the BEST VIENNA TOUR GUIDE ever
Giving you a litte bicycle tour of my beautiful city Vienna.
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GUSTAV KLIMT AND THE BELVEDERE TOUR !!! Vienna ,Austria
GUSTAV KLIMT AND THE BELVEDERE TOUR !!!
Vienna ,Austria
October 9,2017
WORLD’S LARGEST COLLECTION OF KLIMT’S PAINTINGS
There are a number of links between the iconic artist Gustav Klimt (1862–1918) and the Belvedere in Vienna, which houses the world’s greatest collection of Austrian art. It was on the initiative of Klimt and other artists that the Moderne Galerie was founded in 1903, the institution that has evolved into the Belvedere. The aim was to create a place for contemporary Austrian art and to present this in an international context. The Belvedere’s curatorial work and exhibitions are based on this premise to this day.
Gustav Klimt
Austrian painter
Gustav Klimt was an Austrian symbolist painter and one of the most prominent members of the Vienna Secession movement. Klimt is noted for his paintings, murals, sketches, and other objets d'art.
7 Reasons to visit the Belvedere
#1 Gustav Klimt & Kiss
#2 Architecture & Cultural Heritage
#3 Masterpieces
#4 Exhibitions
#5 Events & Activities
#6 Learning & Science
#7 Leisure & Feeling Good
belvedere.at
The two Belvedere palaces were built in the early eighteenth century by the famous Baroque architect Johann Lucas von Hildebrandt to be used as the summer residence of Prince Eugene of Savoy (1663–1736). One of Europe’s most stunning Baroque landmarks, this ensemble – comprising the Upper and Lower Belvedere and an extensive garden – is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Today the Belvedere houses the greatest collection of Austrian art dating from the Middle Ages to the present day, complemented by the work of international artists such as Claude Monet, Vincent van Gogh, and Max Beckmann. Highlights from the holdings Vienna 1880–1914 are the world’s largest collection of Gustav Klimt’s paintings (including the famous golden Art Nouveau icons the Kiss (Lovers) and Judith) and works by Egon Schiele and Oskar Kokoschka. Key works of French Impressionism and the greatest collection of Viennese Biedermeier art are further attractions on display at the Upper Belvedere.
The Lower Belvedere and the former Orangery are venues for top temporary exhibitions. These shows focus on presenting Austrian art in an international context, as defined in the Belvedere’s original mission back in 1903 (when it was founded as the Moderne Galerie). They comprise retrospective shows of Austrian artists, based on research into their work and significance, and major thematic exhibitions exploring key movements and epochs in art.
An insight into medieval art can be gained at the Medieval Treasury, opened in 2007 at the former Palace Stables that once accommodated Prince Eugene’s personal horses. This study collection gives the public access to the Belvedere’s entire holdings of medieval art.
Located at the heart of Vienna, Prince Eugene’s Winter Palace has been renovated and is open to the public as a centre for art and culture. The state apartment’s main rooms are now an exhibition space for artistic encounters between the Baroque interior, the Belvedere’s collections, and contemporary art.
The 21er Haus is housed in the pavilion designed by Karl Schwanzer for the 1958 Brussels World Expo. Renovated and adapted by architect Adolf Krischanitz, it was opened in November 2011 as the Belvedere’s exhibition space for Austrian art in an international context, dating from 1945 to the present day.
© Belvedere, Vienna
Master Program Information Systems at the Vienna University of Economics and Business
The Master in Information Systems provides students with IT-related knowledge and skills with a particular emphasis on management and research topics. A well-balanced mix of theory and practice and the inclusion of state-of-the-art research findings give graduates the tools they need to question standard practices and develop innovative solutions.
The program follows the European “Design Science” approach: using Information Systems technology to actively improve the way companies conduct their business. Students learn to use modern information technologies to shape business processes according to IT’s potential and to optimize business information systems to meet business demands. The curriculum allows students to individualize their studies and encourages them to reflect on what they have learned in a holistic context. Working independently and accepting responsibility for their work are additional important skills.
The Master in Information Systems was designed together with a board of leading Austrian stakeholders from industry and government to meet today's challenges and to give a solid basis for tomorrow's demands. After graduation, students are qualified for a wide spectrum of careers. Some of our graduates choose to become analysts and managers in IT departments of large companies, others excel as specialists in IT firms (hardware, software, services), some focus on business consulting or decide to found their own start-up companies.
Austria during World War II - From Anschluss to Vienna Offensive (1938 - 1945)
What happened with Austria during WWII? After the First World War the Austrian-Hungarian Empire was no more. Austria was now a rump state named the Republic of German-Austria. The following year its name was changed to the First Austrian Republic. This republic was far from stable. There was the July Revolt of 1927. In February 1934 the February Uprising took place, also known as the Austrian Civil War (1934). The Austrofascist leader Engelbert Dollfuss was killed in a pro-nazi coup d'etat. The so-called Anschluss (1938) united Nazi Germany and Austria. Austria during World War II was named Ostmark, a province of the German Reich. The Holocaust in Austria took place in a faster rate than in Nazi Germany were Jews have been discriminated for some years now. Eventually 65,500 Austrian Jews were killed in the Holocaust. During the Vienna Offensive (1945) the Red Army took Vienna. That ended the Second World War in Austria.
Learn more about the territorial change of Germany during the 20th century:
This history on location was filmed on the 20th of April 2019 in Vienna, Austria at the Judenplatz Holocaust Memorial.
Images from commons.wikimedia.org
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Belvedere Museum in Vienna, Austria 4k By Gopro Hero 7 Black
The Österreichische Galerie Belvedere is a museum housed in the Belvedere palace, in Vienna, Austria.
The Belvedere palaces were the summer residence of Prince Eugene of Savoy (1663–1736). The ensemble was built in the early eighteenth century by the famous Baroque architect, Johann Lucas von Hildebrandt, and comprises the Upper and Lower Belvedere, with the Orangery and Palace Stables, as well as extensive gardens. As one of Europe's most stunning Baroque landmarks, it is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Today, the Belvedere houses the greatest collection of Austrian art dating from the Middle Ages to the present day, complemented by the works of international artists. At the Upper Belvedere, visitors not only encounter artworks drawn from over five hundred years of art history but can also experience the magnificent staterooms. In addition to the Lower and Upper Belvedere, the museum has further sites at Prince Eugene's town palace and the 21er Haus as well as the Gustinus Ambrosi Museum.
The Belvedere's art collection presents an almost complete overview of the development of art in Austria and, thus, an insight into the country's history. The world's largest collection of Gustav Klimt's paintings lies at the heart of the presentation of Art around 1900, on show at the Upper Belvedere. Its highlights are Klimt's paintings, The Kiss (1908/09) and Judith (1901), and masterpieces by Egon Schiele and Oskar Kokoschka. Key works of French Impressionism and the greatest collection of Viennese Biedermeier art are further attractions at the museum.
History
The two Belvedere palaces housed an array of artworks even when they were the summer residence of the art patron and collector, Prince Eugene. After the Prince’s death, the Habsburgs acquired some of his collections together with the palaces. Various parts of the imperial art collection were subsequently placed on display at the Belvedere from 1781 onwards. In 1903, the state's Moderne Galerie was opened at the Lower Belvedere. After the fall of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, the Upper Belvedere and the Orangery were converted into museums as well. The Österreichische Galerie (Austrian Gallery), as the museum was named in 1921, came to comprise the Baroque Museum in the Lower Belvedere (opened in 1923), the Gallery of 19th Century Art at the Upper Belvedere (from 1924), and the Modern Gallery at the Orangery (from 1929). The Belvedere's collection of medieval art was first exhibited at the Orangery next to the Lower Belvedere in 1953.
In 1955, after years of rebuilding and renovation, the Upper Belvedere was reopened to the public, showing works by Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele, Oskar Kokoschka, and other major Austrian artists.
In the years after the Second World War, there were many acquisitions and the museum was expanded and modernized. The Österreichische Galerie Belvedere is today one of the Austrian Federal Museums (Bundesmuseen) and since 2000 has been a vollrechtsfähige wissenschaftliche Anstalt (a legally independent public research/scientific institution).
View over the park of the Belvedere
Agnes Husslein, formerly director of the Salzburg Rupertinum and the Museum der Moderne on the Mönchsberg, was director of the Belvedere between 2007 and 2016. She has positioned the Belvedere as a museum of Austrian art in an international context.
Following extensive adaptation and remodelling, the highlights of the collections of medieval and Baroque art (previously in the Lower Belvedere) have been placed on display at the Upper Belvedere since spring 2008. For the first time, the entire scope of the permanent collection, from the Middle Ages to the mid-twentieth century, can now be seen under one roof. The adapted rooms in the Lower Belvedere and Orangery now provide space for temporary exhibitions. Moreover, a study collection of the medieval holdings was set up in the former Palace Stables. The permanent collections were redisplayed in 2011.
Visitor numbers have been increasing steadily.
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A Taste of Vienna in american sign language
A journey through Vienna's culture of pleasure -- from the Sacher Cake to the Vienna Schnitzel. A video in american sign language.
Antirassistischer Stadtspaziergang || Anti-racist City Walk through Vienna || IAW 2018
Dokumentation: Antirassistischer Stadtspaziergang durch Wien, Israeli Apartheid Week 2018.
English below ========
Der antirassistische Stadtspaziergang thematisiert die weitreichenden Folgen des Zionismus als kolonialer Ideologie und deren Fortbestand nicht nur in Israel-Palästina, sondern auch im heutigen Europa, das die Technologie und Logik von Apartheid über zahlreiche Kooperationen mit Israel re-importiert. Mit Anschauungsmaterial und symbolischen Aktionen wie der Umbenennung von Plätzen haben wir insgesamt fünf Orte im Zentrum Wiens aufgesucht, um nationale Geschichtsvermittlung in Österreich in Frage zu stellen, indem wir sie in einem globalen Kontext betrachten.
Der antirassistische Stadtspaziergang fand im Rahmen der weltweit veranstalteten Israeli Apartheid Week 2018 statt. Er begann am „Theodor-Herzl-Platz“ und endete am sogenannten „Platz der Menschenrechte“.
#IsraeliApartheidWeek
#IAW2018
#BDSAustria
Eine Zusammenfassung findet ihr hier:
=======================================
Video: Anti-racist city walk through Vienna, Israeli Apartheid Week 2018.
The Anti-racist city walk through Vienna refers to the far-reaching consequences of Zionism as a colonial ideology and its survival, not only in Israel-Palestine, but also in today's Europe, which re-imports the technology and logic of Apartheid and segregation via numerous cooperations with Israel.
We have visited five places in the centre of Vienna and by symbolic actions such as renaming of squares, we want to question the national conveyance of history in Austria by looking at it in a global context.
The Antiracist city walk took place in the framework of the Israeli apartheid week 2018. We started at the Theodor-Herzl-Square and ended at the so-called square of human rights in Vienna.
An English summary you will find here under:
#IsraeliApartheidWeek
#IAW2018
#BDSAustria
Vienna Field Trip- Plymouth University
Video montage from Plymouth University students' field trip to Vienna Spring 2014.
See more @ experiencingexchange.blogspot.com
How Jewish was Turn-of-the-Century Vienna - Prof. Thomas Kovach
Since the path-breaking work of the cultural historian Carl Schorske in 1979, much atten- tion has been given to the culture of Vienna around 1900, and how it was one of the main sources of modernism in all the arts and culture. ough Schorske did discuss the rise of antisemitism and the founding of the modern Zionist movement by the Viennese Theodor Herzl, he viewed the culture as one shaped by the political and social upheavals of the time, rather than by religion or ethnicity. In the years since, several historians, notably Steven Beller, have given greater emphasis to the Jewish element, some even claiming that the cul- ture was fundamentally Jewish. is lecture will examine various aspects of the culture and discuss the issue of “Jewishness” and how it is de ned in the light of this culture.
Dr. Thomas Kovach is Professor of German Studies and an affiliated faculty in the Center for Judaic Studies. A main focus of his teaching at the University of Arizona has been in German-Jewish Studies — both the writings of German Jews, and the ways in which Jews and Judaism have been portrayed in German texts from 1500 to the present. His research interests range widely over German and Comparative Literature from the mid-eighteenth through the early twentieth centuries.
Rammstein - 2016 Festivals Tour // Fails and funny moments
This is a project on which I've worked for about half a year. I was initially just going to help Rammstuga PT with their usual videos, but they stopped doing them, so I took over.
This video contains most of the moments I deemed worthy. I couldn't find videos for some songs, but I think it shows the fails, bloopers and funny moments that happened throughout the tour.
Each channel whose video(s) I've used are shown during that specific moment, along with some personal notes or context about what's happening in the clip, the song and the concert. Some videos aren't available anymore, due to copyright strikes.
Timestamps for the concerts (listed here and in the video chronologically):
0:00:06 Gods of Metal, Italy
0:04:54 Rock in Vienna, Austria
0:14:58 Allmend Rockt, Switzerland
0:18:42 Download, UK
0:21:14 Pinkpop, Netherlands
0:26:02 Download, France
0:30:02 Hellfest, France
0:32:27 Maxidrom, Russia
0:39:04 Tinderbox, Denmark
0:40:54 Hurricane, Germany
0:41:32 Bråvalla, Sweden
0:42:03 Rock Werchter, Belgium
0:46:41 Provinssirock, Finland
0:47:45 Berlin (08), Germany
0:49:03 Berlin (09), Germany
0:53:46 Berlin (11), Germany
0:56:30 Chicago Open Air, USA
0:58:33 Festival d'été de Québec, Canada
1:03:37 Hell & Heaven, Mexico
1:07:31 Highfield, Germany
1:11:50 Capital of Rock, Poland
1:14:47 Rockout, Chile
1:19:12 Maximus, Brazil
1:21:00 Maximus, Argentina
Wittgenstein Centre / REVES 2016 Meeting / Summer School
The Centre is a collaboration among the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA), the Vienna Institute of Demography of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (VID/ÖAW), and the Vienna University of Economics and Business (WU). The Wittgenstein Centre aspires to be a world leader in the advancement of demographic methods and their application to the analysis of human capital and population dynamics. In assessing the effects of these forces on long-term human well-being, we combine scientific excellence in a multidisciplinary context with relevance to a global audience.
REVES Meetings aim at a comprehensive picture of the factors decisive for human health and longevity. Papers identify the key drivers of longer and healthier lives by explaining variations in various dimensions of health and in mortality. This includes the analysis of hitherto unexplained phenomena and paradoxes of health and longevity.
The Summer School The Demography of Health and Education (funded by WWTF, City of Vienna, Wien Kultur) acquainted international students with the newest research on health and disability in the context of population ageing and familiarized them with the multi-dimensional methods for modelling population and human capital dynamics in a global perspective.
wittgensteincentre.org/en/news/article/wittgenstein-centre-summer-school-2016.htm
Knoll Gallery Vienna - Kamil Kukla - Mass Extinction
Kamil Kukla's (*1989, lives and works in Krakow) first solo show at Knoll Galerie Wien
21 April - 04 June, 2016
Kamil Kukla’s succinct abstract works can be named classical painting. Painting that opposes its own over decades newly compiled obituary, a young and vivid existence of the genre. Something is coming back in Kukla’s works which often was missed or even avoided in painting of the younger generation: a fresh and ambitious involvement with the techniques and genres of the old masters.
Kamil Kuklas works in the exhibition titled „Mass Extinction“ originate from the artists high interest in biological processes. Complex mechanisms that the human being tries to explain and illustrate, whereas often an abstracting description or depiction is used as a mediating tool. Evolution and demise of diverse species, forms of life from different geological eras, the impressive diversity of life and its context-specific depiction or ones own subjective positioning within our surrounding macro- and microcosms - this are some of the topics that Kamil Kukla concentrates in his paintings
Gustav Klimt and the Vienna Secession
This week I analyze Klimt's most famous piece, the iconic Kiss, in the context of the Vienna Secession and the artist's own Symbolist background.
Austria in May 1945 in color and HD (Gramastetten and Linz)
This footage is taken on May 5 and May 6, 1945 in Austria, mainly in Linz.
Find more impressive videos in our playlist Spirit of Liberation:
0:00 Gramastetten in Upper Austria. Gramastetten lies approx. 10 km northwest of Linz. The village was attacked on the way of the US troops to Linz on May 3rd 1945 in the evening by a tank battalion and an infantery battalion, supported by several artillery batteries of the 11th US tank army and defended by a company of the Grenadier Ersatzbataillon II/462 and parts of the 3rd SS-Panzergrenadier Ausbildungsbataillion. Gramastetten suffered heavy damage during the battle, which lasted into the night. The church to be seen still stands there today.
5:20 Linz Urfahr - Donaubrücke - Linzer Hauptplatz. The Bridge (Nibelungenbrücke) become the frontier between the russian sector (Mühlviertel) and the american sector (Hauptplatz, southside of the Donau). The bridge and the northern facade of the central place in Linz were built by the German in the context of the Sonderauftrags Linz.
10:23 Central Place of Linz with the monument Dreifaltigkeitssäule. The pharmacy Wasserapotheke is still there, at Hauptplatz 8.
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Footage in original color and HD before restoring for the documentary “Spirit of Liberation (Kronos Media, 2016)
Watch here the new restored pictures in our film trailer:
Es geht um Europa: Ein Rundgang durch die Schatzkammer
Im Juli 2018 hat Österreich den Vorsitz des Rates der Europäischen Union übernommen. In diesem Zusammenhang wird leidenschaftlich diskutiert, was Europa ist und in Zukunft sein soll.
Für diese Diskussion kann die Schatzkammer in der Wiener Hofburg ein Forum sein, denn viele der dort bewahrten Gegenstände haben ganz direkt mit der Geschichte Europas zu tun, so zum Beispiel die Krone des 1806 untergegangenen Heiligen Römischen Reiches und die Krone des Kaisertums Österreich. Beide Insignien sind zentrale Symbole der europäischen Geschichte.
Europa war geografisch wie politisch nie eine konstante, homogene Größe. Dem entspricht die Devise der Union „In Vielfalt geeint“. Hier will die Aktion „Es geht um Europa (!) in der Kaiserlichen Schatzkammer ansetzen und die Aufmerksamkeit auf die kulturelle Diversität des Kontinents lenken.
Unter dem Aspekt Europa werden zwölf Gegenstände neu betrachtet. Dabei soll vor allem der historische Kontext beleuchtet werden, in dem die Kunstwerke entstanden sind, denn dadurch werden die vielfältigen Wurzeln sichtbar, aus denen „die Idee Europa“ erwachsen ist.
Visiting Leopoldstadt - Vienna
Leopoldstadt (Austro-Bavarian: Leopoidstod, Leopold-Town) is the 2nd municipal District of Vienna (German: 2. Bezirk). There are 97,677 inhabitants (as of 2012-01-01) over 19.27 km2 (7 sq mi). It is situated in the heart of the city and, together with Brigittenau (20th district), forms a large island surrounded by the Danube Canal and, to the north, the Danube. It is named after Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor. Due to its relatively high percentage of Jewish inhabitants (38.5 per cent in 1923, i.e. before the Holocaust), Leopoldstadt gained the nickname Mazzesinsel (Matzoh Island). This context was a significant aspect for the district twinning with the New York City borough Brooklyn in 2007.Places of interest include the Wiener Prater (from Latin pratum meadow), former imperial hunting grounds to which the public was denied access until 1766. The area of the Prater closest to the city centre contains a large amusement park, known as the Volksprater (People's Prater) or Wurstelprater (after the Harlequin-type figure of Hanswurst), and at its entrance there is the giant Wiener Riesenrad Ferris wheel opened in 1897 which features prominently in the movie The Third Man and which has become one of Vienna's trademarks. There is also a miniature steam railway (Liliputbahn) which, on its track through the woodland parallel to the Hauptallee, passes Vienna's Ernst-Happel-Stadion. The Schweizerhaus (Swiss Hut), an establishment boasting a huge beer garden, sells the original Czech Budweiser draught beer. The owners claim that, back in the 1920s, the potato crisp was invented there. Nearby you can find the Republic of Kugelmugel, a micronation proclaimed in 1984 that became a landmark of the area. Another, smaller, park in Leopoldstadt is the topiary-type Augarten, which is the home of the Vienna Boys' Choir and of a porcelain manufactory (Augarten-Porzellan). Sadly, its distinguishing marks are two disused Flak towers built towards the end of the Second World War. For features of this versatile district not listed here, see the bottom-linked Leopoldstadt Category page.
Delegation from Vienna University of Technology (TU Vienna) visited VASSCAA-6 2012 (Exhibitors TV)
Prof. Dr. Peter Vargo from the Vienna University of Technology (TU Vienna) visits VASSCAA-6 2012 to attend meetings to enhance comprehensive competence for developing scientific excellence. TU Vienna has eight faculties including Architecture and Planning, Chemistry, Civil Engineering, computer Sciences, Electrical Engineering and Information Technology, Mathematics and Geoinformation, Mechanical and Industrial Engineering, and Physics.
They are teaching Pakistani students as well in TU Vienna and are glad to educate people in the respective fields. tuwien.ac.at may be browsed for more details.
This Special Online Video Coverage of VASSCAA-6 2012 is brought to you by Exhibitors TV Network in e-Partnership with Tradekey (tradekey.com).
Exhibitors TV Network - exhibitorstv.net is the first-ever Online Video Portal for Trade Show Industry launched by The Xeptionalz - Pakistan. This unique online channel aims to become the largest directory of trade fair videos by presenting a comprehensive coverage of exhibitions, trade shows, conferences and seminars for diverse industries worldwide. Exhibitors TV Network collaborates with Event Organizers; records video presentations/demonstrations of Exhibitors and promotes these videos among the appropriate audience globally. Videos on Exhibitors TV Network help Event Organizers & Exhibitors to provide the information to those individuals and clients who due to any reason couldn't make it to attend the Event.
The Triumph of Baroque Vienna
Learn more about the exhibition Imperial Privilege: Vienna Porcelain of Du Paquier, 1718 - 44 on view at The Metropolitan Museum of Art September 22, 2009 - March 21, 2010.
Listen to co-curators Jeffrey Munger and Meredith Chilton discuss the details of a delightful dessert table with culinary historian Ivan Day.
Fired by Passion: Vienna Baroque Porcelain of Claudius Innocentius Du Paquier, the publication accompanying the exhibition, is available in The Met Store.
Johann Kräftner, director of the Liechtenstein Museum, Vienna, talks about the High Baroque period in Vienna, around 1700. The nobility—who were patrons of music, theater, architecture, and painting—also supported the art of the porcelain manufacturer Du Paquier. The great monasteries of the time were also important patrons. The influence of Italian artists and the competition with Viennese artists is apparent in the styles of this period.
A one-day symposium gathered leading international scholars to discuss a variety of topics related to the exhibition Imperial Privilege: Vienna Porcelain of Du Paquier, 1718 - 44. The second porcelain factory in Europe able to make true porcelain in the manner of the Chinese was established in Vienna in 1718. Founded by Claudius Innocentius Du Paquier, the small porcelain enterprise developed a highly distinctive style that remained baroque in inspiration throughout the history of the factory, which was taken over by the state in 1744. Du Paquier produced a range of tablewares, decorative vases, and small-scale sculpture that found great popularity with the Hapsburg court and the Austrian nobility. This exhibition charts the history of the development of the Du Paquier factory, setting its production within the historic and cultural context of Vienna in the first half of the eighteenth century. The porcelain featured is drawn from both the Metropolitan Museum and the premier private collection of this material.
The symposium and related exhibition are made possible by Eloise W. Martin and the Melinda and Paul Sullivan Foundation for the Decorative Arts.
1938, Austria: Anschluss, Daily Life 221778-07 | Footage Farm
Footage Farm is a historical audio-visual library. The footage in this video constitutes an unedited historical document and has been uploaded for research purposes. Some viewers may find the archive material upsetting. Footage Farm does not condone the views expressed in this video.
If you wish to acquire broadcast quality material of this reel or want to know more about our Public Domain collection, contact us at info@footagefarm.co.uk
[Pre-WWII - 1938, Austria: Anschluss, Daily Life]
CU renamed street sign Adolf Hitler Platz; night exterior of former rathaus.
08:43:05 Daytime. Shoe shine boy working w/ Hitler poster in foreground pedestrians in background. High Angle / HA troops passing in back of truck. Men building grandstand w/ Nazi swastika banner handing behind. Public building w/ banners hanging
08:43:36 MS closed Jewish shops; dock & river bank; old men / Jews (?) & wives sit on park bench; signs in window: Jewish Cafe. Signs: Jewish Business. River bridge w/ little traffic.
08:44:06 Ext. building w/ swastikas draped w/ limousines leaving across plaza. Soldiers riding in trucks thru streets. Hitler poster; trollies & pedestrians.
08:44:35 Farmer leading draft horse pulling harrow across field.
08:45:08 Street scene of village w/ German troops, swastika painted on electric pole, banners. German troops & old man; soldiers w/ boys & other Austrian civilians & children; ask directions of civilian from Army motorcycle w/ sidecar. German troops read newspapers & clean shoes at outdoor bench. Jump to attention as officer passes.
Pre-WWII; Pre-WW2; Anschluss; Post-Austrian Invasion; Military; Invasion; Anti-Semitic;
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