'51.05E
SCHÖNBRUNN GLORIETTE,VIENNA 48°10'41.82N 16°18'31.54E
AUSTRIAN PARLIAMENT BUILDING,VIENNA 48°12'29.17N 16°21'31.28E
HEERESGESCHICHTLICHES MUSEUM,VIENNA 48°11'3.11N 16°23'20.71E
KURSALON HÜBNER,VIENNA 48°12'12.01N 16°22'40.71E
HOFBURG PALACE,VIENNA 48°12'28.48N 16°21'58.47E
SEEBÜHNE BREGENZ,BREGENZ 47°30'19.71N 9°44'17.16E
PALM HOUSE SCHOENBRUNN,VIENNA 48°11'3.17N 16°18'10.67E
GLOCKENTURM,GRAZ 47° 4'33.53N 15°26'13.99E
MINORITENKIRCHE, VIENNA 48°12'34.22N 16°21'50.06E
CLOCK TOWER,GRAZ 47° 4'24.79N 15°26'16.23E
ST. STEPHEN'S CATHEDRAL,VIENNA 48°12'30.51N 16°22'22.88E
ST.JAKOB CATHEDRAL,INNSBRUCK 47°16'9.66N 11°23'38.91E
VOLKSTHEATER, VIENNA 48°12'18.84N 16°21'25.45E
BASILIKA WILTEN,INNSBRUCK 47°15'14.69N 11°23'53.73E
MUSEUMS,VIENNA 48°12'16.24N 16°21'38.89E
STIFT WILTEN,INNSBRUCK 47°15'13.09N 11°24'2.07E
THE CAPUCHIN CHURCH,VIENNA 48°12'20.54N 16°22'11.96E
SISTERS MONASTERY CHURCH,INNSBURCK 47°16'24.10N 11°23'57.14E
ALBERTINA MUSUEM,VIENNA 48°12'13.07N 16°22'3.14E
CASTLE AMBRAS,INNSBURCK 47°15'22.27N 11°26'3.79E
The Blessing of St. Leopold at Stift Klosterneuburg
The Provost of Klosterneuburg, Bernhard Backovsky gives the blessing of St. Leopold to the faithful after the Mass. Sometimes the Provost blesses with the relic (skull) itself.
Timeline of Christian missions | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
00:00:12 1 Apostolic Age
00:01:57 2 Early Christianity
00:05:57 3 Era of the seven Ecumenical Councils
00:16:04 4 Middle Ages
00:19:07 5 1000 to 1499
00:27:30 6 1500 to 1600
00:44:58 7 1600 to 1699
01:03:37 8 1700 to 1799
01:26:16 9 1800 to 1849
01:42:16 10 1850 to 1899
01:59:20 11 1900 to 1949
02:11:58 12 1950 to 1999
02:24:01 13 2000 to present
02:26:46 14 Footnotes
02:26:55 15 See also
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Speaking Rate: 0.7752023995226462
Voice name: en-GB-Wavenet-B
I cannot teach anybody anything, I can only make them think.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
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This timeline of Christian missions chronicles the global expansion of Christianity through a listing of the most significant missionary outreach events.
Römerstrasse - The Roman Road (English subtitles)
In the summer of 2014, Peter Germundsson and Paul Molin went on a journey through Europe. Most of the journey went through the old Roman provinces of Gallia Belgica, Germania Inferior, Raetia and Noricum. Once the Roman Culture flourished here and the Roman heritage put its hallmark on the area for centuries after the fall of the Western Roman Empire. Many of the cities and camps founded by the Romans still exist, and bear modern names. The traces of Rome are still visible. Out of the ruins of the Roman Empire would eventually modern Germany emerge, a nation which throughout its comparatively short existence more than once has been torn apart by devastating wars. Carpet bombers have reduced centuries-old cities to rubble and millions of people have lost their lives at an early age. Now it's been a long time since any war devastated Europe but the tide of history can still be felt. About this and much else is the film you're about to see: Römerstrasse. A film about the history of Europe and the search for it in a highly altered world.
Our trip starts in Sweden and goes down to the European continent to the Hermannsdenkmal, a monument erected to commemorate the battle of the Teutoburg forest in the year 9 A.D. Then we travel along the river Rhine, which marked the border between the Roman Empire and the unconquered Germania. Via Alps, Weissbier and Leberknödel we finally end up in a victorious Berlin in the summer of 2014.
At the same time it is a trip through the modern German-speaking Europe with its people, culture, traffic and lack of parking lots.
Swedish Audio
English subtitles. Translation written by Peter Germundsson.