Inside the Sigmund Freud Museum in Vienna, Austria
Rest your ego and leave it up to this museum to show you where a truly great mind went to work, analysing patients, dreaming up and slipping out theory after genius theory.
Watch more videos:
Sigmund Freud's home - Berggasse 19 - Wien
Sigmund Freud's home at Berggasse 19 in Vienna. Nearly all furniture (like the sofa) and his personal things are at Freud museum in London as he was forced to leave his home in 1937. Dr. Freud lived in this house over 40 years and he had his appointment here. The foundations of psychoanalytic theory were invented in this house.
House is easy to find as it has big signs. You have to ring the doorbell it will be opened to you. As I understood there are people living in this house (i.e. people's homes). There is no lift/elevator, i.e. it is not accessible for handicapped people.
There is an audioguide in several languages.
----
Sigmund Freudin kotitalo Wienissä (Berggasse 19). Tri. Freud asui täällä yli 40 vuotta. Sohva ja muut esineet eivät ole täällä koska Freud otti ne mukaansa muuttaessaan Lontooseen. Talo on kuitenkin mielenkiintoinen ihan siksikin, että se on 1800-luvulta ja harvoin pääsee käymään näin vanhoihin taloihin. Talossa on ymmärtääkseni ihan tavallisia asukkaita. Taloon ei ole rakennettu hissiä.
Aika vähän Freudin ajasta on jäljellä asunnnossa mutta joka tapauksessa paikka on ihan mielenkiintoinen. Jos joku ei tiedä kuka Sigmund Freud oli niin hän on keksinyt psykoanalyyttisen koulukunnan perusperiaatteet. Freudin potilaat olivat lähinnä 1900-luvun hysteriisiä naisia jotka hakivat apua psyykkisiin ongelmiinsa. Täällä hän otti heitä vastaan. Freud itse oli kova tupakoitisija ja hänellä on mm. syöpä jonka kanssa hän pystyi elämään.
Museossa on saatavana audio-opastin usella kielellä mutta ei millään skandinaavisella kielellä eikä tietenkään suomeksi.
Vienna, Austria: A Detailed City Tour - April 2017
On this detailed city tour of Vienna, (which is the capital and largest city of Austria and one of the nine states of Austria), you will be taken on a journey through streets, parks, gardens, past and within stunning buildings and immersed in the culture of what is truly an amazing city.
Vienna is Austria's primary city, with a population of about 1.8 million (2.6 million within the metropolitan area, nearly one third of Austria's population), and is Austria's cultural, economic, and political centre. To read more about Vienna, click here: .
This film features views of the following locations, features and places: Vienna Hauptbahnhof, Star Inn Premium, Gerhard-Bronner-Strasße, Karl-Popper-Strasße, Arsenal, Schweizer Garten, Landstrasßer Gürtel, Belvederegarten, Belvedere Palace, Unteres Belvedere, Rennweg, Marokkanergasse, Veithgasse, Russian Orthodox Church, Zaunergasse, Hochstrahlbrunnen, Schwarzenbergplatz, Heldendenkmal der Roten Armee (Heroes Monument of the Red Army), Schwarzenberg-Denkmal, Georg Raphael Donner statue, Karlsplatz, Karlskirche, Technical University of Vienna, Josef Ressel statue, Secession Contemporary Art Museum, Marc Anton statue by Arthur Strasse, Museumsplatz, MuseumsQuartier, Volkstheater, Museumstrasße, Ferdinand Raimund statue, Bundesministerium fuür Justiz, Palais Auersperg, Grete-Rehor-Park, Reichsratsstrasße, Austrian Parliament Building, Rathaus (City Hall), Lichtenfelsgasse, Rathausplatz, Universitätsring, Burgtheater, Schottenkirche, Austriabrunnen, Wipplingerstrasße, Am Hof, Kohlmarkt, Graben, Katholische Kirche St. Peter, Jungferngasse, Wiener Pestaule (Column of the Trinity), Graben, Goldschmiedgasse, Katholische Kirche Domherrenhof, Stephansplatz, Bräunerstraße, Michaelerplatz, Katholische Kirche St. Michael, Hofburg Palace, Käiser Franz I statue, Heldenplatz, Neue Burg, Prinz Eugen, Burgring, Museum of Natural History, Maria-Theresian-Platz, Empress Maria Theresia monument, Kunsthistoriches Museum Wien, Praterstern Bf, Praterstern, Robert Stolz memorial, Prater Amusement Park and its rides, including the Vienna Riesenrad and the Liliputbahn, Kaisermuühlen VIC Bf, Schottentor Bf, Schottenring, Universitätsring, Sigmund-Freud-Park, Votivkirche, Währinger Strasße, Donau City, DC Tower, 57 Restaurant and Lounge, Neue Donau, River Danube, Ernst Happel Stadium, Donau-City-Strasße, Donauturm, and Donau Park.
This film was taken as part of a week long break in central Europe, in which I visited both Bratislava and Vienna, Austria making extensive films of both capital cities, and staying in three different hotels, of which I also made full video reviews. I travelled from Bratislava to Vienna by boat, and then back again by train, staying three nights in each city. To see all of these films, please click on the links below:
Landing at Bratislava - .
Views Around Bratislava - .
Review: Hotel Devin - .
Views Around Vienna - .
Vienna Hauptbahnhof - .
Vienna Karlskirche - .
Vienna Prater Amusement Park - .
Vienna Donauaturm -
Hotel Review: Star Inn Premium, Vienna Hauptbahnhof - .
Hotel Review: Lindner Hotel, Bratislava - .
Take-off from Bratislava Airport - .
This film is a Moss Travel Media production – mosstravel.tv
If you liked this film, please subscribe to my YouTube channel here: in order to receive updates of my future film uploads.
You can also find my travel films and photography updates on the following social media:
Blogger:
Facebook: **please like my Facebook page**
Google+ just add +stuartmoss .
Instagram: stumoss - .
LiveJournal: .
Pinterest: .
WordPress:
StumbleUpon: .
Tumblr:
Twitter @mosstraveltv or .
VKontakte: .
YouTube: .
I hope that you enjoyed this film and will return again in future, your support is really appreciated, by subscribing above you will be kept informed of my travel updates and new films uploaded.
Thank you and bon voyage!
Sigmund Freud's house in Vienna, Austria
May 2015
Freud lived here for 47 years before fleeing from the Nazis to England in 1938
City of Dreams (Vienna 1900-1935): Sigmund Freud
Julian Johnson speaks to Michael Molnar from the Freud Museum to find out more about the life and work of Sigmund Freud.
The Sigmund Freud Museum on Berggasse 19, Vienna, Austria
The Sigmund Freud Museum located in the Alsergrund district, at Berggasse 19 in Vienna, Austria is a museum founded in 1971. It is where the Founding Father of Psychoanalysis used to live for more than forty years.
For more details about my travels, please visit to my website:
Music sources for FREE
‘Music by Epidemic Sound (
The Reason Why Everyone Love Freud, Sigmund Freud Museum-House Vienna,AT
The Reason Why Everyone Love Freud, Sigmund Freud Museum-House Vienna,AT
Freud-Visit S. Freud Museum:
Sigmund Freud Musem, House- Vienna Pict.2013
The Sigmund Freud Museum in Vienna is founded in 1971 covering the Sigmund Freud's life story. The building was newly built in 1891 when Freud moved there. His old rooms, where he lived for 47 years and produced the majority of his writings, now house a documentary centre to his life and works. The influence of psychoanalysis on art and society is displayed through a program of special exhibitions and a modern art collection.
Freud spent most of his life in Vienna. From 1891 until 1938, he and his family lived in an apartment at Berggasse 19 near the Innere Stadt or historical quarter of Vienna. As a medical researcher, Freud was an early user and proponent of cocaine as a stimulant as well as analgesic.
( )
English 日本語 العربية हिंदी 한국 中文 Deutsch français italiano русский português español
Music by zero-project - Behind of Mind
Sigmund Freud Museum: Wirkungsstätte des Vaters der Psychoanalyse
Die Berggasse 19 ist wohl eine der bekanntesten Adressen Wiens. Hier befand sich Sigmund Freuds Wohnung und Praxis. Heute ist hier ein Museum eingerichtet. BesucherInnen erhalten einen Einblick in das Leben des Analytikers.
leben-freude.at
International Programme at the Sigmund Freud University Vienna
Dr. Elisabeth Vykoukal, Head of International Programme and Ms. Emma McNally, Assistant Coordinator of International Programme and Dr. Martin Jandl, Assistant to the Dean of foreign-language and international programme are talking about what makes the international programme at the SFU so unique.
More information at sfu.ac.at/english
Sigmund Freud Museum 2020 - mit Christoph Waltz
Crowdfunding für Sigmund Freud Museum 2020: freud.wemakeit.com
#freud2020 #crowdfunding #freud #sigmundfreud #sigmundfreudmuseum #berggasse19
Wien am 11. September 1891: „Lieber Freund, konnte Ihnen früher nichts angeben, weil ich selbst nichts wußte. Jetzt teile ich Ihnen mit, dass ich am 15. Sept., in Wien (…), Berggasse 19, Sie mit Ungeduld und in Freuden erwarte (…)
Herzlichst, Ihr Dr. Freud“
Dies schreibt der Nervenarzt Sigmund Freud kurz nach seinem Einzug in die Berggasse an seinen Kollegen Willhelm Fließ.
Beinahe ein halbes Jahrhundert leben die Freuds hier im 9. Wiener Gemeindebezirk: Sigmund, Martha, sechs Kinder und Schwägerin Minna meistern ihren familiären Alltag, Professor Freud ordiniert hier und verfasst an die 20.000 Briefe, die sich unter anderem an berühmte Persönlichkeiten wie Thomas Mann, André Breton und Albert Einstein richten.
Freuds Praxis in der Berggasse 19 avanciert zum Symbol für den Aufbruch in die Moderne:
Aus aller Welt langen Anfragen ein – man will höchst persönlich von Freud behandelt werden. Mit seinen neuen Methoden, der „Gesprächstherapie“ und „freien Assoziation“, begibt sich Freud auf Spurensuche ins menschliche Unbewusste. Er etabliert eine neue Wissenschaft, die das Selbstverständnis des Menschen für immer verändern wird.
Freuds Schriften werden zu Meilensteinen der modernen Kultur- und Gesellschaftstheorie: „Der Vater der Psychoanalyse“ setzt sich für ein aufgeklärtes Miteinander ein. Unvoreingenommen berücksichtigt er die Stärken der Menschen ebenso wie ihre Schwächen.
Bis heute dienen die Begriffe Es, Ich und Über-Ich der Erklärung unserer Persönlichkeitsstruktur. Das Unbewusste ist der Ort verdrängter Gefühle und Wünsche – es äußert sich in Träumen und Fehlleistungen wie dem sogenannten „Freudschen Versprecher“
1938 verlässt Sigmund Freud Wien. Mit dem engsten Kreis seiner Familie flieht er vor dem Terror des Nationalsozialismus. Die gesamte Wohnungseinrichtung wird verpackt und ins Londoner Exil transportiert: Zurück bleiben leere und verlassene Räume.
Heute befindet sich im Haus Berggasse 19 ein Museum. Jährlich zieht es über 100.000 Besucherinnen an: So steht dieser geschichtsträchtige Ort im Zeichen der Auseinandersetzung mit Freuds Leben, Werk und seiner bis heute andauernden Wirkungsgeschichte.
Nun gilt es, dieses kulturelle Erbe in seiner Einzigartigkeit zu bewahren und das Sigmund Freud Museum internationalen Museumsstandards entsprechend auszustatten, umzubauen und in die Zukunft zu führen.
Dafür brauchen wir eure Unterstützung. Helft mit und werdet Teil des Projekts SIGMUND FREUD MUSEUM 2020!
Sigmund Freud House (Vienna)
Sigmund Freud House (Vienna)
Vienna Austria at Sigmund Freud Park 04/11/12
Here is the proof coming at you on Vienna Autstria. This city rules. Only Albuquerque New Mexico comes close to the quality of life.
Opera Toilet - Vienna Austria [[Eurotrip Travel Vlog Day 2 of 22]
Travel Vlog Day 2 of our 22 Daily Vlog Europe Series.
Destination: Vienna, Austria!
Siya and I visit a traditional Vienna Coffee House where Sigmund Freud used to go, make friends with Pinocchio, encounter a Opera toilet, visit Naschmarkt and conduct an orchestra at the House of Music.
Subscribe for more videos:
All vlogs shot with the Sony RX100 4 -
________________________
◅ ▻ Places Featured in this Video ◅ ▻
Cafe Landtmann -
Naschmarkt -
Haus der Musik -
25 Hours Hotels Vienna -
_______________
◅ ▻ Want to Become a Travel Influencer? ◅ ▻
Want to travel the world and make kick ass travel videos? Check out the course Hey Nadine, Nomadic Matt and I created just for you:
♫ Music ♪
Wink
Don't Worry So Much
Home
◅ ▻ Equipment We Use ◅ ▻
↠ Sony RX100 5 -
↠ Sony A7SII -
↠ Camera Assist Monitor
↠ GoPro Hero 6 -
↠ Sony 16-35mm lens/F4 -
↠ Sony 24-70mm lens/F4 -
↠ Sony 85mm lens/F1.8 -
↠ SHURE LensHopper Camera-Mounted Shotgun Mic -
_______________
◅ ▻ OTHER PLACES TO FIND US ◅ ▻
↠ Blog -
↠ Instagram (Kristen) -
↠ Instagram (Siya) -
↠ Facebook -
↠ Twitter (Kristen) -
↠ Twitter (Siya):
↠ Siya's Other Channel -
◅ ▻ CONTACT ◅ ▻
↠ Business & Hosting Enquiries: hopscotchtheglobe@gmail.com
✉ SEND US MAIL ✉
Hopscotch the Globe Inc.
PO BOX. 30007
150 Main Street.
Grimsby, Ontario, Canada
L3M 1P0
1/2 Freud's Couch - Masterpieces of Vienna
Episode 2/3 A look at Sigmund Freud's couch - now an emblem of psychoanalysis.
Vienna, Austria virtual tour
There are slides of Schönbrunn Palace, Belvedere, Vienna State Opera, St. Francis of Assisi Church, St. Stephen's Cathedral, Burgtheater, Augarten, Hofburg Palace, etc.
Vienna (German: Wien) is the capital and largest city of Austria, and one of the nine states of Austria. It is the 7th-largest city by population within city limits in the European Union. Until the beginning of the 20th century it was the largest German-speaking city in the world, and before the splitting of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in World War I the city had 2 million inhabitants. Today it has the second largest number of German speakers after Berlin. Vienna is host to many major international organizations, including the United Nations and OPEC. The city lies in the east of Austria and is close to the borders of the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Hungary. These regions work together in a European Centrope border region. Along with nearby Bratislava, Vienna forms a metropolitan region with 3 million inhabitants. In 2001, the city centre was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Apart from being regarded as the City of Music because of its musical legacy, Vienna is also said to be The City of Dreams because it was home to the world's first psycho-analyst – Sigmund Freud.
Freud's House in Vienna
Freud's House in Vienna
Jack in the Box @ Open Sense Festival in Sigmund Freud Park , Vienna,Austria May 2014
a través de YouTube Capture
Sigmund Freud Museum 2020 - with Christoph Waltz
freud.wemakeit.com #freud2020 #crowdfunding #freud #sigmundfreud #sigmundfreudmuseum #berggasse19
Vienna, September 11, 1891
“Dear friend: Could not notify you sooner because I myself did not know. Now I can tell you that on September 15 I am expecting you, impatiently and joyously, in Vienna […], Berggasse 19 […]
Most cordially your Dr. Freud”
The neurologist Sigmund Freud writes these words to his colleague Wilhelm Fließ shortly after moving in to Berggasse.
The Freuds live here in Vienna’s 9th district for almost half a century: Sigmund, Martha, six children, and sister-in-law Minna cope with their day-to-day family life. Professor Freud works here in his practice, writing around 20,000 letters to such famous figures as Thomas Mann, André Breton and Albert Einstein.
Freud’s office at Berggasse 19 becomes a symbol of the move into the modern age: inquiries arrive from all over the world – everyone wants to be treated by Freud in person. With his new methods, “talking therapy” and “free association”, Freud sets out to probe the human unconscious, thus establishing a new science that will forever change the way people see themselves.
Freud’s writings become milestones of modern cultural and social theory: “The Father of Psychoanalysis” is an advocate of open-minded life together in society. Unbiased, he considers people’s strengths and weaknesses.
The terms Id, ego and superego are still used today to explain the structure of our personality. The unconscious is the locus of repressed emotions and wishes – it is expressed in dreams and parapraxes such as the “Freudian slip”.
Sigmund Freud leaves Vienna in 1938. Together with his closest family he flees the terror of National Socialism. All of the family’s furnishings are packed up and transported into exile in London: all that remains is empty, deserted rooms.
Today Berggasse 19 is home to a museum. Attracting more than 100,000 visitors a year, this historical location is devoted to the study of Freud’s life, work and the history of his influence to this day.
The aim now is to preserve this unique cultural heritage and to equip and convert the Sigmund Freud Museum in keeping with international museum standards and to take it into the future.
For this we need your support. Help us by becoming part of the SIGMUND FREUD MUSEUM 2020 project!
Unveiling ceremony of the Sigmund Freud sculpture at the campus of the MedUni Vienna
Markus Müller
Rector of the Medical University of Vienna
Heinz Faßmann
Federal Minister of Education, Science, and Research
Lord David Freud
Great-grandson of Sigmund Freud, Member of the House of Lords, United Kingdom
Vienna,Wien,Beč - Austria 26.11.2011
Vienna (play /viːˈɛnə/; German: Wien [viːn]; Viennese German: Wean) is the capital and largest city of the Republic of Austria and one of the nine states of Austria. Vienna is Austria's primary city, with a population of about 1.723 million[3] (2.4 million within the metropolitan area,[2] more than 25% of Austria's population), and is by far the largest city in Austria, as well as its cultural, economic, and political centre. It is the 9th-largest city by population in the European Union. Vienna is host to many major international organizations, such as the United Nations and OPEC.
Vienna lies in the east of Austria and is close to the borders of the Czech Republic, Slovakia, and Hungary. These regions work together in a European Centrope border region. Along with nearby Bratislava, Vienna forms a metropolitan region with 3 million inhabitants, and this region is referred to as Twin City.[citation needed] In 2001, the city centre was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[4]
Vienna is often said to be The City of Dreams because it was home to one of the world's greatest interpreters of dreams, Professor Sigmund Freud.[5]
Vienna has its roots in early Celtic and Roman settlements that transformed into a Medieval and Baroque city, the capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The city is well known for playing an essential role as a leading European Music Centre, from the great age of Viennese Classicism through the early part of the 20th century. The Historic centre of Vienna is rich in architectural ensembles, including Baroque castles and gardens, as well as the late-19th-century Ringstrasse lined with grand buildings, monuments and parks.[6]
In a 2005 study of 127 world cities, the Economist Intelligence Unit ranked the city first (in a tie with Vancouver, Canada) for quality of life (in the 2011 survey of 140 cities Vienna was ranked number two, behind Melbourne).[7][8][9] For three consecutive years (2009-2011), the human-resource-consulting firm Mercer ranked Vienna first in its annual Quality of Living survey of hundreds of cities around the world.[10][11][12] Monocle's 2011 Quality of Life survey ranked Vienna sixth on a list of the top 25 cities in the world to call home (up from eighth in 2010).[13][14][15]
Analytically, the city was ranked 1st globally for a culture of innovation in 2007 and 2008, and 2nd globally after Boston in 2009 from 256 cities on an analysis of 162 indicators in the Innovation Cities Index on a 3-factor score covering culture, infrastructure and markets.[16] As a city, Vienna regularly hosts urban planning conferences and is often used as a case study by urban planners.[17]
In each single year since 2005 so far, Vienna has been the world's number one destination of international congresses and conventions,[18] thus contributing to attracting at about five million tourists a year[19] which makes up a record of roughly three tourists per city inhabitant
Schönbrunn Palace (German: Schloss Schönbrunn [ʃøːnˈbʁʊn]) is a former imperial 1,441-room Rococo summer residence in Vienna, Austria. One of the most important cultural monuments in the country, since the 1960s it has been one of the major tourist attractions in Vienna. The palace and gardens illustrate the tastes, interests, and aspirations of successive Habsburg monarchs.[1]
The Schloss is Vienna's most popular tourist destination, attended by 2,600,000 visitors in 2010.[2] The whole Schönbrunn complex with Tiergarten Schönbrunn, Palmenhaus, Wüstenhaus and the Wagenburg, accounted for more than five million visitors.[3] At the official website tickets can be purchased in advance for tours. In addition to tours and tour packages, many classical concerts featuring the music of W. A. Mozart and his contemporaries can be enjoyed with the added benefit of more time in the spectacular halls, Orangerie, or Schlosstheater.