Jesuit Church, Innsbruck
Jesuit Church, Innsbruck
Innsbruck guide
History of the Hapsburgs is a complex story brought to life by our guide, Uta von Mackowitz, who takes us walking in Innsbrucks main square, downtown, Jesuit Church, and the Royal Palace.
Innsbruck Travel Guide - Beautiful Austria
Innsbruck Travel Guide - Beautiful Austria
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Innsbruck is the provincial capital of Tyrol. Located in the broad valley between high mountains, the so-called North Chain in the Karwendel Alps. It has twice hosted the Winter Olympics making it not only an interesting and beautiful situated city but the largest ski resort in the alps. It is located both close to Munich and northern Italy making it a must see alpine destination.
Innsbruck became the capital of Tyrol in 1429 and in the 15th century the city became a centre of European politics and culture as emperor Maximilian I moved the imperial court to Innsbruck in the 1490s. Many old buildings from the middle ages and modern times survived in the heart of Innsbrucks old town.
The city is well known for its sporting opportunities, especially alpine sports, as it is in the Alps and surrounded by mountains. Several ski resorts are situated inside the city territory or within short distance. Innsbruck was one of the centers of snowboard boom in the 1990's and the derived distinct subculture endured until today. The population of skateboarders, snowboarders and people alike is therefore above average and nothing unusual to the people.
This culture is also celebrated by a lot of events in and around Innsbruck especially in the winterseason, attracting (predominantly young) people from all around the world. There are two universities and several colleges in Innsbruck, with over 25,000 students altogether, (including a significant Italian population) making the city's nightlife very lively.
From the main station (Hauptbahnhof) to the city center is a relatively short and enjoyable 10 to 15 minute walk. Walk out of the Hauptbahnhof, cross the street at the train station cross walk, turn to your right, and go down to the next street to your left. Walk on this street until Maria-Theresien Strasse, then turn right toward the city center. Taking this street all the way leads to the pedestrian zone and the Golden Roof.
Places of interest in Innsbruck includes:
Nordkette
Old Inn Bridge (Alte Innbrücke)
Ambras Castle
Andreas Hofer's tomb
St. Anne's Column (Annasäule)
Bergisel Ski Jump
Büchsenhausen Castle
Canisianum
Casino
City Hall (Stadtsaal)
Golden Roof (Goldenes Dachl)
Helbling House (Helblinghaus)
Imperial Palace (Hofburg)
Hungerburgbahn
Leopold Fountain (Leopoldsbrunnen)
Maria-Theresien-Straße
Maximilian's Cenotaph and the Black Men (Schwarzen Männer)
Old Federal State Parliament (Altes Landhaus)
Old Town (Altstadt)
Silver Chapel (Silberne Kapelle)
City Tower (Stadtturm)
Triumphal Arch (Triumphpforte)
Tyrolean State Theatre
Alpine Club Museum
Ambras Castle
Armoury
City Archives
Grassmayr Bell Foundry and Museum
Innsbruck Stubaital station
Kaiserjäger Museum
Tyrol Panorama Museum (Das Tirol Panorama)
Tyrolean Folk Art Museum (Tiroler Volkunstmuseum)
Tyrolean State Museum (Tiroler Landesmuseum or Ferdinandeum)
Tyrolean Museum Railways (Tiroler Museumsbahnen)
Alpine Zoo (Alpenzoo)
Baggersee Innsbruck
Innsbruck University Botanic Garden
Hofgarten (Court Garden)
Rapoldi Park
Ambras Castle Park (Schlosspark Ambras)
Court Church (Hofkirche)
Innsbruck Cathedral (Dom zu St. Jakob)
Old Ursuline Church
Jesuit Church
Church of Our Lady
Church of Our Lady of Perpectual Succour
Servite Church
Hospital Church
Ursuline Church
Wilten Abbey (Stift Wilten)
Wilten Basilica (Wiltener Basilika)
Holy Trinity Church
St. John's Church
St. Theresa's Church (Hungerburg)
Pradler Parish Church
St. Paul's State Memorial Church in the Reichenau
Evangelical Church of Christ
Evangelical Church of the Resurrection
Old Höttingen Parish Church
Höttingen Parish Church
Parish Church of St. Nicholas
Parish Church of Neu-Arzl
Parish Church of St. Norbert
Parish Church of Maria am Gestade
Parish Church of the Good Shepherd
Parish Church of St. George
Parish Church of St. Paul
Parish Church of St. Pirminius
Church of the Guardian Angel
( Innsbruck - Austria ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Innsbruck. Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Innsbruck - Austria
Join us for more :
Innsbruck 2.mp4
Innsbruck tour, Monday morning. Includes Hofburg, Hofgarten and the Altstadt (old town).
Golden Roof
Kaiserliche Hofburg (Imperial Court)
Hofkirche (Imperial Church) with the cenotaph of Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor
Altes Landhaus (old federal state parliament)
Alte Innbrücke (The Inn Bridge, spanning the Inn River at the Altstadt, a bridge has existed at this point since at least 1080 A.D.)
Altstadt (Old Town)
Annasäule
Helblinghaus
Maria-Theresien-Straße (Main Street)
Tiroler Landestheater Innsbruck (Theatre)
Triumphpforte
Bergiselschanze, designed by Zaha Hadid.
New Hungerburgbahn, designed by Zaha Hadid
Tyrol is a region in Western Central Europe, which included the present day Austrian state of Tyrol (consisting of North Tyrol and East Tyrol), the Italian region Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol and three communes of the Italian region Veneto (Livinallongo del Col di Lana, Colle Santa Lucia e Cortina d'Ampezzo).
Breves imagens de Innsbruck, Áustria, em JAN2017
Breves imagens de Innsbruck em janeiro de 2017.
Local belíssimo. Lamentável que alguns aos visitar a Áustria se limite a Viena.
Principais locais mostrados:
1. Vista do centro histórico, que dispensa comentários.
2. Imagens do Nordkette (as imagens de montanha na neve).
3. Alpen Zoo.
A Visita deve ser conjugada com o Nordekette. Ir especialmente não faz sentido. Recomendo ir depois de visitar as montanhas.
Pessoas com mobilidade reduzida não devem ir. Muita subida e descida. Crianças cansadas também não recomendo.
4. Hofkirche.
Cuidado que fica meio escondida a entrada;
Se entra por um museu ao lado. Como não sabíamos, quase deixamos de visitar.
Abstraindo as belezas naturais, foi o que mais gostei de Innsbruck.
5. Rio Inn.
6. Cathedral of St. James (Dom zu St. Jakob)
7. The Golden Roof (Goldenes Dachl)
8. Town Tower (Stadtturm)
9. RathausGalerien
10. St. Anna's Column (Annasaule)
11. Triumphal Arch (Triumphpforte)
12. Spitalskirche
13. Ottoburg
14. Jesuit Church
15. Servite Church
16. Schloss Ambras. Este é meio afastado, mas merece a visita. Muito interessante.
17. Por fim, tem o Swarovski Crystal Worlds. Este último é de interesse limitado.
Recomenda-se ir apenas se houver mais de um dia disponível em Innsbruck ou se a pessoa for um fanático por cristais.
Se perde muito tempo chegando lá e tem relativamente pouca coisa para ver. As imagens imponentes da parte externa e de uma ou outra coisa interna são tudo. Não há mais do que isso.
Imagens no TripAdvisor:
Abschiedsvorlesung des Innsbrucker Theologen Józef Niewiadomski
Mit einer Eucharistiefeier in der Jesuitenkirche und einem Festakt im Kaiser-Leopold-Saal feierte der Innsbrucker Theologe Józef Niewiadomski am 25. Juni 2019 seinen akademischen Abschied. Dabei überreichte ihm Rektor Tilmann Märk in Vertretung des Bundespräsidenten das Österreichische Ehrenkreuz für Wissenschaft und Kunst 1. Klasse. Zahlreiche Freunde, Wegbegleiter und Gäste aus Kirche, Politik und Wissenschaft, darunter drei Bischöfe, kamen in den Kaiser-Leopold-Saal an der Universität Innsbruck, um die Abschiedsvorlesung von Józef Niewiadomski zu hören.
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church in Innsbruck
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Innsbruck City Tower!
Come and join me as i climb up all 133 steps to the top of the tower, and take in the lovely panoramic views.
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Burggraben and Hofburg, Innsbruck, Tyrol, Austria
Innsbruck became the capital of Tyrol in 1429 and in the 15th century the city became a centre of European politics and culture as emperor Maximilian I moved the imperial court to Innsbruck in the 1490s. Many old buildings from the middle ages and modern times survived in the heart of Innsbrucks old town.
Innsbruck has also hosted the Winter Olympics in 1964 and 1976 as well as the World University Games in 2005. In summer 2008 it hosted several games of the EURO 2008 European Football Championship.
The city is well known for its sporting opportunities, especially alpine sports, as it is in the Alps and surrounded by mountains. Several ski resorts are situated inside the city territory or within short distance. Innsbruck was one of the centers of snowboard boom in the 1990's and the derived disctinct subculture endured until today. The population of skateboarders, snowboarders and people alike is therefore above average and nothing unusual to the people. This culture is also celebrated by a lot of events in and around Innsbruck especially in the winterseason, attracting (predominantly young) people from all around the world.
Innsbruck, Austria
Innsbruck, Austria
Innsbruck, capital of Austria’s western state of Tyrol, is a city in the Alps that's long been a destination for winter sports. Innsbruck is also known for its Imperial and modern architecture. The Nordkette funicular, with futuristic stations designed by architect Zaha Hadid, climbs up to 2,256m from the city center for skiing in winter and hiking or mountaineering in warmer months.
The centerpiece of Innsbruck’s medieval Altstadt (old town) is the Goldenes Dachl, an iconic, circa-1500 landmark with an elaborate Gothic balcony and copper-tiled roof. The Hofburg imperial palace affords a glimpse into the decadent Habsburg dynasty via guided tours. At the 16th-century Hofkirche (Court Church), statues, including German artist Albrecht Dürer's King Arthur, surround a memorial to Emperor Maximilian I. The Tyrolean State Museum houses works by Austrian artists such as Paul Troger, Gustav Klimt and Oskar Kokoschka. The Tyrolean Folk Art Museum has cultural artifacts dating back hundreds of years.
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Bells in Salzburg, Austria
Bells in Salzburg, Austria. The bell from the most important church tolls first, then so on down the line, until all of the bells are tolling.
A View From The Top Of Stadtturm In Innsbruck, Austria
2006年に訪れたオーストリア、インスブルックの風景と街並(黄金の小屋根など)を「市の塔」から眺めました。
Josef Pembaur: Symphony in F Major, Op. 39 'In Tirol'
It is my sincere desire that any and all potential or actual remuneration due me be instead donated to the performers and the Tiroler Landesmuseen Ferdinandeum, Innsbruck, Austria
Josef Pembaur (1848-1923)
Symphony in F Major, Op. 39 'In Tirol'
I. Morgen, aufsteig in Gebirge (Morning, climbing in the mountains): Moderato - Allegro 0:00
II. Idylle (Idyll): Andante 11:39
III. Spiel und Tanz im Dorfe (Play and dance in the village): Allegro 23:03
IV. Fröhliche Heimkehr (Happy homecoming): Allegro assai 31:14
Orchester der Akademie St. Blasius
Karlheinz Siessl, conductor
Josef Pembaur the Elder (1848 - 1923) was an Austrian conductor, composer and music teacher.
The son of an administrative officer and local council member, Pembaur studied law at the University of Innsbruck, but then turned to music and studied composition and organ at the Viennese Conservatory with Anton Bruckner, music theory and organ at the Munich Conservatory with Josef Gabriel Rheinberger, and also with Giuseppe Buonamici, Franz Wüllner and Julius Hey. In Munich he befriended Peter Cornelius.
In 1874 he became the successor of Matthäus Nagiller as director of the Musikverein in Innsbruck and secured an enhancement of musical life there. Pembaur conducted an orchestral association founded by him and the academic services in the Jesuit Church, the Academic Vocal Society, the Innsbruck Liedertafel and the Tiroler Sängerbund, which he resurrected in 1881. For annual performances of oratorios, he founded a mixed choir.
At the school, he taught solo singing, piano, musical theory, and also, occasionally, organ. Among his pupils were Ludwig Thuille, Vinzenz Goller, Anton Schmutzer, Hartmann of An der Lan-Hochbrunn, Martin Spörr and Josef Eduard Ploner. He paid a higher salary for teachers, gaining better instructors and raising the prestige of the school. In 1912 he determined that the Musikverein, which had previously used various inadequate rooms, needed appropriate facilities, and ensured that it had its own building, today's Tyrolean Landeskonservatorium.
His sons Joseph and Karl were also musicians.
As a composer, Pembaur produced a symphony, a cello concerto, an opera, oratorios, a German and eight Latin fairs, a requiem, a march, piano music, chamber music, 56 male choirs, seven mixed choirs and some 70 songs. His male choruses were performed not only in Europe, but also in America. While he showed interest in modern music as a conductor, he remained as a composer a post-romanticist influenced by Robert Schumann. He also published several articles and essays, especially in the annual reports of the Innsbruck School of Music.
Vienna Tourism : Vienna Tourism: St. Michael's Church
St. Michael's Church is one of the oldest churches in Vienna, which makes it a popular tourist destination. Explore the history of St. Michael's Church with tips from the owner of a travel agency in this free video about vacationing in Vienna, Austria.
Expert: Rick Watts
Bio: Rick Watts is the owner of a travel company called Pedal Power in Vienna. He regularly organizes walking and biking tours in the city and all over Austria.
Filmmaker: Paul Volniansky
Hail, O Queen of Heav'n Enthroned- Jesuit Church, Vienna
Jesuit Church- Vienna, Austria (June 14, 2017)
Marilyn Quiroz in Austria
On September 9, 2011, we visited Lucerne, Liechtenstein and Innsbrook in Austria. Our traveling group admired Thorwaldsen's Lion Monument, walked through the Old Town and crossed the famous covered Chapel Bridge to the Jesuit Church. We took time to shop for Swiss watches and climb Mount Pilatus. We then left Switzerland and stopped in the Principality of Liechtenstein before continuing to Innsbruck in the Austrian Tyrol to take photos of Emperor Maximilian's Golden Roof. That night, we saw the most traditional Alpine Folklore Show in town and enjoyed Schuhplatteln Dancers, Yodeling, Lederhosen, Dirndls, and Zither Music. The drinks were included in this event and I never laughed so hard in my life. The highlight of the evening was listening to a wonderful Austrian woman singing a beautiful song only to begin moo'ing like a cow. It was hilarious.
One minute of Innsbruck, Austria
Where Sill flows into Inn, there was once a small settlement. In 1239 the settlement received the status of the city and the name of Innsbruck. In the 15th century. sovereign Friedrich IV, nicknamed Friedl - empty pockets, chooses Innsbruck his fiefdom. With the advent of Maximilian I (1459-1519) Innsbruck became the residence of the Habsburgs.
Innsbruck is the main city of the province of Tyrol and one of the most famous ski resorts in the country. There were two Winter Olympic Games. 6 skiing areas in about 120 km are perfectly prepared trails at altitudes from 900 to 3200 m, over 100 km of plain trails, a snowboard park and 52 ski lifts. The city has a well-developed infrastructure.
Linz, Austria Tourism : Linz Tourism: St. Ignatius Church
St. Ignatius church in Linz, Austria is a two tower Jesuit church and is the largest baroque style church in the city for tourists to see. Visit St. Ignatius church in Linz, home of the annual Bruckner festival, with travel tips in this free video on tourism.
Expert: Linz, Austria
Bio: Linz is the third largest city of Austria and capital of the state of Upper Austria.
Filmmaker: Demand Media
Pelegs Austria trip - Innsbruck church
Recorded on June 15, 2010 using a Flip Video camcorder.
Innsbruck Hofgarten : royal garden in the centre of the city
The ten hectare Hofgarten is located in the centre of Innsbruck right next to the royal palace - after all where else would one expect a royal garden to be located? It was originally laid out on the site of a river meadow under the direction of Archduke Ferdinand II in the sixteenth century. At the time, it was one of the most elaborate gardens laid out north of the Alps.
Over the years, the garden has been a Renaissance garden, a French formal garden and, since 1858, an English landscape garden. It contains plants that were planted personally by the Austrian Empress, Maria Theresa. The Tiroler Kunstpavillon (Tyrolean Art Pavilion) in the middle of the park dates back to 1733. Today, the pavilion supports numerous events—mainly concerts. Chess tournaments are held on the outsize chess boards next to the pavilion.
There is a lawn for sunbathing in the Hofgarten with a children's playpark. Otherwise walking on the ornate lawns is not permitted because they are susceptible to excessive use.
The palm house contains a comprehensive collection of about 1,700 species of plant, which may be viewed mostly on working days. During the temporary art and sculpture exhibitions in the summer season the palm house may also be visited at weekends.