List of street names in Vienna / Hietzing

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List of streets, alleys and squares in Vienna's 13th district Hietzing

Historical street names - literature - web links
Vienna subdivisions (13) .svg

The respective cadastral municipality (KG.) Of the land register is given in brackets after the traffic area name . KG Auhof includes the Lainzer Tiergarten and thus also the settlements in former parts of it (e.g. Peace City or Auhofer Trennstück settlement ).

A.

  • Adolf-Lorenz-Gasse (Hietzing), named in 1959 after the orthopedic surgeon Adolf Lorenz (1854–1946); as a surgeon he specialized in the surgical healing of anatomical deformities. Since these methods repeatedly resulted in deaths, he began to work on alternative healing methods. He then built up the field of orthopedics at the University of Vienna and at the General Hospital . In 1889 he became the first professor of orthopedics at the University of Vienna. Adolf Lorenz is the father of the behavioral scientist Konrad Lorenz .
  • Adolfstorgasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the Adolfstor, one of the gates in the 22 km long enclosure wall of the Lainzer Tiergarten , towards which the alley runs. It was formerly called Bergstrasse .
  • Aichbühelgasse (Hacking), named in 1961 after the civil servant Johann Carl Aichbühel (1598–1658), court chamber secretary, regimental councilor (1654–1657), professor of poetics and eloquence at the University of Vienna and its rector (1649). Around 1654 Aichbühel is attested as the owner of the Hacking estate ; the Aichbühelhof in Grinzing was possibly also in his possession. Before 1961 another street was called Aichbühelgasse; this is now part of Lilienberggasse .
  • Alban-Berg-Weg (Lainz), named in 1969 after the composer Alban Berg (1885–1935); his work combines influences of Mahler's late romanticism with Arnold Schönberg's free atonality and later the twelve-tone technique . Although Berg always saw himself as a "natural continuation of a correctly understood, good, old tradition", he is one of the great innovators of the music of the 20th century. Main path of the Josef Afritsch settlement on the Küniglberg .
  • Alois-Kraus-Promenade (Hietzing, Lainz), named in 1955 after the civil servant and manager Alois Kraus (1840–1926); from 1879 to 1919 he was director of the Schönbrunn menagerie . Under his leadership, the animal population reached a peak with 3,442 animals in 712 species. Kraus converted the zoo from a mere courtly display menagerie to an institution serving science and popular education. The path at the foot of the grove on the Küniglberg was previously called the Promenadenweg .
  • Altgasse (Hietzing), named (date unknown; included in the first Lehmann edition, 1859) after the oldest part of Hietzing, which was an independent village until 1890 . The oldest properties were in the Altgasse area, to the north of it (towards the Wien River) there were cattle pastures, to the south a few fields and extensive vineyards.
  • Amalienstraße (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1869 after Empress Amalia Wilhelmine (1673–1742), wife of Emperor Joseph I. Since her husband had infected her with a venereal disease , she could not give birth to a (surviving) male heir to the throne. so that the imperial crown after Joseph's death to his younger brother Charles VI. passed over. The street was renamed Goldmarkstraße after the end of the monarchy in 1919 (see Goldmarkplatz), but was renamed back to Amalienstraße in 1922 .
  • Am Fasangarten (Schönbrunn), named in 1905 after a pheasantry that adjoined the park of Schönbrunn Palace to the south of the Gloriette and still appears on the city map as a pheasant garden (the southernmost part was later built with the Maria Theresa barracks ). Pheasant gardens and other beautiful birds such as B. peacocks, kept for the edification of the nobles. See also Fasangartengasse .
  • At the Hans-Moser-Park (Hietzing), named in 1998 after the park of the same name; this is named after the popular actor Hans Moser (Johann Julier, 1880–1964); he began his career as a cabaret artist and achieved his breakthrough in 1923 with the sketch "Der Dienstmann". As a result, he played in around 150 films, was a popular interpreter of Viennese songs and, after 1945, was also used in serious roles at the Burgtheater . Moser lived for decades in the 13th district ("Moser-Villa", Auhofstrasse 76-78 / Hügelgasse). The traffic area is in front of the main entrance of the municipal district office for the 13th and 14th district , between Hietzinger Kai and Eduard-Klein-Gasse.
  • Am Meisenbühel (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1975 after an old field name that probably refers to the titmouse family of bird species . Bühel is an old word for hill , derived from the Old High German buhil (hill, hill).
  • Am Platz (Hietzing), named in 1894 after the Sunday meeting place in front of the Maria Hietzing parish church, "Mariä Hietzing", which has been used since the Middle Ages . The square was originally called St. Marienplatz after the Marian column erected in front of the church , and then until 1894, like the relevant squares of other incorporated suburbs, Kirchenplatz .
  • Am Rosenberg (Rosenberg), named in 1965 after a field name that gave the current cadastral community of Rosenberg its name.
  • Am Rosenhügel (Speising, Rosenberg), named in 1922 after the 258 m high Rosenhügel , at the height of which the square in front of the Rosenhügel water reservoir , which was put into operation in 1873 , is the urban terminus of the 1st Vienna high spring water pipeline . The hill belongs to the north-eastern hill country of the Vienna Woods and is therefore part of the Northern Limestone Alps ; it gets its name from the extensive rose cultures that used to be at this point. See also Rosenhügelstrasse .
  • Anatourgasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1955 after the actress and soubrette Marie Anatour (1857–1929); she worked in theaters in northern Bohemia and Saxony from the age of six. In 1876 she came to Graz, in 1882 she worked at the Vienna Carltheater and in 1893 at the Theater in der Josefstadt . In 1895 she left Vienna and went to Breslau. The alley was formerly called Bürgergasse .
  • Angermayergasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the clergyman Anton Angermayer (1803–1874), pastor of Ober-St.-Veit (1847–1861). The alley was previously called Mayergasse .
  • Anna-Strauss-Platz (Hietzing), named in 2006 after Anna Strauss (1801–1870), wife of Johann Strauss (father) and mother of Johann Strauss (son) ; According to his father's wishes, he was to become a civil servant or businessman, but Anna Strauss made it possible for Johann junior to study music. Whenever he played his own compositions on the piano, she accompanied him on the guitar. Her sons Josef Strauss and Eduard Strauss also became successful musicians. (Although the name “Strauss” can often be found with “ ß ” in modern reference works , the members of the Strauss family always spelled their names with “ss”, with the exception of Eduard Strauss.) The square has no addresses, as the adjacent buildings to Hietzinger Hauptstrasse, Auhofstrasse and Dommayergasse.
  • Anton-Langer-Gasse (Speising), named in 1894 after the writer and journalist Anton Langer (1824–1879); from 1850 until his death he was editor of the magazine Hans Jörgl . Langer wrote more than 100 novels, mostly so-called 5 Groschen novels . With a few exceptions, his numerous dramas are considered lost. The alley was formerly called Parkgasse .
  • Aschergasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named after the composer Leo Ascher in 1955 ; The doctor of law worked as a composer, from 1905 to 1932 he composed 32 operettas as well as Viennese songs and chansons. In 1938 Ascher emigrated to New York , where he lived as a lawyer. In the United States , he has written musicals , patriotic songs, and educational literature for children. The street used to be called Waldmüllergasse .
  • Atzgersdorfer Straße (Rosenberg, Speising), named in 1918 after the former suburb and today's Liesing district Atzgersdorf , which was mentioned in a document as early as 1130 as "Azichinstorf". The name Atzgersdorf is a combination of the personal name "Atzichî" and the word village. The street runs next to the Vienna terminus of the 1st high spring water pipeline; see Am Rosenhügel . From its northern end to Am Rosenhügel ( Wundtgasse ), the street (mostly the eastern side lane ) forms the border between the 13th and 12th district; from there south to Schluckergasse, the border between the 13th and 23rd district (mostly in the middle of the street).
  • August-Reuss-Gasse (Hietzing), named in 1959 after the pediatrician August Reuss (1879–1954); he introduced improvements in the field of pediatrics, especially for newborns . So he outsourced the infant wards from general gynecology. He achieved recognition of paediatrics as a separate medical specialty and is thus Austria's first social pediatrician.
  • Auhofstraße (Hietzing, Unter-St.-Veit, Ober-St.-Veit, Hacking), named (date unknown; included in the first Lehmann edition in 1859 ) after the “ Auhof ”, a farm proven since the Middle Ages (“Hof in der Au ”) on the northern edge of the Lainzer Tiergarten . The estate was first mentioned in a document in 1194; Until the 16th century it was under the rule of the Johanniter and was then owned by wealthy Viennese citizens. From 1560 it was the official residence of the imperial forester. Long before the construction of the traffic route later called Hietzinger Hauptstrasse, Auhofstrasse appeared in historical plans as a connection parallel to the right bank of the Vienna River. See also Café Dommayer at No. 2, the former Villa Hügel at No. 15, the Moser Villa at No. 76-78 and the area of ​​the former Bossi hat factory (see Bossigasse ) at No. 84

B.

  • Beckgasse (Lainz, Unter-St.-Veit, Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1949 after the politician Max Wladimir von Beck (1854–1943), section head in the Ministry of Agriculture (1898–1906), Imperial and Royal Prime Minister (1906–1908) , later Imperial and Republican President of the Audit Office. He carried out numerous reforms; Above all, he succeeded in 1906 in winning majorities in both houses of the Reichsrat for universal, equal suffrage for men. The street was formerly called Reichgasse after Josef Reich, who built the first house in the street; from 1938 to 1949 it was called Gustav-Groß-Gasse after the German liberal Moravian politician Gustav Groß , who in 1918 was the last president of the House of Representatives of the Imperial and Royal Reichsrat. See “Villa Langer” at no. 30 with the facade by Josef Plečnik .
  • The Meier yards (Speising), 1911 named after once-off here Meier courts . As Meierhof a farmstead or -building is called, in which the administrator (the Meier ) of a manor lived.
  • Benkgasse (Speising), named after the sculptor Johannes Benk (1844–1914) in 1924 ; he was an important representative of the Ringstrasse period with partly neo-baroque influences. He was mainly active as a creator of architectural sculptures , memorials and grave monuments. His best-known work is the Deutschmeister monument in front of the Rossau barracks (1906).
  • Bergenstammgasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the civil servant and local researcher Alois Groppenberger von Bergenstamm (1754–1821); he collected many documents on the history of Vienna , especially manuscripts, certificates, seals and books, and wrote numerous treatises. His research on a wide variety of topics in the history of Vienna is still valuable today. The street was previously called Marinonigasse .
  • Bergheidengasse (Speising), named in 1892 after the field name Bergheide of the Rosenhügels. Location of the Federal College for Tourism and Business Professions (HLTW13)
  • Berta-Karlik-Gasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 2011 after the physicist Berta Karlik (1904–1990); their greatest success was the detection of isotopes 215, 216 and 218 of element 85, astatine , in the natural radioactive decay series . From 1931 she worked at the Institute for Radium Research , in 1947 its director. In 1950 he was appointed associate professor and in 1956 Karlik was the first woman ever to receive a full professorship at the University of Vienna .
  • Biraghigasse (Speising), named after Marianne Biraghi (1819–1895) in 1894; the widow of a tropical fruit dealer worked as a benefactress and donated 10,000 guilders for the needy. The street was previously called Eisenbahngasse .
  • Björnsongasse (Speising), named in 1932 after the Norwegian poet and politician Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson ; among other things he wrote the Norwegian national anthem and was the founder of the Riksmålsforbundet . In 1903 Bjørnson was the first Scandinavian to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature .
  • Blebanngasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named after Heinrich Blebann (1882–1965) in 1982; In February 1934 he was the leader of the Republican Schutzbund in Hietzing. Opposite the confluence of the street in the Trazerberggasse is the monument to the Hietzingen February fighter Karl Münichreiter (see also Münichreiterstraße ).
  • Bossigasse (Unter-St.-Veit, Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1907 after the entrepreneur Giuseppe Bossi (1810–1891); The native Italian came to Vienna in 1832 and founded a "Kurrentwarenhandlung" (trading house) in Unter-St.-Veit in 1839. In 1844 he took over a large cotton printing company ("Bossi & Clerici"), but went bankrupt in 1859. As a result, he downsized the company to a hat factory and ran it until 1888. The factory then existed under different owners until 1937; the area was roughly at Auhofstrasse 84 opposite the junction with Bossigasse there. Bossi donated the first bell for the Unter-St.-Veiter parish church in 1843 .
  • Bowitschgasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1883 after the civil servant and writer Ludwig Bowitsch (1818–1881), civil servant and later chancellor in the gendarmerie inspection. From 1839 he was a prolific author of late Romantic poems as well as the author of fairy tales and legends . His collections were also very well received, especially the Austrian Ballad Book .
  • Brammergasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1955 after the librettist Julius Brammer (1877–1943); From 1908 he worked as a playwright and wrote, often with Alfred Grünwald , numerous librettos for operettas by Leo Ascher , Edmund Eysler , Leo Fall , Emmerich Kálmán , Robert Stolz and Oscar Straus . He was one of the leading creators of the silver operetta era . The street was previously called Dr.-Julius-Angerer-Gasse or Heinrich-Heine-Gasse .
  • Braunschweiggasse (Hietzing), named in 1902 after Duke Wilhelm von Braunschweig (1806–1884); he ruled the Duchy of Braunschweig from 1830 to 1884 . In 1878 Wilhelm inherited the Palais Cumberland , which belonged to the 13th district from 1892–1938 and has been part of the 14th district since 1938. In 1861 he was made an honorary citizen of Hietzing . Part of the street was called Hügelgasse from 1894–1902 (not identical to today's Hügelgasse).
  • Brückenweg (Auhof), unofficial name; the path leads to the Wolf-in-der-Au bridge, which, together with the Auhof bridge, crosses the Wienfluss-Mauerbach retention basin .
  • Buchbindergasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1955 after the actor, journalist and writer Bernhard Buchbinder (1849–1922); Born in Hungary, he moved to Vienna in 1887 and lived here as a columnist ; Among other things, he wrote for the "Neue Wiener Journal" . In addition to his journalistic activities, he wrote novels, folk plays and especially libretti in Viennese flavor. His best-known operetta libretto is “Die Försterchristl” . The street was previously called Dr.-Josef-Bayer-Gasse .

C.

D.

Dr.-Schober-Strasse
The Café Dommayer corner Auhofstraße / Dommayergasse, Anna-Strauss-Platz
  • Dermotagasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1992 after the singer Anton Dermota (1910–1989), member of the ensemble of the Vienna State Opera (1936–1980). The lyrical tenor was one of the most popular Mozart and Bach interpreters internationally ; He also set standards as an interpreter of songs, especially by Schubert and Schumann . In total, his repertoire comprised more than 80 roles.
  • Diabelligasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the composer and music publisher Anton Diabelli (1781-1858). His over 200 compositions encompass all genres of music, such as piano pieces, teaching and study material for the piano and for the guitar, orchestral works , chamber music works , operettas , singspiels, cantatas , masses and offers . Because of this diversity, Diabelli can be regarded as the first-rate composer among the Viennese classics . The alley was previously called Plankengasse .
  • Dirkensgasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1955 after the German operetta singer Annie Dirkens (1870–1942); she sang at the Theater an der Wien (from 1896), at the Theater in der Josefstadt (from 1899) and then at the Carltheater . Dirkens was the most famous operetta diva in Vienna in its time . During the First World War she worked in an Austrian military hospital, was wounded and ended her career. Before that, the street was called Dr.-Seipel -Gasse .
  • Dommayergasse (Hietzing), named in 1894 after the entrepreneur Ferdinand Dommayer (1799–1858); In 1823 he bought an inn, which he expanded into the magnificent Dommayers Casino by 1833 . With its dance hall, the bar was one of the city's leading entertainment venues and was known for its lavish ball nights. The building was demolished in 1907. Today's Café Dommayer has nothing to do with Ferdinand Dommayer, but rather takes its name from his address at Dommayergasse 1, corner of Auhofstrasse 2. Anna-Strauss-Platz has been in front of the café since 2006 . The alley was previously called Badhausgasse .
  • Dontgasse (Lainz), named in 1938 after the composer and violinist Jakob Dont (1815–1888), violinist in the Vienna Court Music Orchestra (from 1834), professor at the Vienna Pedagogical Institute (from 1853), teacher at the Vienna Conservatory (from 1871). His compositional work mainly extended to innovative educational works.
  • Dostalgasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1955 after the composer Hermann Dostal ; He was military Kapellmeister of kuk infantry regiments in the Kingdom of Hungary (with today's Slovakia ) and in the Austrian South Moravia and conducted for Franz Lehár . As a composer he mainly wrote marches and operettas . The street was previously called Künstlergasse .
  • Dostojewskijgasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1932 after the Russian writer Fyodor Michailowitsch Dostojewski (1821–1881); His main works include Guilt and Atonement , The Demons and The Brothers Karamazov . He is considered one of the most important Russian writers, his influence on the literature of the 20th century, especially on existentialist and expressionist currents, was great.
  • Dovskygasse (Lainz), named in 1936 after the writer and actress Beatrice Dovsky (1866–1923); Her works include poems, short prose and fairy tales, e.g. B. "The Vienna brat", "The ma'am," "Twelve Tales of the Eastern March " (1913) and the travel - narration "From Penzing to Beijing" (1901). Her best-known work is the libretto for the opera “Mona Lisa” .
  • Dr.-Schober-Straße (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), 1932 in the police estate of the municipality of Mauer near Vienna named after the civil servant and politician Johann Schober (1874–1932), police officer (from 1898), police chief (1918–1932), Federal Chancellor (1921–1922 and 1929–1930), Foreign Minister (1921–1922 and 1930–1932). As police chief, he was responsible for the bloody suppression of the "July Revolution" in 1927 .
  • Dr.-Schreber-Gasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1927 after the German doctor Moritz Schreber (1808–1861); he published educational writings advocating repression and intimidation and was a proponent of Enlightenment education . He had nothing to do with " allotment gardens ", they were named in honor of Ernst Innozenz Hauschild . The Dr.-Schreber-Weg in the 12th district of Meidling , the Dr.-Schreber-Gasse in the 19th district of Döbling and the Schrebergasse in the 22nd district of Donaustadt are also named after him.
  • Dvorakgasse (Speising), named in 1924 after the art historian Max Dvořák (1874–1921), professor of art history at the University of Vienna (from 1909). He was one of the main representatives of the Vienna School of Art History and, with his most important publication, coined the concept of art history as a history of ideas . In 1916 he published his standard work "Catechism of Monument Preservation".

E.

Fanny Elßler
  • Ebersberggasse (Speising, “Hermeswiese” settlement), named in 1926 after the theater poet and journalist Ottokar Franz Ebersberg (1833–1886); In 1859 he founded the satirical weekly Tritsch-Tratsch and, as its successor, the satirical magazine Kikeriki . He also wrote about 150 comedies , antics , parodies, etc. Ebersberg was considered a democrat who always made himself the mouthpiece of the “little man”.
  • Ebner-Rofenstein-Gasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1936 after the histologist Viktor von Ebner-Rofenstein (1842–1925), Professor of Histology at the University of Graz (1873–1888) and at the University of Vienna (1888– 1922), rector (1907–1908). He achieved the separation of histology from anatomy and physiology as well as its recognition as an independent examination subject.
  • Eduard-Jaeger-Gasse (Speising), named after the ophthalmologist Eduard Jäger von Jaxtthal in 1894 ; he introduced the ophthalmoscope and made valuable contributions to the anatomy of the eye. He gained worldwide fame through his eye operations. His images of the fundus could not be surpassed for many decades. The alley at the Speising S-Bahn station on the connecting line was previously called Bahngasse .
  • Eduard-Klein-Gasse (Hietzing), named in 1899 after the lawyer Eduard Klein (1828–1894), local councilor and high school councilor in Hietzing. The alley was originally called Badgasse , then until 1899 (the office building, built in 1912/1913 between the alley and today's quay, was not yet standing) Hietzinger Kai and 1938–1945 Emil-Wimmer-Gasse .
  • Egon-Schiele-Gasse (Lainz), named in 1930 after the painter Egon Schiele (1890–1918); alongside Gustav Klimt and Oskar Kokoschka, he is one of the most important visual artists of Viennese modernism . In addition to his numerous self-portraits, Schiele is particularly famous for his nudes, which almost exclusively show women and children. The largest collection of Schiele works is in the Leopold Museum in the MuseumsQuartier . Schiele spent the last years of his life in the 13th district. Alley in the “Lockerwiese” settlement built from 1928 onwards. See also Klimtgasse .
  • Einsiedeleigasse (Upper St. Vitus), named in 1936 after a former hermitage in the area. It was built in 1748 by Brother Konrad (actually Leopold Zetl, formerly a clerk in the Imperial Chancellery) and Brother Arsenius (real name unknown, formerly stable master of Joseph Friedrich von Sachsen-Hildburghausen ), who then lived here as hermits . The hermitage was under the supervision of the Franciscan order . The hermitage was dissolved by Emperor Joseph II in 1782 ; In its place, the restaurant "Zur Einsiedelei" was built after 1823, which enjoyed great popularity, burned down in 1908 and was restored around 1930 by Adolf Swatschina as a café-restaurant "Zur alten Einsiedelei". See also Seifertstrasse .
  • Eisenbachgasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1955 after the cabaret artist Heinrich Eisenbach (1870–1923); he was one of the most important comedians in Vienna at the turn of the century and star of the Vienna cabaret ensemble Budapest Orpheum . This ensemble included some of the most important entertainers of the time, such as Armin Berg and Hans Moser . In 1915, Eisenbach moved into a new venue in Annagasse , the "Max und Moritz" in St.-Anna-Hof . The street was previously called Beethovengasse .
  • Eitelbergergasse (Unter-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the art historian Rudolf Eitelberger (1817–1885), from 1852 first professor of art history at the University of Vienna . He is considered the founding father of the Vienna School of Art History . He was the initiator and first director of the Museum for Art and Industry (1864) and the affiliated arts and crafts school (1868). The Hietzingen Synagogue (memorial plaque) was located at number 22 until 1938 . The street was previously called Malfattigasse (see Malfattisteig).
  • Elisabethallee (Hietzing, Lainz), named in 1918 after Empress Elisabeth (1837–1898), princess from the ducal branch Zweibrücken-Birkenfeld-Gelnhausen of the House of Wittelsbach and through her marriage to Franz Joseph I from 1854 to Empress of Austria and Apostolic Queen of Hungary . Her life has been popularized in countless films, operettas, and musicals. The Kaiserin-Elisabeth-Spital and the Kaiserin-Elisabeth-Wöchnerinnenheim are also named after her; part of today's Western Railway was originally called the Kaiserin Elisabeth Railway . There is hardly a city in Austria that has not named a street or a square after it. The street is part of the southern boundary of the historical area around Schönbrunn Palace , the imperial summer residence in Elisabeth's time; the empress had her private dairy farm here, in the highest, rearmost part of the palace park. The part of the Elisabethallee located southeast of Maxingstrasse (the other part did not yet exist) formed what was then Hetzendorfer Strasse until 1894 with Maxingstrasse, connecting Alt-Hietzing to Hetzendorf (12th district). Then until September 1918 it became part of the Schlöglgasse , which still exists in the 12th district , while an insignificant traffic area south of the now no longer existing intersection of the connecting railway with Rosenhügelstraße was called Elisabethallee. The later part of the street northwest of Montecuccoliplatz was still an unnamed dirt road around 1930.
  • Elßlergasse (Unter-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the dancer Fanny Elßler (1810–1884); next to Marie Taglioni she was one of the most famous dancers of the 19th century. Elßler's unparalleled successes began in Berlin in 1830 and continued in Paris and on tours of Europe, Russia, Cuba and North America. With national dances such as Polka , Krakowiak and her famous Cachucha , she conquered the stages of the world. The street was previously called Endlergasse . It was created when the "New World" was parceled out from 1883 and was not yet to be found on the Freytag - & - Berndt city ​​map 1898/1899. See Carl Witzmann's house Kosmak at no. 8, house no. 9 by Adolf Loos and house no. 26, Villa Reitler, in which the composer Franz Schmidt lived from 1912–1922 and which was rebuilt in 1922 by Adolf Loos .
  • Engelbrechtweg (Lainz), named in 1936 after the classical philologist August Engelbrecht (1861–1925), middle school teacher (from 1883), professor of classical philology at the University of Vienna (1901–1908). From 1899 he was the main chargé d'affaires of the Latin Church Fathers Commission and took care of the final editing for 26 volumes of the Corpus of the Latin Church Fathers . Away in the Werkbundsiedlung Vienna opened in 1932 .
  • Engelhartgasse (Lainz, “Lockerwiese” settlement), named in 1951 after the painter and sculptor Josef Engelhart (1864–1941); he was one of the leading figures on the art scene in Vienna around 1900 and one of the founders of the Vienna Secession . His main interest was the representation of people, be it nudes, portraits, folk or social scenes. He also painted his own family again and again. Engelhart was opposed to the newer currents and developments in the art scene; In his later years, and especially after his death, he was increasingly forgotten.
  • Erika-Mitterer-Weg (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 2002 after the writer Erika Mitterer (1906–2001); As an epic poet , poet , playwright and committed letter writer , she has dealt with the social, societal and political developments of her time and is considered an important representative of the literature of inner emigration .
  • Erzbischofgasse (Hacking, Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the Archbishop's Palace in Ober-St.-Veit, until about 1930 the summer residence of the respective Archbishop of Vienna and today the seat of church schools. The street was previously called Bischofgasse .
  • Eugen-Jettel-Weg (Lainz, settlement “Lockerwiese”), named in 1932 after the painter Eugen Jettel (1845–1901); he worked mainly as a landscape painter . From 1875 he lived in Paris , where he was the center of a circle of Austrian and German artists. In 1897 he returned to Vienna, where he was also successful and Archduke Carl Stephan and his wife, Archduchess Maria Theresia , became his sponsors.
  • Eustachiusweg (Auhof; "Heimscholle" settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1932 after Saint Eustachius , a figure in Christian mythology. He is considered a martyr , is one of the fourteen helpers in need and is venerated next to Saint Hubertus of Liège as the patron saint of hunters.
  • Eyslergasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1955 after the composer Edmund Eysler (actually Eisler, 1874–1949); With a total of 60 operettas , he had a very strong impact on the music world of that time in Austria and Germany. International successes were less to be recorded, however, since Eysler's music was more Viennese and local folklore. The street was previously called Mozartgasse .

F.

The " Klimt Villa " in Feldmühlgasse
  • Faistauergasse (Lainz), named in 1931 after the painter Anton Faistauer (1887–1930); He worked in Vienna from 1926 and created colorful, expressive still lifes and portraits. Faistauer is one of the most important painters of Austrian modernism. In contrast to most of his colleagues, he tried to further develop traditional Western painting. The alley is the sometimes very broad main axis of the “Lockerwiese” settlement built from 1928 onwards.
  • Fasangartengasse (Lainz, Speising), named in 1909 after the former pheasantry south of the Gloriette in Schönbrunn Palace , which still appears in the city map as a pheasant garden (forest area) (the southernmost part was later built with the pheasant garden barracks , today's Maria-Theresien-barracks ) . Pheasant gardens and other beautiful birds such as B. peacocks, kept for the edification of the nobles. See also Am Fasangarten . The street in Lainz was called Hetzendorfer Gasse until 1909 , because it led in the direction of Hetzendorf (12th district) when viewed from there, and was largely visible on the city map around 1912 as projected. The statement by Czeike that the alley in Hetzendorf was called Hetzendorfer Straße until 1894 is confused: Until 1894, today's Maxingstraße – Elisabethallee was called Hetzendorfer Straße (viewed from Hietzing). The St. Hemma Church is at the corner of Wattmanngasse .
  • Fasholdgasse (Hietzing), named in 1894 after the wagon entrepreneur Josef Fashold (1821–1892), local councilor in Hietzing (1863–1891). The street was previously called Mayerhofgasse .
  • Fassbendergasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1981 after the architect and city ​​planner Eugen Fassbender (1854–1923); as an architect, he set up numerous telephone exchanges in Vienna. But he concentrated more on urban planning and the publication of specialist publications. Far-sighted was his proposal in 1898 to create a “people's ring” that was to form an air reservoir around the city. In 1905 this idea was realized in a modified form with the establishment of the forest and meadow belt .
  • Fehlingergasse (Speising), named in 1894 after the doctor Friedrich Fehlinger (1813–1890), councilor and mayor (1864–1873) of Speising (1864–1873). The street was previously called Gemeindegasse .
  • Feldkellergasse (Speising), named in 1892 after the former inn "Zum Feldkeller"; previously one of the four Feldgassen in the area incorporated in 1890/92 in today's 13th district.
  • Feldmühlgasse (Unter-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the former field mill on a Wienfluss -Mühlkanal; in the 16th century it belonged to Marx Treitz-Sauerwein, secret clerk of Emperor Maximilian I. Around here, after 1800, the village of Unter-St.-Veit emerged on earlier fields . See also the so-called “ Klimt Villa ” on No. 11. Previously one of the four Feldgassen in the area incorporated in 1890/1892 in today's 13th district.
  • Felixgasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1955 after the opera singer Benedikt Gross (stage name Benedikt Felix, 1860–1912); he worked in Iglau , Florence , Rome , Genoa , Naples , Milan , Venice and Trieste . In 1882 he sang at the Vienna Carltheater so successfully that he was engaged at the court opera in 1883 , where he worked until his death in 1912. The street was previously called Tiergartengasse .
  • Fichtnergasse (Unter-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the actor Karl Fichtner (1805–1873); in 1822 he came to the Theater an der Wien and in 1824 to the Hofburgtheater , where he appeared in 460 plays and 513 roles until his retirement in 1865. Fichtner preferred to play youthful, later sedate lovers and bon vivants. The alley was created when the "New World" was parceled out from 1883 and was not yet to be found on the Freytag - & - Berndt city ​​map 1898/1899. It is known as the location of the high school at No. 15 . The hill park borders on the west side of the alley, which in Heimito in 1963 from Doderer's novel No. 7 / I. The Slunj waterfalls was called.
  • Firmiangasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after Bishop Leopold Maximilian von Firmian (1766–1831), auxiliary bishop in Passau (from 1797), bishop of the diocese of Lavant (from 1800), archbishop of Salzburg (from 1816), prince archbishop of the Archdiocese of Vienna (from 1822). He is portrayed as a pompous prince of the church who fulfilled the will of the emperor in his diocese and allowed the interventions of late Josephinism in church life . The street was previously called Lange Gasse and before that it was called Winzerzeile or Hauerzeile .
  • Fleschgasse (Unter-St.-Veit), named around 1876 after the leather manufacturer Siegmund Flesch (1827–1902); he was known as a benefactor. The street was previously called Adlergasse and 1938–1947 Burgkmairgasse after Hans Burgkmair the Elder . In 1995 the last industrial company in the 13th district, the Wiesbauer sausage factory , was relocated from the Auhofstrasse 25 / Fleschgasse 9–11 / Kremsergasse 2 area . Hugo Gorge , who was involved in the Werkbundsiedlung and Friedrich-Engels-Hof , built his house at number 8 .
  • Flurgasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named around 1876 after the corridors of the Girzenberg to which it leads; see also Girzenberggasse . The street was previously called Floragasse .
  • Fonovitsplatz (Lainz), named in 2011 after the physicist Hilda Fonovits (married Smereker and Maier, 1893–1954); from 1931 she worked in the special department for radiation therapy at the Lainz Hospital , from 1934–1938 its director. She died in 1954 as a result of years of handling radioactive substances. It is an addressless traffic area between the corner of Würzburggasse / Dovskygasse and the entrance to the ORF-Zentrum Küniglberg .
  • Fourniergasse (Speising, Lainz), named in 1932 after the historian and politician August Fournier (1850–1920), professor of history at the Technical University of Vienna (1900–1903) and at the University of Vienna (1903–1920). He is considered to be the most important historian of the Habsburg epoch that was drawing to a close. His three - volume Napoleon biography is now considered a standard scientific work. With the literary scholar Anton Bettelheim , he founded the 22-volume “New Austrian Biography from 1815”; see also Bettelheimstrasse in the 22nd district of Donaustadt .
  • Franz-Boos-Gasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1905 after Franz Boos (1753–1832), court gardener at the kk court gardens at Schönbrunn . From 1783 to 1788 he undertook several trips around the world to bring plants and animals to Vienna for the court garden , the court menagerie and the court natural history cabinet . In 1790 he became director of the Schönbrunn menagerie and in 1807 director of all court gardens.
  • Franz-Petter-Gasse (Lainz, “Lockerwiese” settlement), named in 1932 after the painter Franz Xaver Petter (1791–1866); He was one of the most important painters of flower still lifes of the Biedermeier period in Vienna. Later he also designed small-format pieces of fruit and, at the end of his life, flowers against a landscape background. Petter's pictures were very popular with the nobility and bourgeoisie.
  • Franz-Schalk-Platz (Hietzing), named in 1935 after the conductor Franz Schalk (1863–1931), 1st Kapellmeister of the Vienna Court Opera (from 1900), its director from 1918–1929. From 1919 to 1924 he shared this post with the composer Richard Strauss ; this time is considered the heyday of the State Opera. Schalk played a key role in founding the Salzburg Festival . From 1905 to 1910 he lived for a few years at Hügelgasse 10. The square and the adjacent row house settlement on the edge of the forest on the Küniglberg were laid out in the 1930s on the area of ​​the demolished "Malfatti-Schlössel" , whose outbuildings are on both sides of today's driveway to the square (Gloriettegasse 47 and 49) are still available.
  • Fred-Liewehr-Gasse (Speising), named in 1995 after the chamber actor and singer Fred Liewehr (1909–1993); in 1931 he was engaged by Max Reinhardt at the theater in der Josefstadt . From 1933 he played at the Vienna Burgtheater . In 1969 he became an honorary member there and in 1981 a doyen . Liewehr also appeared at the Vienna Volksoper and at the Salzburg Festival and acted in numerous films. The Martha-Rohs-Weg has been named after his wife in Hietzing since 2009 . The alley is wrong - numbered with the odd numbers on the right.
  • Friedenshöhegasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1929 after the Friedenshöhe settlement cooperative , which was established in 1928. Its name refers to the people's longing for peace after the First World War . See also Friedensstadtgasse and Friedenszeile . The street was called Friedensstrasse from 1927 to 1929 ; a cemetery mentioned by Czeike for 1867, not visible on historical maps, seems unlikely, as the area was only spun off from the Lainzer Tiergarten in the 20th century , which was then reserved for the ruling house and those in his service.
  • Friedensstadtgasse (Auhof; Friedensstadt), named around 1929 after the Friedensstadt settlement cooperative . This area, which previously belonged to the Lainzer Tiergarten , was initially populated "wildly", ie without building permits, by returnees from the First World War and invalids from 1919 onwards . The allotment garden settlement was legalized in 1928 and the settlers became owners of their parcels. See also Friedenshöhegasse and Friedenszeile . The street was previously called Waldgasse .
  • Friedenszeile (Auhof; Friedensstadt), named around 1921 in memory of the end of the First World War . Alley parallel to Hermesstrasse in the Friedensstadt settlement ; this was built from 1921 according to plans by Adolf Loos . See also Friedensstadtgasse and Friedenshöhegasse in Hietzing and Friedensstrasse in the 23rd district. The naming was made by the settlers and was officially recognized at an unknown date.
  • Friedrich-Kostelnik-Weg (Auhof; Friedensstadt), named in 2006 after the businessman Friedrich Kostelnik (1915–1997), chairman of a settlers' association
  • Frimbergergasse (Hietzing), named in 1956 after the popular writer Johann Georg Frimberger (1851–1919), construction draftsman and archivist for the railroad as his main occupation. His importance lies primarily in his dialect poems, which identify him as a connoisseur of the dialect of the country north of Vienna, the Weinviertel .
  • Fritz-Kastner-Weg (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1955 after the local researcher and prehistorian Josef Fritz Kastner (1888–1968); he worked as an archaeologist in Vienna and the surrounding area. He prepared the prehistoric foundations for large parts of the Viennese soil and published his results in lectures and through popular publications beyond the subject.
  • Fritz-Moravec-Steig (Lainz), named in 1998 after the alpinist and travel writer Fritz Moravec (1922–1997); He became known through his numerous expeditions, including in the Karakoram , where he took part in the first ascent of the 8,034 m high Gasherbrum II . In 1962 he was the founder of the Glockner- Kaprun High Mountain School , which is now called the Fritz Moravec High Mountain School . The climb is a steep path from Fasangartengasse to the Küniglberg . The Hummel Chapel, created in 1889, has been owned by him since 1938 .
  • Fürthweg (Speising), named in 1930 after the lawyer and politician Emil Fürth (1863–1911); from 1904 to 1910 he was a member of the Vienna City Council , where he represented the Social Political Party , a bourgeois-liberal group. As a specialist in housing care, he earned merit, and he was also a sponsor of the Vienna People's Education Association . The path was called Dühringweg from 1938 to 1947 .
  • Furtwänglerplatz (Speising), named in 1955 after the conductor Wilhelm Furtwängler , concert director of the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde (from 1921), chief conductor of the Vienna Philharmonic (from 1927), Kapellmeister at the Vienna State Opera (from 1928). From 1937 on he conducted many concerts and performances at the Salzburg Festival . After the Anschluss in 1938, Furtwängler was appointed music representative in Vienna and from 1939–1945 also took over the management of the Vienna Philharmonic. From 1952 he was artistic director of the Salzburg Festival.

G

Gobergasse, view in east direction
  • Gaheisgasse (Hacking), named in 1910 after the pedagogue and local history researcher Franz Anton de Paula Gaheis (1763–1809); as a member of the study revision court commission , he earned services as a primary school reformer. In addition to his educational activities, he wrote several books on the local history of Vienna and the surrounding area, which led to the rediscovery of the Viennese landscape and gave impetus to the beginning of tourism. The alley was previously part of the Raschgasse .
  • Gallgasse (Speising), named in 1894 after Sebastian Gall (1820–1888), local councilor in Speising (1870–1888) and benefactor. The street was previously called Mayerhofgasse .
  • Gamgasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1933 after the winemaker Michael Gam (1793–1870). The Gam family was long -established in Mauer and has been documented since 1682.
  • Gassmannstraße (Schönbrunn, until 1999: Gaßmann…), named in 1906 after the composer Florian Leopold Gassmann (1729–1774); In 1763 he was appointed ballet composer to the Viennese court, in 1764 he became chamber composer for Emperor Joseph II and in 1772 court conductor . He worked at the transition from baroque to pre-classical and composed 22 operas . His successor as chamber composer and court conductor was Antonio Salieri ; see Salierigasse in the 18th district of Währing . The street was previously called Wiener Weg . The border with the 12th district to the east runs in the middle of the street ; In the southern part of the street, the Maria-Theresien-Kaserne borders to the west .
  • Gemeindeberggasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the 321 m high communal mountain in Ober-St.-Veit , to which the street leads. The street was originally called Hausbergstraße and then Friedhofstraße because the Ober-St.-Veiter cemetery has been located here on the mountain slope since 1876 ; Here is Egon Schiele buried.
  • Genéegasse (Lainz) 1951 named after the librettist , playwright and composer Richard Genée (1823-1895); together with Franz Zell ( operetta company Zell and Genée ) he wrote a large number of libretti for operettas by Johann Strauss , Karl Millöcker , Carl Michael Ziehrer and others. a. Two of the most famous operettas, whose texts he co-wrote, are Die Fledermaus by Johann Strauss and Der Bettelstudent by Karl Millöcker. The alley is located on the southern slope of the Küniglberg .
  • Geylinggasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1907 after the painter Carl Geyling (1814–1880); he mainly dealt with glass and landscape painting . He created glass paintings for the parish church of St. Laurenz am Schottenfeld and for St. Stephen's Cathedral (1858–1879, destroyed in 1945). Geyling founded the glass painting company Carl Geyling's Erben in 1841 and was a purveyor to the court (kk court glass painter) . The company still exists and is now owned by Schlierbach Abbey .
  • Ghelengasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the printer Johann van Ghelen (1645–1721) and his son Johann Peter van Ghelen (1673–1754), also a printer. Johann van Ghelen owned five presses in Vienna, making him the largest printer based here. In 1703 he founded the Wiennerische Diarium ; this became the organ for official announcements and decrees and, under the name Wiener Zeitung, is the oldest daily newspaper in Austria and around the world that still exists today. His son continued to run the printing works and the Wiennerische Diarium . The western end of the street on the mountain side is at the foot of the Dollwiese . Before that the street was called Parkgasse .
  • Girzenberggasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the 285 m high Girzenberg , on whose western slope it runs. The Girzenberg was first documented in 1819 in the French tax version . Walter Steinhauser derives the name from the old Slovenian gorica (little mountain).
  • Glasauergasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after Karl Glasauer (1819–1874), Mayor of Ober-St.-Veit . The alley was originally called Bauernzeilgasse and then Rudolfsgasse .
  • Glawatschweg (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1954 after the singer and actor Franz Glawatsch (1871–1928); He played at the Vienna Carltheater from 1900 and was a baritone member of the ensemble at the Theater an der Wien from 1903–1916 . From 1907 he was chief director of the Karczag-Bühnen Theater an der Wien and Raimundtheater ; see also Wilhelm-Karczag-Weg . Glawatsch was one of the most popular singing comedians of his time; next to Hans Moser, he is considered to be the type of the cozy "original Viennese".
  • Gloriettegasse (Hietzing), named (date unknown; listed as Glorietgasse in the first edition of Lehmann's address book in 1859 ) after the Gloriette in the park of Schönbrunn Palace , at which it aims when viewed eastward; it was built in 1775 as the last building in the garden according to plans by Johann Ferdinand Hetzendorf von Hohenberg as a “temple of fame”, at the same time the main eye-catcher of the garden and a lookout point. It later served as a dining and ballroom, as well as a breakfast room for Emperor Franz Joseph I. The Schratt Villa , where Katharina Schratt , castle actress and confidante of the emperor, who is well known in literature, lived, is located at No. 9, at No. 14 –16 is the architecturally remarkable Villa Primavesi . The alley had a counterpart of the same name in the 12th district, which ran west towards the Gloriette; it has been called Hohenbergstrasse since 1894 .
  • Gnedgasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1955 after the actress and soubrette Nina Gned (1811–1874); she had engagements in Frankfurt, Milan, Barcelona, ​​Zurich, Hanover and Prague and was successful in later years as a "strange old woman". The street was previously called Billrothgasse (see Billrothstrasse in the 19th district).
  • Gobergasse (Lainz, Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1895 after Franz Gober (1822–1883), Mayor of Lainz from 1873.
  • Gogolgasse (Lainz, Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1932 after the Russian writer Nikolai Wassiljewitsch Gogol (1809–1852), professor of general history at the University of Saint Petersburg . As a poet he wrote works of epic breadth, but also pointed satires and fantastic-grotesque stories; his best-known works are The Auditor (1836) and The Dead Souls (1842). The alley runs on the northeast slope of the Red Mountain .
  • Goldmarkplatz (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1925 after the composer Karl Goldmark (1830–1915); at the end of the 19th century he was a very popular composer who was overwhelmed with superlatives. In addition to symphonies , other orchestral works , chamber music , choral works and songs , he composed a number of operas . His best-known work is the opera Die Königin von Saba , which premiered at the court opera in 1875 and with which he became famous overnight. The place was called 1938-1945 Walter-Flex-Platz after the German writer Walter Flex . On the Trazerberggasse there is a monument to Karl Münichreiter (see Münichreitergasse ), opposite the Blebanngasse branches off . Münichreiter and Blebann were active in the February fighting in 1934.
  • Granichstaedtengasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1955 after the composer Bruno Granichstaedten (1879–1944); he created 16 operettas and singspiele , for which he also wrote the libretto himself. He also created music for three sound films and some songs and chansons . In the early years his music was typically Viennese, but after the First World War the influence of popular American music can be clearly heard. The street was previously called Resselgasse or Conrad v. Hötzendorf- Alley .
  • Grenzgasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named (date unknown) after the earlier course of the border between Vienna and the market town of Mauer, which was incorporated to the south in 1938 .
  • Griepenkerlgasse (Speising), named in 1924 after the painter Christian Griepenkerl (1839–1916), professor at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna (from 1874), head of the special school for history painting there (from 1877). He created numerous monumental wall and ceiling paintings, u. a. for the court opera , the kuk weapons museum and several palaces. He also became posthumously famous for rejecting Adolf Hitler's applications for admission to the Academy of Fine Arts in 1907 and 1908 . An artists' settlement was built between the Gasse, the Russweg and the Riedelgasse in the 1920s (see Alfons Riedel ).
  • Grobeckergasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1955 after the German operetta singer Anna Grobecker (1829–1908); she played in 1846 in Magdeburg , 1848 in Leipzig and 1850-1858 in Berlin . In 1858 she came to Vienna, where she first played at the Theater am Franz-Josefs-Kai and then from 1862–1871 at the Carltheater . Anna Grobecker was a very popular comedian and operetta singer during her lifetime, best known for her trouser roles. Before that, the street was called Theodor-Körner-Gasse .
  • Großer Ring (Auhof; Friedensstadt), 1921 (?) Named after the semi-circular structure of the street. See also the counterpart Small Ring . Gasse in the Friedensstadt settlement , which arose after 1918 on the easternmost part of the historical area of ​​the Lainzer Tiergarten and was incorporated into the municipality in 1938. The street was not yet included in the last Lehmann edition, 1942, but was already mentioned in the street directory in 1956.
  • Grünbergstrasse (Schönbrunn), named in 1908 after the court attorney Josef Freiherr von Hagenmüller zu Grünberg (around 1745–1824); around 1790 he built several houses on this hill and wanted to found his own community, which he was forbidden by the authorities in 1794. The residents soon called the hill and the settlement Grünberg . The street was called 1894–1908, like a junction in the northern part of the street, Zenogasse and had previously been called Maria-Theresien- Strasse since 1864/1869 . The border to the neighboring 12th district to the east runs mostly in the middle of the street . The Villa XAIPE is at No. 2 next to the Meidlinger Tor to the Schönbrunn Palace Park ; Once you have reached the hill, another gate opens to the west to the castle park, which leads directly to the Gloriette .
  • Gusindegasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1975 after the priest, ethnologist and anthropologist Martin Gusinde (1886–1969); he worked and researched in Chile , Tierra del Fuego , the Congo , New Guinea and Japan . A museum was built in his honor in Puerto Williams , Chile.
  • Gustav-Brünner-Gasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1933 after the entrepreneur Gustav Brünner (1824–1905), owner of a lamp factory, local council (1872–1875) and mayor (1879–1882) of Mauer .
  • Gustav-Seidel-Gasse (Hacking), named in 1906 after Gustav Seidel (1816–1887), Mayor of Hacking (1878–1886).
  • Gütenbachstrasse (Auhof; Lainzer Tiergarten), named (date unknown) after the Gütenbach , the largest tributary of the Liesing , which drains the south of the Lainzer Tiergarten nature reserve . The road follows the stream in its lower reaches and is divided by the Tiergarten's Gütenbachtor. Outside the zoo, it is located in the 23rd district.
  • Gutzkowplatz (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1932 after the German writer, playwright and journalist Karl Gutzkow (1811–1878); he was a leading representative of the literary movement Young Germany . Gutzkow devoted himself to liberal politics in literature and often came into conflict with censorship. In 1845 he visited Vienna and wrote his critical impressions of Vienna , whereupon all of his works were banned in Austria.

H

The Parkhotel Schönbrunn on Hietzinger Hauptstrasse
House number plate on Hietzinger Hauptstrasse
  • Hackinger Hof (Hacking), named in 1908 after the Hackinger Hof , a historic building in the former Viennese suburb of Hacking , today part of the 13th district.
  • Hackinger Kai (Hacking), named in 1906 after its course next to the fortified bank ( quay ) of the Wien River in Hacking , from Hackinger Steg at the Vienna Hütteldorf train station to the Zufferbrücke; see also the Hietzinger Kai downstream . Both traffic areas were created in the course of the Vienna river regulation carried out between 1895 and 1899 , were originally only of local importance and were expanded after 1950 to form parts of the B1, the former Bundesstraße 1 , today's western entrance to Vienna.
  • Hagenberggasse (Ober-St.-Veit, Hacking), named in 1907 after the 406 m high Hagenberg , part of the Lainzer Tiergarten . The Hagenberg is documented for the first time in 1377 as Hekenperg . The name probably does not come from the word Hag (fence), but has its roots in the nearby village of Hacking ; he was often referred to as Hackenberg on maps . The alley was originally named Himmelhofgasse in 1907 , while today's Himmelhofgasse was named Hagenberggasse . Obviously this was displeasing, and street names were changed that same year.
  • Hanschweg (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1930 after the landscape painter Anton Hansch (1813–1876); he was the most important alpine and mountain painter in Austria in the second half of the 19th century. His pictures are mostly idealizing and heroic. The path leads from Ghelengasse to the St. Veiter Tor of the Lainzer Tiergarten . See the Faniteum at No. 1.
  • Hanselmayergasse (Hietzing, Lainz), named in 1910 after the well builder Franz Hanselmayer (1815–1906), last mayor of the Hietzing community and first district head of the Hietzing district (1892–1897). The alley runs on the north and east slopes of the Küniglberg , partly through the forest.
  • Hansi-Niese-Weg (Lainz), named in 1955 after the actress Hansi Niese (1875–1934); Niese not only played on stages in Vienna, but also on tour in Berlin . She appeared in antics and operettas , often as a partner of Alexander Girardi . The initial self-taught woman became one of the monarchy's most popular actresses . The Hansi-Niese-Gasse in the 19th district Döbling is also named after her. The path was previously known as the Serpentinenweg from 1926 to 1955 because it leads up the western slope of the Küniglberg in serpentines.
  • Hedy-Urach-Gasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1949 after the tailor Hedy Urach (1910–1943), member of the central committee of the KPÖ ; from 1940 she was a member of the third illegal party leadership of the KPÖ around Erwin Puschmann . She was arrested in 1941 and executed in 1943 after two years of torture. The street was called Tolstojgasse , then in the municipality of Mauer, since 1927 (see there).
  • Home plaice alley (Auhof; settlement Auhofer separator) 1932 named after the former non-profit building, housing and Siedlungsgenossenschaft "home soil" and from her to the alley, on a former part of the Lainzer Tiergarten , built settlement home soil .
  • Heinz-Nittel-Weg (Ober-St.-Veit, Lainz), named in 1991 after the politician Heinz Nittel (1930–1981), member of the National Council (1970–1976, SPÖ ), from 1976 acting city councilor in the Vienna City Senate , from 1979 for roads, traffic and energy, President of the Austrian-Israeli Society and co-founder of the Jewish Welcome Service Vienna . In 1981 he was murdered by a Palestinian perpetrator in front of his house, a few meters from today's route over the Red Mountain . The Heinz-Nittel-Hof in Floridsdorf is also named after him.
  • Hentschelgasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1895 after Karl Hentschel (1827–1898), the last mayor of Ober-St.-Veit (1873–1891). The street was previously called Schützengasse .
  • Hermann-Lanske-Weg (Ober-St.-Veit, Hochwiese settlement), named in 2010 after the film director and film producer Hermann Lanske (1927–1979); from 1960 to 1979 he made numerous films, mostly comedies, and wrote the script for some. He also gained fame through the design of numerous Vienna New Year's concerts for television.
  • Hermesstrasse (Speising, Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1894 after the Hermesvilla , a small castle in the Lainzer Tiergarten ; Emperor Franz Joseph I gave it to Empress Elisabeth as the “castle of dreams”. The name of the villa refers to a statue of Hermes made of white marble that stands in the garden. The street was previously called Tiergartenstrasse and was west of Linienamtsgasse in the Lainzer Tiergarten until 1918; then the Peace City , originally a wild post-war settlement, was created to the west of this lane and north of Hermesstrasse . Hermesstraße led and leads from Speising to the Lainzer Tor of the zoo.
  • Hetzendorfer Straße (Speising), named in 1894 after the formerly independent municipality of Hetzendorf , which was mentioned in 1114 and 1156 as Hercendorf and was incorporated into the 12th district, Meidling , in 1892 . The street was originally called Altmannsdorfer Weg and Hetzendorfer Weg , and then until 1894 Hauptstraße . Most of the street runs in the 12th district. The part in the 13th district was only laid out after 1910; To the north of the newly laid out road section, the Speising depot for the city's trams was built by 1914 , and in 1915, continuous tram traffic to Feldkellergasse was opened.
  • Heubergergasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1955 after the composer , conductor , music teacher and music journalist Richard Heuberger (1850–1914); his compositional work includes operas , ballets , operettas , songs , choirs and other instrumental compositions. His most famous work is the operetta Der Opernball . Heuberger also made a name for himself as a music critic , first with the Neue Wiener Tagblatt , then with the Allgemeine Zeitung , the Neue Freie Presse and the Neue Musikalische Presse . The street was previously called Adalbert-Stifter-Gasse (see also Adalbert-Stifter-Straße in the 20th district of Brigittenau ) or Robert Riedl-Gasse .
  • Hevesigasse (Speising), named in 1964 after the writer and journalist Ludwig Hevesi (actually Ludwig Hirsch, 1843–1910); The focus of his work was theater reviews ( reviews ), e.g. B. on the Vienna Hofburgtheater , as well as art reviews on the Viennese art scene and literary essays . Hevesi was one of the most important art critics of the Franciscan Josephine period. In particular, he supported the Vienna Secession journalistically and thereby contributed to its success. A part of the street was called Sarajewoplatz from 1909 to around 1955 (after Sarajevo , the capital of Bosnia and Herzegovina , which was occupied by Austria in 1908 ).
  • Hietzinger Hauptstraße (Hietzing, Unter-St.-Veit, Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the Hietzing municipality , which was independent until 1890 and after which the new 13th district was named in 1892. Hietzing was first mentioned in a document in 1130 and in 1892 it was incorporated into Vienna with many other suburbs. The name Hietzing is derived from Hiezo or Hezzo , a short form of "Heinrich". The oldest properties were in the Altgasse area ; see this. The street was previously called Hauptstraße in Alt-Hietzing ; from today's Anna-Strauss-Platz out of town it was called St. Veiter Gasse and in Ober-St.-Veit Maria-Theresien- Strasse or Maria-Theresien-Gasse , as the Ober-St.-Veiter Castle, towards which the street runs , was in the possession of the ruler for some time. The street begins at the Kennedy Bridge over the Wien River ( Hietzing underground station ), leads south to the Hietzinger Tor in the Schönbrunn Palace Park and turns west at Am Platz ( Maria Hietzing parish church ). At Anna-Strauss-Platz , Lainzer Straße branches off to the southwest . At no. 40 the hill villa of the then well-known gardening expert once stood in a very large garden ; a villa built by Robert Oerley has existed here since 1914 . In the 1860s and 1870s, the large entertainment establishment "New World" stretched south of the street . At no. 80, now a post office, lived until around 1930, Empress Elisabeth Marie Auguste von Bayern . Egon Schiele had his studio at No. 101 for a while; opposite, at no. 114, he died in 1918 in the apartment of his wife Edith Harms. The street ends in the west at Wolfrathplatz in Ober-St.-Veit (means of transport then and now: see Unter-St.-Veit ).
  • Hietzinger Kai (Hietzing, Unterbaumgarten, Unter-St.-Veit, Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after its course next to the bank of the Vienna River in Hietzing; see also Hackinger Kai . The street was previously called Badgasse or Wiengasse . The traffic area was created in the course of the Vienna river regulation carried out between 1895 and 1899 and was originally only of local importance, but was expanded after 1950 to become part of the B1, the former Bundesstraße 1 , today's western entrance to Vienna. See also Amtshaus for the 13th and 14th district on ONr. 1-3.
  • Hildegard-Teuschl-Weg (Lainz), named in 2014 after the nun Hildegard Teuschl (1937–2009), member of Caritas Socialis . In 1966 she founded the Caritas School for Social Professions in Vienna, which she directed until 1998. Sister Hildegard was mainly concerned with practical and pastoral care for the dying, as well as palliative care and built up the Austrian hospice movement for this purpose .
  • Hiltlweg (Auhof; Friedensstadt), named in 2011 after the teacher and politician Nora Hiltl (1905–1979), music professor at the Wenzgasse grammar school . The committed Catholic was a youth leader of the Christian Social Party and the Fatherland Front . In 1946 she founded the weekly Frau von heute , was head of the department “General Women's Education” in the Ministry of Education and regional director of the Vienna ÖVP women. She was also a member of the state parliament, local councilor, member of the federal council, president of the Austrian scouts and vice-president of the Volkshochschule Wien-West. The Nora-Hiltl-Hof in Hietzing is also named after her.
  • Himmelbaurgasse (Speising), named in 1930 after the librarian and popular artist Isidor Himmelbaur (1858–1919); from 1884 he worked at the Vienna University Library and was its director from 1910. From 1914 to 1917 he was chairman of the Vienna People's Education Association .
  • Himmelhofgasse (Ober-St.-Veit, Hacking), named in 1907 after the former restaurant "Am Himmel" on the Hagenberg . The court engraver Franz Jauner, father of the actor and theater director Franz von Jauner , bought a dairy farm here in 1848, which he converted into a large inn and which was known for its beautiful view. (A dairy is an inn that primarily serves milk products.) Today, the Himmelhof viewing area is reminiscent of the “Am Himmel” inn . The alley was originally named Hagenberggasse in 1907 , while today's Hagenberggasse was named Himmelhofgasse . Obviously this was displeased, and in the same year the two street names were swapped. The alley runs partly directly on the wall of the Lainzer Tiergarten , in the corner of Nikolaigasse that Nikolaitor leads.
  • Hirschensteig (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1932 after the deer animal family from the order of the ungulates ; In addition to fallow deer , roe deer , mouflons and wild boars , deer are part of the Lainzer Zoo .
  • Hirschfeldweg (Speising), named in 1930 after the journalist and music critic Robert Hirschfeld (1857–1914); He founded the folk concerts with classical programs in the Vienna People's Education Association , which he also directed himself for eight years. In 1900 he was one of the founders of the Wiener Concert-Verein . As a popular educator, he helped to bring classical music to broad sections of the population. The path was called Ambergerweg from 1938 to 1947 .
  • Hochheimgasse (Lainz), named in 1909 after the battle near Hochheim am Main , in which an Austrian corps under Field Marshal Ignácz Gyulay (approx. 30,000 men) formed a French unit (approx. 5,000 men) as part of the Napoleonic wars on November 9, 1813 Forced retreat.
  • Hochmaisgasse (Speising), named in 1924 after the field name Hochmais , which refers to a higher-lying young forest ("maize"). To the west of the alley is the Hermeswiese terraced house development in Red Vienna .
  • Hochwiesenweg (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 2003 after the Hochwiese settlement north of the Hörndlwald and near the wall of the Lainzer zoo . The path branches off from Possannergasse .
  • Hofjagdstraße (Hacking), named in 1902 as the western continuation of Auhofstraße after the former hunts of the imperial court in the Lainzer Tiergarten , along whose northern wall it runs. At the western end of the street, near the zoo's powder pound gate, is the historic Auhof estate , after which the local cadastral community , the Auhof Center shopping center in the 14th district and the motorway station there are named. See also Hofjägerstrasse .
  • Hofjägerstrasse (Auhof), named after 1941, date unknown; Path to and on the northern wall of the Lainzer Tiergarten , where kk court hunters were active until 1918 . Today, the road mostly runs along the 13/14 district border. To the north, the Weidlingau district of the 14th district, south of the Wien River, with the Auhof Center and the Vienna Auhof motorway station ( Exit 9 ) join the A1. See also Hofjagdstrasse .
  • Hofwiesengasse (Lainz, Speising), named in 1912 after the historical field name Hofwiesen . The street was rebuilt with tram tracks that went into operation in 1912 to bypass the level crossing of the Lainzer Straße – Speisinger Straße road with the connecting railway and the narrow section of the northernmost section of Speisinger Straße, as was the railway bridge over it.
  • Holowatyjplatz (Lainz, Lockerwiese settlement), named in 2011 after the trade unionist Rudolf Holowatyj (1904–1951), deputy chairman of the association of woodworkers (1932–1934), deputy chairman of the union of construction and woodworkers (1945–1951). Place in the Lockerwiese housing estate, at the confluence of Seelosgasse and Camillianergasse in Faistauergasse . The housing estates surrounding the square bear the addresses of Faistauergasse.
  • Horeischygasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1951 after the chemist and physicist Kurt Horeischy (1913–1945), assistant at the First Chemical Institute at the University of Vienna . On April 5, 1945, he tried to save the institute's electron microscope - the only one in Austria - from senseless destruction, and was therefore shot by the National Socialist institute director Jörn Lange. Jörn Lange was sentenced to death after the war and committed suicide in 1946.
  • Hörndlwaldgasse (Auhof; Friedensstadt), named in 1924 in the newly created Friedensstadt settlement (on the former grounds of the zoo ). The lane leads from the settlement to the Hörndlwald forest , which is adjacent to the north and which was also part of the Imperial and Royal Zoo until 1918 .
  • Hügelgasse (Unter-St.-Veit), named in 1903 after the diplomat , traveler , natural scientist and hortologist Carl von Hügel (1796–1870), whose hill villa had today's address at Hietzinger Hauptstrasse 40. (He owned a very large garden area around his villa on both sides of the road.) His travels took him to the Himalayas , Kashmir and Australia . Its ethnographic collection has been an important part of the Museum of Ethnology since 1928 . He was the founder of the Austrian Horticultural Society and a member of the Austrian Academy of Sciences . The Hügelpark south of Hietzinger Hauptstrasse has also been named after him since 1903. Before that, the street was called Wienflussgasse, as it runs towards the Wienfluss . At No. 2, at the corner of Auhofstrasse 76-78, is the former Moser villa, which the popular folk actor Hans Moser lived in for decades. Originally another street was called Hügelgasse from 1894; this was incorporated into today's Braunschweiggasse in 1902.
  • Hummelgasse (Unter-St.-Veit, Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1898 after the composer and pianist Johann Nepomuk Hummel (1778–1837); He was considered the most important pianist of his time and in this capacity, alongside Joseph Woelfl , he was Beethoven's closest competitor , with whom he was linked in a crisis-prone friendship. As a composer he represents the transition from the classical to the romantic era. His late work is highly romantic and virtuoso. The alley runs to the east right next to the connecting tram and therefore has no odd house numbers.

I.

  • Ignaz-Born-Weg (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1975 after the mineralogist and geologist Ignaz von Born (1742–1791); as an official of the court chamber , he carried out improvements in mining and developed a new amalgamation method for separating silver and gold from ores. Born was a Freemason and a leading member of the Vienna Illuminati ; he is the model for the character of Sarastro in Mozart's opera “ The Magic Flute ”. The mineral bornite is also named after him.
  • In der Hagenau (Lainz), named in 1947 after a field name. The former vineyards Sommerhagenau and Mitterhagenau are now parts of the Red Mountain immediately north of the alley. A hag is an area enclosed or fenced in by a hedge . Hag is derived from germ. * Haga / * hagaz / * hagjô / * hagjôn : " fencing , enclosure " and also includes the term "protection" as in cherish and comfortable . The street was previously called Lainzer Cottage .
  • Innocentiagasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1907 after the nun Innocentia Pögel (1824–1907); For 40 years she was superior of the Elisabethinum in Ober-St.-Veit as well as director of the Ober-St.-Veit children's institution. The name was initially incorrectly spelled as Innozentiagasse , but this was corrected in 1907.
  • Irene-Jerusalem-Weg (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 2006 after the teacher Irene Jerusalem (1882–1942?), Professor of German and French at the Wenzgasse grammar school . In 1941 she was deported to the Litzmannstadt ghetto ( Łódź , Poland) and murdered shortly afterwards. Her father was the pedagogue, philosopher and sociologist Wilhelm Jerusalem ; for it is the Jerusalem street in the 21st district, Floridsdorf named.

J

  • Jagdschlossgasse (Lainz, Ober-St.-Veit) (official until 1999: Jagdschloß…), named in 1894 after an imperial hunting lodge in Lainz . It is unclear whether this hunting lodge meant the Hermesvilla in Lainzer Tiergarten (to which the alley has no topographical connection) or the "Lainzer Schlössl", the predecessor of the Cardinal-König-Haus at No. 2. At No. 2, corner of Lainzer Street, or at Kardinal-König-Platz 1, is the Lainz Speising Council Memorial Church and the Kardinal-König-Haus behind it. The westernmost part of the alley borders the Werkbundsiedlung , which opened in 1932 as an international architecture exhibition . The street was previously called Einsiedeleigasse (see there).
  • Jagićgasse (Lainz, Werkbundsiedlung Vienna ), named in 1936 after the Croatian linguist Vatroslav Jagić (1838–1923), professor of Slavic philology at the University of Vienna (1886–1908). He is considered to be one of the most important Slavists of the second half of the 19th century and one of the last who was able to survey the subject in all its breadth.
  • Jakob-Stainer-Gasse (Speising), named in 1942 after the Tyrolean violin maker Jakob Stainer (1621–1683); until around 1800 his instruments north of the Alps had a better reputation than the Italian ones. He never took on an apprentice, so his art of violin making was not passed on.
  • Janneckgasse (Lainz, “Lockerwiese” settlement), named in 1932 after the baroque painter Franz Christoph Janneck (1703–1761); He mainly created cabinet, miniature and genre pictures, religious representations, landscapes and portraits and is considered a master of fine painting in the Baroque era . He taught at the Academy of Fine Arts and was its rector from 1752–1754. His successor as rector was Paul Troger ; see Trogergasse in the 14th district of Penzing .
  • Jaunerstraße (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1955 after the actor, director and theater director Franz Jauner (1831–1900); Actor and director at the Carltheater (1871–1875), director of the court opera (1875–1880), director of the Ringtheater (1880–1881). As a result of the ring theater fire in 1881, he resigned and was sentenced to three months in prison. In 1895 he took over the management of the Carltheater, went bankrupt with it and committed suicide. The street was called before Maria Theresa -Straße .
  • Jenbachgasse (Auhof; Friedensstadt), named in 1955 after the actor and librettist Bela Jenbach (actually Béla Jacobowicz, 1871–1943); He came to Vienna from Hungary in 1889 and initially worked as an actor at the Burgtheater , later as an author of librettos for operettas. His most famous works are Die Csárdásfürstin (1915) and The Tsarevich (1927). The alley was previously called Berggasse .
  • Jennerplatz (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1931 after the English physician Edward Jenner (1749–1823); He invented the vaccination against smallpox , in which he brought about an immunization against all types of smallpox through an artificially induced infection with the harmless cowpox . Jenner called his procedure "vaccination" (German vaccination , from Latin vacca = "the cow"). This term stands in English to this day for the vaccination of a healthy person with weakened pathogens. The square, actually a street, interrupts Wlassakstrasse ; the adjacent settlement plots are often divided into several parcels lying one behind the other as seen from the street, which also have the address Jennerplatz at a considerable distance.
  • Jodlgasse (Hietzing), named in 1919 after the German philosopher and psychologist Friedrich Jodl (1849–1914). He came to Vienna in 1896 and became professor of philosophy at the University of Vienna ; he also taught aesthetics at the Technical University . He was considered the most prominent liberal professor who spoke out against the prevailing ultramontanism and the clerical influence in schools and universities in countless lectures and newspaper articles . Jodl also worked through teaching at the Vienna People's Education Association and as a sought-after speaker. The Professor-Jodl-Hof residential complex in the 19th district, Döbling , is named after him. The short cul-de-sac starting from Dommayergasse was called Badgasse until 1894 and then from 1894–1919 Stephaniebadgasse after a bath located on Dommayergasse .
  • Johann-Peter-Au-Gasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named (date unknown) after the wine maker Johann Peter Au (1720–1792), local judge of Mauer (1754–1779), until 2020 Augasse. Another Augasse is in the 9th district.
  • Johannes-Bischko-Platz (Unter-St.-Veit), named in 2019 after the physician Johannes Bischko (1922-2004). He became known for his efforts to establish Chinese medicine - especially acupuncture - in Europe within medical science. In addition to his teaching and research activities, he founded the Austrian Society for Acupuncture in 1954 and ran an acupuncture clinic from 1958. The square refers to the previously unnamed green area opposite the house at Hietzinger Hauptstrasse 44, corner of Fichtnergasse, at the gusset-like junction of Neue Welt-Gasse.
  • Jörsgasse (Speising), named in 1936 after the legal historian Paul Jörs (1856–1925); The legal history of the Roman Empire played an important part in his studies . In addition to Roman marriage and private law , he dealt with the history of Roman jurisprudence and the sources of Roman law . As a papyrologist, he studied the law in Egypt during the Roman Empire.
  • Josef-Gangl-Gasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1932 after the actor and writer Josef Gangl (1868–1916); he lived in great poverty in Vienna. His stories and novels deal with topics from the Bohemian Forest . The most important work is the novel The Last Tree , which describes the decline of a peasant family. The alley is interrupted roughly in the middle by a large meadow on the southern slope of the Girzenberg ; the construction of the middle section, which was once planned (the matching house numbers were kept free), has no political chance today.
  • Josef-Heinzl-Gasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1928 after the trade unionist and politician Josef Heinzl ; he was involved in the trade union movement and became a functionary of the metal workers' association. After the First World War he was foreman of the consumer cooperative Vienna and the surrounding area and from 1919 to 1921 a member of the Lower Austrian Parliament .
  • Josef-Kraft-Weg (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1987 after the archivist and local history researcher Josef Kraft (1879–1945); initially employed at the Tyrolean Provincial Archives in Innsbruck , he moved to Vienna in 1921, where he was appointed Provincial Archives Director of Lower Austria . His research on the history of Vienna became important, especially on the history of Ober-St.-Veit .
  • Josef-Kyrle-Gasse (Speising), named in 1932 after the dermatologist Josef Kyrle (1880–1926); his most important scientific achievement lies in his collaboration with Julius Wagner-Jauregg . He had the idea of ​​the therapeutic generation of fever in syphilis patients by malaria pathogens. Because of his untimely death, Kyrle could not see Wagner-Jauregg receiving the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1927 for this joint research . See also the Wagner-Jauregg-Weg in the 14th district.
  • Josef-Pommer-Gasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1934 after the teacher Josef Pommer (1845–1918); he devoted himself to collecting folk songs . He made a name for himself in the music scene from 1899 as the editor of the magazine Das Deutsche Volkslied . In 1899 he was involved in the establishment of the phonogram archive of the Academy of Sciences and in 1904 in the establishment of the Austrian Folk Song Works, which he directed until his death.
  • Josef-Schuster-Gasse (Lainz), named in 1932 after the flower painter Josef Schuster (1812–1890); At the suggestion of Archduke Johann, he discovered the world of alpine flowers as an artistic theme for himself. He achieved great success with aristocratic and upper-class audiences, and his flower pictures were sold all over the world.
  • Joseph-Lister-Gasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1931 after the British physician Joseph Lister (1827–1912), professor of surgery at the University of Glasgow . With the disinfection of instruments and bandages that he introduced, hospital stays due to accidents and / or surgical interventions lost their horror. Patient mortality was falling rapidly. According to Ignaz Semmelweis's findings , Lister's research results led to the groundbreaking principles of asepsis and antisepsis in health care. See also Semmelweisgasse in the 21st district.

K

  • Kalmanstraße (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1955 after the composer Emmerich Kálmán (actually: Imre Koppstein, 1882–1953); he came to Vienna from Budapest in 1908 . With his works Die Csárdásfürstin (1915), Countess Mariza (1924) and Die Zirkusprinzessin (1926) he became one of the most famous operettas composers on both sides of the Atlantic. The street was previously called Burgenlandstrasse .
  • Kardinal-König-Platz (Lainz), named in 2005 after Cardinal Franz König (1905–2004), Archbishop of Vienna 1956–1986, cardinal priest from 1958, military vicar 1959–1969. Because he made a significant contribution to reconciliation between social democracy and the church in Austria , he was sometimes called "the red cardinal". His predecessor as archbishop was Theodor Innitzer (see Kardinal-Innitzer-Platz in the 19th district); his successor was Hans Hermann Groër (no street name). The square (formerly Lainzer Straße 136-140) located at the junction of Jagdschlossgasse from the Lainzer street ; No. 1: Council Memorial Church Lainz Speising , No. 3: Cardinal-König-Haus .
  • Kardinal-Piffl-Gasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1946 after Cardinal Friedrich Gustav Piffl (1864 to 1932), Archbishop of Vienna 1913–1932, cardinal priest from 1914. After the First World War, he tried to reorganize the Pastoral care and promoted the Kolping Society and Caritas . His predecessor as archbishop was Franz Xaver Nagl (see Kardinal-Nagl-Platz in the 3rd district); his successor was Theodor Innitzer (see Kardinal-Innitzer-Platz in the 19th district). The street was called 1938-1946 after the anti-Semitic politician Georg-Ritter-von-Schönerer -Gasse .
  • Karl-Schallhas-Gasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1934 after the painter and etcher Karl Schallhas (1767–1797); his oil paintings are nostalgic representations of nature, often pastoral scenes with shepherds and cattle. As an etcher he mainly depicted landscapes, but also created cityscapes and small portraits. He is considered to be a representative of a transitional art between late baroque and Biedermeier .
  • Karl-Wilhelm-Diefenbach-Gasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1927 after the painter and social reformer Karl Wilhelm Diefenbach (1851–1913); He is considered a pioneer of life reform and a pioneer of nudism and the peace movement . His rural commune near Vienna (1897–1899) was one of the models for the reform settlement Monte Verità near Ascona. As a painter he was an independent representative of Art Nouveau and Symbolism .
  • Käthe-Leichter-Gasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1949 after the socialist trade unionist and politician Käthe Leichter (1895–1942); she was the author of numerous social science works, founder and head of the women's department of the Vienna Chamber of Labor (from 1925) and died in a concentration camp. The Käthe-Leichter-Hof in Hietzing is also named after her. The street was previously called Horngasse from 1943 to 1949 .
  • Keplingergasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1955 after the soubrette and theater director Dora Keplinger-Eibenschütz (1876–1949); as a singer at the Theater an der Wien (from 1900) she mainly appeared in operettas . From 1924 to 1929 she succeeded her husband Siegmund Eibenschütz and was the last director of the Carltheater . The alley was previously called Franz-Schubert -Gasse from 1927 to 1955 .
  • Kernhausgasse (Auhof; Friedensstadt), named (after 1941, date unknown) after the term Kernhaus , an initially constructed building object, which is then expanded in stages.
  • Kirchmeyergasse (Hietzing), named in 1893 after Josef Kirchmeyer (1837–1912), local councilor in Hietzing (1891–1895).
  • Kleiner Ring (Auhof; Friedensstadt), named (after 1942, before 1956) after the ring-shaped layout of the street. See also the Big Ring . Path in the Friedensstadt settlement , which arose after 1918 on the historical area of ​​the Lainzer Tiergarten and was incorporated into the municipality in 1938.
  • Klimtgasse (Lainz), named in 1924 after the painter Gustav Klimt (1862–1918); he was one of the most controversial but also popular artists of the turn of the century . He was wanted by Viennese society because of the erotic charisma of his female portraits. He is undoubtedly the most important Art Nouveau artist in Austria, but also occupies a leading position on an international scale. The middle of the street is the district boundary 13/12 . See also Egon-Schiele-Gasse .
  • Klippenweg (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1975 after cliffs in Ober Sankt Veit , a geological formation from the Jura era .
  • Klitschgasse (Speising), named in 1955 after the actor Wilhelm Klitsch (1882–1941); He appeared primarily as a theater actor, but also took part in some early Austrian film productions as a silent film actor . He belonged to the ensemble of the Deutsches Volkstheater and also worked as a director. The street was to be found on the city map in 1898 as Feldgasse , in 1912 like Schillingergasse, which was named 1933 in Mauer in what was later to be the 23rd district .
  • Köchelgasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1912 after Ludwig von Köchel (1800–1877); his books on the history of music in Vienna (a history of the court orchestra and the biography of Johann Joseph Fux from 1872) are among the most important studies of the second half of the 19th century. In 1862 his chronological-thematic directory of all of Wolfgang Amadé Mozart's sound works was published , which is named after him Köchelverzeichnis (KV).
  • Kögelngasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1950 after the historical field name Kögeln .
  • Königgasse (Speising), named after the sculptor Otto König (1838–1920) in 1924 ; he worked on the figural design of magnificent buildings on Vienna's Ringstrasse , especially the Vienna State Opera , the Burgtheater and the Museum of Art History . He created the relief heads of famous composers at the Vienna City Hall . Several grave monuments in Viennese cemeteries and portrait busts of members of the court also come from him. Alley on the western edge of the Hermeswiese settlement.
  • Konrad-Duden-Gasse (Lainz), named in 1930 after the German high school teacher and linguist Konrad Duden (1829–1911); he was mainly a philologist and lexicographer . He campaigned for the standardization of German spelling all his life . The work “Complete Orthographic Dictionary of the German Language”, published in 1880, is considered to be the “ Urduden ”; it contained 28,000 headwords on 187 pages. Alley on the southwest slope of the Küniglberg .
  • Kopfgasse (Hietzing), named in 1893 after the master builder Josef Kopf (1829–1895), local council in Hietzing .
  • Kraelitzgasse (Speising), named in 1936 after the orientalist and Turkologist Friedrich Kraelitz (1876–1932); he taught as the first professor of Turkish Studies at the Institute for Oriental Studies at the University of Vienna since 1918 . With his processing of 24 original documents from the second half of the 15th century, he founded the teaching of Ottoman diplomats in 1924 .
  • Kramer-Glöckner-Straße (Auhof; Friedensstadt), named in 1955 after the popular actress and soubrette Josefine Kramer-Glöckner (1874–1954); Her first engagement was at the Deutsches Theater in Budapest , followed by years in Berlin and finally from 1892 at the Deutsches Volkstheater in Vienna, where she stayed until her death. From 1917 she also played in silent films in addition to the theater . After her father Josef Matras is Matra alley named. The street was previously called Eichenstrasse .
  • Kremsergasse (Unter-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the innkeeper Anton Kremser (1811–1879), Mayor of Hietzing. Before that, the street was called Bognergasse .
  • Kugygasse (Speising), named in 1964 after the alpinist Julius Kugy (1858–1944). Born in Gorizia , he was awarded a Dr. jur. PhD. From 1883 he headed his father's company in Trieste . Thanks to his solid financial means, he was able to surround himself with excellent mountain guides and thus mastered numerous first ascents . He mainly devoted himself to the exploration of the Julian Alps .
  • Küniglberggasse (Lainz), named in 1926 after the Küniglberg , a 261 m high hill on the Lainzer Sattel, a foothill of the Vienna Woods . The Küniglberg is named after the imperial procurator Wolfgang Künigl, who administered the property of the parish Hütteldorf in the 16th century . The expression Küniglberg is often used as a synonym for Austrian broadcasting , since the ORF center Küniglberg is located there. Alley on the southwest slope of the mountain.
  • Kupelwiesergasse (Unter-St.-Veit), named after the painter Leopold Kupelwieser (1796–1862) in 1894 ; Today he is best known for the pictures he made of Franz Schubert and his circle of friends. Kupelwieser belonged to the Nazarenes school and, together with Joseph von Führich, is the main representative of religious romantic painting in Vienna. No. 28: House Strasser by Adolf Loos ; opposite, the Hügelpark borders the street on its north side.

L.

Vienna Lainzer Str 8a.jpg
  • Lafitegasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1952 after the composer, organist, choir director, conductor, program designer , organizer, music teacher, music critic and piano accompanist Carl Lafite (1872–1944); he was considered one of the most important piano accompanists of his time. As a composer he created, among other things, an oratorio, operas, choirs and songs that are close to the style of Franz Schubert , as well as melodramas.
  • Lainzer Straße (Hietzing, Unter-St.-Veit, Lainz, Speising), named in 1894 after the formerly independent municipality of Lainz , which was first mentioned in documents in 1313 and incorporated into Vienna with other suburbs in 1892 and became part of the new 13th district, Hietzing . The name "Lainz" probably goes back to Lventz , which is derived from Slavic loka ("on the meadow"). The street surrounding the Küniglberg in the north and west was previously called Hauptstraße in Lainz and Speising . The traffic route that branches off from Hietzinger Hauptstrasse in the center of Alt-Hietzing ends on the southern edge of Lainz at the connecting railway and continues beyond the railway barriers in Speisinger Strasse . The center of Lainz with the now Syrian Orthodox former Lainz parish church (in front of No. 148) was directly on the street. See the neighboring Kardinal-König-Platz next to the street.
  • Lainzer-Bach-Straße (Auhof; between Friedensstadt and the Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named after the Lainzer Bach in 1955 ; it rises in the Lainzer Tiergarten , flows into the Wien River and since 1891–1903 has partly run in a creek canal . The street was previously called Elisabethstrasse . The simplified spelling Lainzerbachstrasse is used on the city administration's electronic city map and on street signs in 2013 .
  • Larochegasse (Unter-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the German actor Carl von La Roche (1794–1884); He came to Vienna in 1833 and received a lifelong engagement at the Burgtheater , which he therefore belonged to until his death. In 1873 he was knighted and awarded the Order of the Iron Crown . The alley was originally spelled La Roche Gasse . No. 2: Main entrance to the Wenzgasse grammar school . No. 3: House Scheu by Adolf Loos . No. 14: Apartment of the long-time police chief Josef Holaubek . Between numbers 16 and 18, the Hügelpark borders the alley on its south side. No. 35: House of social politician Hildegard Burjan .
  • Laverangasse (Speising), named in 1932 after the French physician Alphonse Laveran (1845–1922); he mainly dealt with the tropical disease malaria and its triggers. He later worked with colleagues on research into other pathogens, especially trypanosomes . Laveran received the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1907 .
  • Leitenwaldplatz (Speising), named in 1924 after the nearby Leitenwald , which still belonged to the former Imperial and Royal Tiergarten around 1920 and stood on what was later to be the settlement area on the former Tiergarten property; it was directly connected to the Lainzer Bach to the south. Around today's Dostalgasse, the Leitentürl led from Wittgensteinstrasse into the forest, as its relic, the Napoleon Forest, remained between the settlements. Place between Speisinger Strasse and Hochmaisgasse (Hermeswiese housing estate).
  • Leodolterpromenade (Speising), named in 2015 after the doctor and politician Ingrid Leodolter (1919–1986); she was the medical director of the Sophienspital from 1961 to 1971 . From 1971 to 1979 she was the first Federal Minister for Health and the Environment . In 1974, Leodolter introduced the mother-child pass , which resulted in a significant reduction in child mortality . The promenade runs as a walkway from the main entrance of the Hietzing Clinic , the former Lainzer Hospital, to the adjacent main entrance of the former geriatric center Am Wienerwald , the former Lainz retirement home. It accompanies the own track structure of tram line 62 in Wolkersbergenstraße.
  • Leo-Fall-Weg (Lainz), named in 2000 after the composer and conductor Leo Fall (1873–1925); Alongside Franz Lehár and Oscar Straus, he is one of the most important composers of the so-called “ Silver Operetta Era ”. Fall achieved a breakthrough in 1907–1908 with three operettas (including Die Dollarprinzessin ) and became known worldwide with later works such as Die Rose von Stambul (1916). The path leads up to the Küniglberg, rising from the west .
  • Leon-Kellner-Weg (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1932 after the Anglicist Leon Kellner (1859–1928); He was committed to popular education in Vienna and in 1900 founded the "Jewish Toynbeehalle ". He also worked for Zionism and was the closest collaborator of Theodor Herzl . The path was called Wilhelm-Riehl-Weg from 1938 to 1947 .
  • Leopold-Schwarz-Platz (Ober-St.-Veit), named after the baker Leopold Schwarz (1873–1941) in 2018; He founded a bakery in Ober-St.-Veit, Auhofstraße 136, which became the largest in the district.
  • Leopold-Zechner-Platz (Speising), named after the teacher Leopold Zechner (1884–1968), district school inspector in Floridsdorf (1930–1934), President of the Vienna City School Council (1945–1960), member of the National Council (1945–1956, SPÖ) ). Zechner earned services in rebuilding popular education and the school system after the war . Addressless place at the confluence of Hofwiesengasse (No. 48, corner house: Hietzing Adult Education Center ) in Feldkellergasse .
  • Lilienberggasse (Hacking), named in 1894 after the legal scholar and court official Christoph Ignaz Abele (1627–1685); he was active in the higher civil service, where he became imperial court secretary and internal Austrian referendarius. He was the owner of the Hacking estate . In 1665 Emperor Leopold I gave him the title von und zu Lilienberg, heir from Hacking . The street was previously called Wiengasse ; part of the alley was called Aichbühelgasse until 1961 (not identical to today's Aichbühelgasse).
  • Linienamtsgasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1929 after the former Linienamtsgasse that was in operation at Speisinger Strasse 104 from 1892–1921 and still exists today. From 1892–1938 the city border to the southern neighboring municipality of Mauer near Vienna ran here , and since 1920 the state border to Lower Austria .
  • Linkweg (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1955 after the actress and singer Antonie Link-Dessauer (1853–1931); she played at the Burgtheater from 1870 , where she had previously performed in children's roles. From 1872 she sang as an operetta singer at the Carltheater and became a star of the ensemble. In 1879 she married the banker Adolf Dessauer and withdrew from working life. The path was previously called Försterweg from 1932 to 1955 .
  • Linzackergasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1913 after the vineyard name Linzacker, which was mentioned in a document in 1407 .
  • Löfflergasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1931 after the German hygienist and bacteriologist Friedrich Loeffler (1852–1915); as an employee of Robert Koch , he discovered the pathogens of various infectious diseases, such as snot , diphtheria and ruddiness . Together with Paul Frosch, he described the pathogen causing foot and mouth disease and thus became a co-founder of virology .
  • Lynkeusgasse (Speising) 1924 named after the engineer and social philosopher Josef Popper-Lynkeus (1838–1921). As an engineer, he applied for a number of patents and published general scientific papers. He became known, however, for his work on social reformist issues, which resulted in his general duty to feed , i.e. a kind of unconditional basic income . The street was called Vernalekengasse from 1938 to 1947 .

M.

  • Madjeragasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1936 after the civil servant and writer Wolfgang Madjera (1868–1926); In addition to his job as a lawyer in the Vienna City Administration, he worked as a writer and wrote poems, plays, fairy tales and essays in a patriotic spirit.
  • Malfattisteig (Lainz), not officially named after the physician Johann Malfatti (1775–1859); He came to Vienna from Italy in 1795 and started his own practice in 1804. During the Congress of Vienna he enjoyed an excellent reputation and became the personal physician of Archduke Charles and Archduchess Maria Beatrice of Modena-Este . The climb is a steep path to the Küniglberg , on the north-western slope of which Malfatti lived in a house called Malfattivilla or Malfattischlössl , but which no longer exists (see Franz-Schalk-Platz). The Malfattigasse in the 12th district is also named after him.
  • Mantlergasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1898 after the teacher Josef Mantler (1845–1902), senior teacher in Unter-St.-Veit . At the northern end of the alley at Hietzinger Kai , the Guldenbrücke leads from the 14th district over the Wien River.
  • Marienstig (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1919 after the Marienbach , which rises in the Lainzer Tiergarten and flows into the Wien River. The brook caused floods in Ober-St.-Veit for many years until its lower course was vaulted in 1915.
  • Markwardstiege (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1973 after Markwardus de Hacingen (unknown dates, 12th century), a follower of Margrave Heinrich II von Babenberg and owner of Hacking Castle in the 12th century. He is probably the namesake of the village Hacking , which was first mentioned in 1156 as Hacingen and is now part of the district of Hietzing.
  • Martha-Rohs-Weg (Ober-St.-Veit, settlement "Hochwiese"), named in 2009 after the singer Martha Rohs (1909–1963); the chamber singer ( mezzo-soprano ) worked at the Vienna State Opera and the Salzburg Festival from 1937 to 1949 . She was the wife of actor and singer Fred Liewehr ; see Fred-Liewehr-Gasse .
  • Matrasgasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1912 after the actor and popular singer Josef Matras (1832–1887); In 1858 he founded a folk singing society with Johann Fürst . In 1862 he accepted an engagement as a comedian at the Fürst Theater in the Prater . In the following year he moved to the Carltheater until 1879 and played mainly in plays by Johann Nestroy . At the Carltheater, Matras also appeared together with Karl Blasel and Wilhelm Knaack as a very successful comedian trio; see Blaselgasse in the 18th district and Knaackgasse in the 21st district. Matras was the father of the actress Josefine Kramer-Glöckner ; see the Kramer-Glöckner-Strasse .
    Vienna Maxing Str 7.jpg
  • Maxingstraße (Hietzing), named in 1894 after the Maxingvilla , built for Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian (who was shot in Mexico in 1867) , brother of Emperor Franz Joseph I , in Maxingpark between the Hietzinger cemetery and a back entrance to the Schönbrunn Palace Park . The villa, built in the style of a wooden Swiss country house, was ceremoniously opened in 1850 for the Archduke's 18th birthday. Johann Strauss took over the musical direction and composed the Maxing Dances op. 79 for the event . The building was demolished in 1955 because it was in disrepair. The street was previously called Hetzendorfer Straße , with the part of today's Elisabethallee leading south-east from Maxingstraße , because it leads to Hetzendorf when viewed from Hietzing . In 1873, Johann Strauss (son) composed the operetta “ Die Fledermaus ” in house number 18 . The publisher Paul Zsolnay lived at number 24 from 1929 onwards , and at number 46 since 1884 Anna Nahowski , a lover of Franz Joseph I. The name Maxing for the area at the southern end of the street on the mountain side should also be based on the name Max (imilian) are based.
  • Maygasse (Speising), named in 1911 after the deaf and mute teacher Josef May (1755–1820); he studied sign language technology in France with Charles-Michel de l'Epée and subsequently developed the “Vienna School” of teaching the deaf and dumb . In 1779 he founded the institution for the deaf and dumb together with - and at times in violent hostility to - Friedrich Stork; see Storkgasse in the 5th district. The alley leads east from Speisinger Strasse to the Federal Institute for Deaf Education.
  • Meillergasse (Speising), named in 1911 after the historian and archivist Andreas von Meiller (1812–1871), official in the Imperial and Royal State Archives (from 1841), head of the Reichshofratsregistratur (from 1851). He expanded the archives in Vienna and published several scientific works. Meiller succeeded Joseph Chmel ; see Chmelgasse in the 19th district.
  • Melchartgasse (Lainz, Speising), named in 1913 after the school councilor Matthäus Melchart (1790–1866), the first mayor of Speising (1848–1859).
  • Meytensgasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1898 after the painter Martin van Meytens (1695–1770); he came to Vienna in 1731 and became an imperial chamber painter a year later. Under the reign of Maria Theresa from 1740 he reached the height of his fame as the preferred painter of the imperial family. In 1759 he was appointed director of the Vienna Art Academy . The north side of the Goldmarkplatz extends between buildings nos. 19 and 21 .
  • Mittermayergasse (Hietzing), named in 1894 after the civil servant Matthias Mittermayer von Waffenberg (also Mittermayr, 1651–1708), imperial mint master (1679–1708); the mint in the Wollzeile in the old town experienced a great boom under him, as he reformed the minting process. He was a patron of the Trinity Church , the then Lainz parish church. The street was previously called Mühlgasse .
  • Modl-Toman-Gasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1955 after the operetta singer Gabriele Modl-Tomann (* February 28, 1872, † March 8, 1948, not 1848!), 6., Linke Wienzeile 84; no further biographical information is available about them. Before that , the street was called Siedlergasse ; it runs directly parallel to the wall of the Lainzer Tiergarten, which was built after 1918, south of today's Lainzer Tor.
  • Möglichasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1955 after the conductor and composer Franz Mögele (1834–1907); from 1850 he was a violinist at the Theater an der Wien and later on several suburban stages. Later he worked as Kapellmeister at the Thalia Theater and for a long time served as choir master of the “Währinger Liedertafel”. From 1858 he came out with his own compositions, especially operettas and opera parodies, such as Friedrich, the Heizbare and Leonardo and Blandine . The street was previously called Defreggergasse .
  • Montecuccoliplatz (Lainz, Hietzing), 1909, 300 years after his birth, named after the general, diplomat and statesman Raimondo Montecuccoli (1609–1680); he was the creator of the first standing army in Austria and one of the most important military theorists of the 17th century. He became famous for his victory against a huge Turkish army, which he defeated in 1664 during the Turkish War of 1663/1664 in the battle of Mogersdorf . Along with Prince Eugene of Savoy and Archduke Karl, he is one of Austria's most important generals. See also St. Gotthard Strasse in the 14th district. The general's monument dedicated by Franz Joseph I has been in the Army History Museum since 1869 .
  • Montevideogasse (Lainz), named in 1931 after the city of Montevideo , capital of Uruguay , which sent donations for starving Vienna after the First World War .
  • Mühlbachergasse (Lainz), named in 1930 after the historian and diplomat Engelbert Mühlbacher (1843–1903), professor of medieval history at the University of Vienna (1881–1903), director of the Institute for Austrian Historical Research (1896–1903). As a member of the Central Management of the Monumenta Germaniae Historica , he created an extensive edition of Carolingian documents. The alley was rebuilt in the 1920s.
  • Münichreiterstraße (Unter-St.-Veit, Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1946 after the shoemaker Karl Münichreiter ; As a social democrat and member of the Schutzbund , he was actively involved in the fighting in the civil war in 1934. He was seriously injured by gunfire by the police and arrested. Two days later, he was sentenced to death and hanged from the stretcher. His memorial is on Goldmarkplatz , one block from his last address, Meytensgasse 18 in Ober-St.-Veit. The street was originally called St. Veiter Allee or Unter Sankt Veiter Allee until 1894 (as seen from Lainz) , then from 1894–1938 (after the actual family name of Carl Carl ) Bernbrunngasse and 1938–1946 Stuttgarter Straße .

N

Haus Horner in Nothartgasse 7, designed by Adolf Loos and built in 1912/1913
  • Napoleonwaldgasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1955 after the Napoleon forest , a remnant of the Leitenwald forest in the Lainzer Tiergarten, which was still stagnant around 1920, within its former boundaries. The name comes from the time of the Napoleonic Wars , when the forest located here was cut down: the wood served as heating material for Napoleon Bonaparte when he resided in Schönbrunn Palace for five months in 1809 . It was later reforested. The street was previously called Arbeitergasse .
  • Nästlbergergasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1955 after the singer and librettist Robert Nästlberger (1886–1942); he sang as a tenor at the Vienna Citizens' Theater , took part in two films as an actor and wrote the libretto for the operetta Der Reiter der Kaiserin (1941). Before that, the street was called Hauergasse .
  • Neblingergasse (Unter-St.-Veit), named in 1913 after Jakob Neblinger (1817–1884); he set up a foundation for the poor in Unter-St.-Veit .
  • Neue-Welt-Gasse (Unter-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the former entertainment establishment “ Neue Welt ”, which existed here from 1861 to 1882 between Lainzer Strasse and Hietzinger Hauptstrasse . It was founded by the entrepreneur Carl Schwender (1809–1866); see Schwendergasse in the 15th district, where he ran “Schwenders Colosseum”. After the establishment was closed, the large area was parceled out; all the alleys in this Grätzl were gradually built.
  • Neukommweg (Speising, “Hermeswiese” settlement), named in 1930 after the composer , pianist and diplomat Sigismund von Neukomm (1778–1858); his musical oeuvre includes over 1,300 works, including ten operas, three oratorios , sacred music and songs in various languages. He never got to know his great role model Mozart , but he was harpsichord teacher of his son Carl Thomas Mozart .
  • Neukräftengasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1926 after the historic field name Neukräftengasse . The alley was created during the expansion of the settlement area east of the municipality mountain.
  • Nikolausgasse (Hacking), named in 1892 after the patron saint of the nearby Nikolaikapelle in Lainzer Tiergarten , which can be reached at the western end of the street through the Nikolaitor. The chapel was built at the end of the 12th century. The name Nicholas (Nikolai is Latin Nicholas ) is Church on the St.. Nicholas back. Other topographical terms in the area using the saint's name are listed here .
  • Nothartgasse (Lainz, Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1911 after the business owner Franz Nothart (1808–1897), Mayor of Lainz (1861–1864). Alley on the northeast slope of the Red Mountain . No. 7: Haus Horner by Adolf Loos .
  • Novalisgasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1935 after the German writer Novalis (actually Georg Friedrich Philipp Freiherr von Hardenberg, 1772–1801); he is considered one of the most important representatives of early German romanticism . Despite his untimely death, he left behind numerous poems, fragments, and essays, as well as an astonishing wealth of records on history and politics, philosophy, religion, aesthetics, and the history of science.

O

  • Olmagasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1955 after the singer and actress Bertha Olma (1851–1902; not † 1848); she sang mainly in operettas , but has left only a few biographical traces. The street was previously called Gärtnergasse from 1929 to 1955 .
  • Opitzgasse (Lainz), named in 1903 after the theologian, politician, popular educator, publicist and publisher Ambros Opitz (1846–1907); he founded and directed numerous newspapers, u. a. the Viennese "Reichspost" (1894, since 1907 as a daily newspaper), which was considered the most important Catholic medium of the monarchy. 1895–1901 Opitz was a Christian-Social Member of Parliament in the Bohemian state parliament . Opitz was one of the most important representatives of political Catholicism in Austria; his clerical followers were called "Opitzians".
  • Oskar-Jascha-Gasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1955 after the composer and conductor Oskar Jascha (1881–1948), conductor at the Theater an der Wien and at the Wiener Stadttheater . He composed numerous operettas and musical plays; In total, his oeuvre comprises around 200 works. Before that, the street was called Invalidengasse .
  • Oskar-Pilzer-Platz (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 2014 after the lawyer and film industrialist Oskar Pilzer (1882–1939); 1932–1936 he was president of the last major Austrian film production company before the Second World War , the Sascha film industry , and president of the Vienna Film Producers Association. Pilzer emigrated to Paris in 1938, where he died the following year.
  • Otto-Weininger-Gasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1957 after the philosopher Otto Weininger (1880–1903); he became known through his work "Gender and Character". Despite his Jewish origin, Weininger was extremely hostile to Jews and was an advocate of a misogynist and anti- body mentality. He developed a philosophical-psychological theory of the sexes, at the center of which is the theory of human bisexuality . Through his suicide in Ludwig van Beethoven's house where he died, he became a myth and his book a bestseller .
  • Overbeckgasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1938 after the German painter Friedrich Overbeck (1789–1869). He is considered one of the most important protagonists of Nazarene art , his work is shaped by religiosity and conservative values. 1806–1810 he lived in Vienna and studied at the Academy of Fine Arts . The alley was previously called Dr. Julius-Ofner- Alley ; see Ofnergasse in the 2nd district.

P

  • Pacassistraße (Lainz, Speising), named in 1922 after the architect Nikolaus Pacassi (1716–1790), head of the court building department (from 1753). Under his leadership u. a. the general renovation of Schönbrunn Palace (1743–1749), the renovation of the Favorita to the Theresianum (1753), the redesign of the Redoutensaal of the Hofburg and the restoration of the court library (1760). Alley on the west and south-west slopes of the Küniglberg .
  • Pallenbergstraße (Auhof; Friedensstadt settlement), named in 1955 after the actor Max Pallenberg (1877–1934); he was one of the most important character comedians of his time and often appeared under the direction of Max Reinhardt . He played u. a. at the Theater in der Josefstadt (from 1904), at the Theater an der Wien (from 1908), at the Deutsches Theater in Berlin (from 1914) and at the Salzburg Festival . Before that, the street was called Alleestraße .
  • Palmaygasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1955 after the Hungarian actress and singer Ilka Pálmay (actually Ilona Petráss, 1859–1945); she was a very popular soubrette and worked mainly in Budapest , but she also sang with great success at the Theater an der Wien . The street was called Schillergasse from 1927 to 1955 .
  • Paoliweg (Speising), named in 1930 after the poet, novelist, journalist and translator Betty Paoli (actually Barbara Elise Glück, 1814–1894); she worked as a journalist for the daily newspapers Pester Lloyd (Budapest) and Die Presse (Vienna), wrote theater, book and exhibition reviews and worked as a translator of French salon pieces for the Burgtheater . Furthermore, with sensitive poems and critical essays, she became an important figure in the early women's movement . Paoli also published several short stories and was a gifted essayist. The path in the Hermeswiese settlement was called Justus-Möser -Weg from 1938 to 1945 .
  • Paul-Hörbiger-Weg (Ober-St.-Veit), named after Paul Hörbiger (1894–1981) in 2009 ; in the 1930s he became one of the most popular German-speaking actors with sound films. In his roles he embodied the kind-hearted person with a love for life, in Hans Moser he found a congenial partner. After his father, the engineer Hanns Hörbiger that is Johann-Hörbiger-Gasse named in the 23rd district. Path in the "Hochwiese" settlement north of the Hörndlwald .
  • Peschkaweg (Speising), named in 1993 after the painter Anton Peschka (1885–1940); he mainly created nudes and landscapes . His work is strongly influenced by Egon Schiele , to whose sister Gertrude he was married. Peschka exhibited in the Vienna Künstlerhaus in 1910 and 1919 and was a member of the Hagenbund from 1922 to 1935 . The path runs next to and behind the lawn at Hietzinger Bad on Atzgersdorfer Straße .
  • Pfeiffenbergergasse (Hacking), named in 1894 after Michael Pfeiffenberger (1831-1892), the last mayor of Hacking before it was incorporated into Vienna in 1892. The street was previously called Bäckergasse .
  • Pflieglergasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1975 after the theologian Michael Pfliegler (1891–1972), professor of moral and pastoral theology at the University of Vienna . Together with Karl Rudolf he was the founder and spiritual leader of the Catholic youth movementNeuland ”. Pfliegler also endeavored to bring the church and socialism closer together .
  • Pia-Maria-Plechl-Weg (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 2002 after the journalist and writer Pia Maria Plechl (1933–1995), editor of the daily newspaper “ Die Presse ” (from 1961), from 1982 until her death deputy editor-in-chief. She wrote numerous books, often with ecclesiastical subjects. The path is located near the St. Veiter Gate of the Lainzer Tiergarten .
  • Possannergasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1960 after the doctor Gabriele Possanner (1860–1940); after long struggles she was the first woman who was allowed to do a doctorate at an Austrian university (1897). In the same year she opened a practice as a general practitioner. From 1902 she worked at the Crown Princess Stephanie Hospital in Ottakring ; at the time she was the only doctor in a kk hospital. The Gabriele-Possanner-Park in the 9th district, Alsergrund , where she had her ordination for decades, is also named after her.
  • Prehausergasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1912 after the popular actor Gottfried Prehauser (1699–1769). He was initially traveling as a traveling comedian. In 1725 he came to the Kärntnertortheater in Vienna, where he replaced Josef Anton Stranitzky as "Neuer Wienerischer Hanswurst" and after his death took over the management of the German comedians . See also Stranitzkygasse in the 12th district. Prehauser also wrote local plays and local antics in the style of the old Viennese folk theater . The alley consists of three unconnected parts; it is interrupted at Matrasgasse and between Ghelengasse and Veitingergasse .
  • Preindlgasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the organist and composer Joseph Preindl (1756–1823), organist in the churches of Maria am Gestade (1775), Peterskirche (1793), Michaelerkirche (1797) and chapel master at St. Stephen's Cathedral ( 1809). As a composer he mainly created high quality church music such as masses , requies , motets and church arias. The street was previously called Mühlbachgasse because a Mühlbach , fed by the Wien River, flowed here.
  • Preleuthnersteig (Speising), named in 1928 after the sculptor Johann Preleuthner (1807–1897); he furnished numerous buildings from the Ringstrasse era with sculptures and reliefs. His works also include the life-size portrait statues of Andreas Hofer and Field Marshal Johann Graf Pálffy for the General Hall of the Austro-Hungarian Arms Museum (1869 and 1873). The climb runs on the southern slope of the Küniglberg .
  • Premreinergasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1895 after Michael Premreiner († 1879), the last local judge of the manorial estate active until 1848/1849 and first mayor of the municipality of St. Veit an der Wien , founded in 1850 , which existed until 1867/1870 and then split into Ober-St.-Veit and Unter-St.-Veit .
  • Preyergasse (Speising), named in 1912 after the composer and conductor Gottfried von Preyer (1807–1901), director of the conservatory of the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde in Vienna and cathedral music director of St. Stephan . He wrote over 600 compositions of sacred and secular pieces of music: four Requien , five Te Deums , about 25 masses , as well as hymns and responsories , organ works, symphonies , string quartets and songs . The street was created until 1912 with the Hofwiesengasse (see there) for the tram, in order to save it the level crossing with the connecting tram. To the west of the alley is the Speising S-Bahn station .
  • Pröllgasse (Hacking), named in 1894 after Martin Pröll (1792–1863), local judge of Hacking (around 1840). The street was called before - referring to the wetlands on the unregulated Wienfluss - Augasse .
  • Promenade (Hacking), named (before 1898, date unknown) after its location as a path on the right bank of Vienna . A "promenade" (from French promener  ~ to walk) is the term for a walk or a path made for strollers. The promenade runs parallel to Wientalstraße and Hackinger Kai as a footpath . It was probably created in connection with the regulation of the Vienna River between 1895 and 1899.
  • Promenadeweg (Ober-St.-Veit), naming date unknown. The path runs directly outside the wall of the Lainzer Tiergarten on the edge of the settlement around Wlassakstrasse (maximum extension: from Hanschweg (St. Veiter Gate of the Tiergarten) to Joseph-Lister-Gasse , access to Hörndlwald ). Officially named promenade paths exist in the 17th and 23rd districts.
  • Puntigamgasse (Speising), named in 1936 after the Jesuit , youth chaplain and writer Anton Puntigam (1859–1926); he founded the Eucharistic League of Nations and published the magazine of the same name. In 1914 he was youth minister in Sarajevo ; after the assassination attempt on the heir to the throne Franz Ferdinand , he donated the last unction to him in the town hall of Sarajevo . He took the weapon and planned to found a Franz Ferdinand Museum, which did not come about.
  • Püttlingengasse (Lainz), named in 1912 after the composer Freiherr Johann Vesque von Püttlingen (1803–1883); he is considered the most important Austrian songwriter between Schubert and Brahms . His main work is the "Heimkehr" published in 1851 - the most extensive song cycle in music history - which is a complete setting of the 88 numbers of Heinrich Heine 's poetry collection of the same name .

R.

  • Ranzenhofergasse (Lainz), named in 1931 after the painter and graphic artist Emil Ranzenhofer (1864–1930); he was a popular artist at the end of the 19th century and was best known for his book illustrations and posters. During the First World War he worked in the Austro-Hungarian war press headquarters and created propaganda depictions of the military and the war. The street in the Lockerwiese settlement was called Hüsinggasse from 1938 to 1947 .
  • Raschgasse (Hacking), named in 1894 after the cleric , writer , organist , mathematician and bookseller Johann Rasch (around 1540–1615); he wrote many works on cultural history, history and genealogy . The first German-language specialist book on wine can be regarded as an outstanding work: Von Baw, Pflege und Brauch des Wein (1580–1582). It developed into a classic in wine literature. The alley at the foot of Nikolaiberg and Hagenberg was previously called Bergstrasse .
  • Ratmannsdorfgasse (Lainz), named in 1901 after the Ratmannsdorf family (life dates unknown); In 1527 Ladislaus von Ratmannsdorf received the rule of Lainz as a fief. In the following years the brothers Otto and Alban von Ratmannsdorf are attested as owners. The Ratmannsdorf have been recorded in Weiz , Styria, since the 12th century. In 1622 Lainz became the property of Countess Anna Maria von Ratmannsdorf; she married into the Saurau family, who thus took over the rule of Lainz; see the Sauraugasse .
  • Reischergasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1960 after the school director Anton Reischer (1860–1950), welfare councilor (1899–1920) and district council (1909–1920) in Unter-St.-Veit and Ober-St.-Veit . He mainly took care of the fire and rescue services. The alley is located on the northern slope of the Hörndlwald .
  • Riedelgasse (Speising), named in 1911 after the psychiatrist Josef Gottfried von Riedel (1803–1870), director of the Vienna insane asylum (from 1851); he was an important innovator in psychiatry in Austria. Riedel fought the coercive measures that were common at the time on patients and advocated targeted support and employment of the mentally ill. To the south of the alley extends the area of ​​the Rothschild Foundation for the Mentally Ill , which began operations in newly constructed buildings in 1912. The area was bought from the community of Mauer near Vienna in 1908 and incorporated into Vienna; previously the city limits ran along the street since 1892.
  • Rohrbacherstraße (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the entrepreneur Josef Rohrbacher (1817–1883), wagon manufacturer. He built mail cars and wagons for the Viennese horse tramway, as well as train vehicles, ambulance vehicles and fortress railways for the military. The Rohrbachersche Wagenfabrik was located at the crossing Rohrbacherstraße / Hietzinger Hauptstraße / Schrutkagasse on the southwest corner and had a siding to the steam tramway opened in 1887 in Hietzinger Hauptstraße, from 1908 to the tram line (1) 58. The street was formerly called Kreuzstrasse . At its northern end on Auhofstrasse you will find Streckerplatz and Park.
  • Rohrergasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1933 after the wine maker Johann Rohrer (1649–1727), local judge and mountain master in Mauer ; the Rohrer family is the oldest recorded in Mauer.
  • Rosenhügelstrasse (Speising), named in 1905 after the 258 m high rose hill that it leads up to; it belongs to the north-eastern hill country of the Vienna Woods and is thus part of the Northern Limestone Alps . The rose hill takes its name from the extensive rose cultures that used to be at this point. See also Am Rosenhügel (district boundary 12/13). In Hetzendorf in the east adjoining 12th district, where the northeast half of the street is located, it was already on the city map in 1898. In its section in the 13th district, the street runs along the Vienna terminus of Vienna's first high spring water pipeline , the Rosenhügel reservoir. The southwestern part of the street belongs to the 23rd district.
  • Rossinigasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1942 after the Italian composer Gioachino Rossini (1792–1868); he is considered one of the most important bel canto opera composers . His operas The Barber of Seville and La Cenerentola (Cinderella) are part of the standard repertoire of opera houses around the world.
  • Rotenberggasse (Lainz), named in 1894 after the 262 m high Roter Berg hill to which it leads. The Rote Berg was first mentioned in a document in 1819. The mountain got its name from the red earth, which has a high proportion of iron oxide . The name of the Red Mountain is relatively young and largely includes the old vineyards Sommerhagenau and Mitterhagenau . Before that, the street was called Gärtnergasse .
  • Rußpekgasse (Hacking), named in 1894 after the Lords of Rußpek (also Rußbach, dates unknown), who owned the Hacking estate from around 1260 to 1360 . The street was called before, referring to a bridge over the River Wien to station Hütteldorf-Hacking , Brückengasse .
  • Russweg (Speising), named in 1927 after the painter Karl Russ (1779–1843) and his son Leander Russ ( 1809–1864 ), also a painter. Karl Russ was Archduke Johann's chamber painter from 1810 and accompanied him on his hikes through Styria. Johann commissioned him to capture the clothes of the common people in the country in a watercolor series. From 1818 he was custodian of the Imperial and Royal Picture Gallery in Belvedere Palace . Leander Russ was a painter from the Viennese pre-March period and mainly created portraits, genre and history pictures. His preferred technique was watercolor . His peep-box pictures were very popular, depicting the folk life of Vienna at the time, but also scenes from the Orient.

S.

The Steiner house designed by Adolf Loos in St.-Veit-Gasse 10
  • Santa ...: see St.
  • Satgasse (Auhof), named in 1929 after the Auhofer Trennstück (SAT) settlement ; it is located on an area of ​​38  hectares belonging to the Auhof cadastral community , which used to be part of the Lainzer zoo . In 1921 the settlers' cooperative Auhofer Trennstück (SAT) emerged from the Siller colony . The self-sufficient settlers built many houses without a building permit; In 1928 the illegally built houses were de facto legalized. In 1938 the SAT (together with Mauer) was incorporated into Greater Vienna , becoming part of the 13th district.
  • Saulackenweg (Auhof; Friedensstadt), named (after 1942, before 1956) after the Saulacken , swampy places in the Lainzer Tiergarten . "Pig" means the abundant wild boars in the zoo .
  • Sauraugasse (Lainz), named in 1893 after the Saurau family, who owned the Lainz estate in the 17th century . Countess (since 1638) Anna Maria von Saurau († after 1650) came from the Ratmannsdorf family (see Ratmannsdorfgasse ), who previously owned the rulership as a fiefdom of the sovereign, and had been the fiefdom herself since 1622. In 1637 she handed it over to her son Christoph Alban von Saurau, hereditary land marshal of Styria, who lost the fief in 1647 at the latest because he was the re-Catholicization of the country by Ferdinand III. did not participate. In 1652 the emperor sold the rule as now free property to Johann Mathias Prückelmayer Baron von Goldegg; see also Prückelmayrgasse in the 23rd district. According to Czeike , who does not cite any sources, the name refers to Franz Josef Graf Saurau , one of the most important advisers to Emperor Franz I / II. , allegedly the commissioner of Joseph Haydn for the composition of the Austrian imperial anthem .
  • Schirnböckgasse (Lainz), named after the painter and copper engraver Ferdinand Schirnböck (1859–1930) in 1930 ; from 1892 he worked for the Austro-Hungarian Bank and the kk Hof- und Staatsdruckerei . Based on designs by Koloman Moser , he made the engravings for several stamp series that made him internationally known among experts. The postage stamp series for the 60th anniversary of the throne of Emperor Franz Joseph I (1908), which is close to Art Nouveau , influenced the portraits on postage stamps. The new lane in the Lockerwiese settlement, built between 1928 and 1932, was named during Schirnböck's lifetime on April 2, 1930, at the same time as the new settlement paths Egon-Schiele-Gasse , Seelosgasse and Zewygasse (since 1938 Spitzweggasse ); all are in the part of the settlement closest to Alt-Lainz.
  • Schlägergasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1933 after the opera singer Antonie Schläger (actually Antonie Lautenschläger, married Freiin Theumer, 1859–1910); she was a member of the kk Hofoper from 1883 to 1896 , where she sang in numerous leading roles; her focus was on the works of Meyerbeer , Giuseppe Verdi and Richard Wagner . In total, she appeared in around 40 operas. The Lautenschläger street in the 11th district is also named after her since 1954th
  • Schlehenweg (Upper St. Vitus), named after the 1967 Strauchart Blackthorn from the genus Prunus , of the tribe of stone fruits (Amygdaleae) within the family of the rose family belongs (Rosaceae). Short dead end on the southern slope of the Red Mountain .
  • Schliessmanngasse (Hietzing), named in 1923 after the draftsman Hans Schliessmann (1852–1920); he was a popular draftsman and caricaturist of Viennese folk life. His preferred types were musicians, athletes, and soldiers. In addition to his work for magazines, in Volume 1 of the so-called Kronprinzenwerk Die Austro-Hungarian Monarchy (Vienna 1886) relating to Vienna and Lower Austria, he presented the life of the people in Vienna.
  • Schlossberggasse (Hacking, until 1999 official: Schloßberg ...), named in 1887; Path to the Hackinger Schlösschen , which is located on a hill , which was built at the beginning of the 18th century and demolished in 1955. Before that, the street was called Schloßgasse
  • Schluckergasse (Rosenberg), named in 1971 after the master builder Philipp Schlucker (1748–1820); In 1782–1787 he built the approximately 22 kilometer long wall around the Lainzer Tiergarten at a sixth of the price of the competition from the City of Vienna. According to a popular legend, he is said to be impoverished, which is said to have given rise to the phrase “ poor swallower ”. However, this is not the case; Schlucker continued to work successfully as a builder.
  • Schmardagasse (Speising), named in 1936 after the zoologist and explorer Ludwig Karl Schmarda (1819–1908); From 1853 to 1857 he made an extensive research trip to Africa, Asia, Australia and America and then worked as a university professor in Vienna (1861-1883). Several other trips served primarily to examine the economic aspects of oyster farming and sea fishing and took him to the coasts of the Adriatic, France, Spain, Africa and as far as Ceylon in the Indian Ocean.
  • Schönbachstrasse (Speising), named in 1932 after the German scholar and literary scholar Anton Emanuel Schönbach (1848–1911), professor at the University of Graz (1873–1921). He set up the first seminar for German philology in the Austro-Hungarian monarchy and with this gained high international recognition. Schönbach devoted himself mainly to medieval literature and Christian cultural history. The lane runs parallel to the connecting railway and passes under the Stranzenberg bridge, which leads over the Maxing freight station.
  • Schönbrunner Schlossstrasse (Schönbrunn, until 1999 official:… Schloß…), named in 1885 after Schönbrunn Palace . Its name goes back to a saying attributed to Emperor Matthias , who is said to have "discovered" an artesian well while hunting and exclaimed: What a beautiful well . The castle was built in 1696–1701 and redesigned by Nikolaus Pacassi in 1743–1749 ; see Pacassistraße . The street was previously called Schönbrunner Strasse . It runs along the north or Vienna river side, starting from the Kennedy Bridge or Hietzinger Hauptstraße , along the entire castle area and continues eastward beyond Grünbergstraße in the 12th district. The street is part of the west entrance of Vienna (B1). The main entrance to the palace and park is at the palace bridge.
  • Schrefelplatz (Auhof, settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 2011 after the clergyman Anton Schrefel (1882–1945); 1929–1945 he was pastor of the Lainzer parish church (today Syriac Orthodox Church St. Ephrem ) and initiated the construction of a church in the new settlements created by the separation from the Lainzer zoo , as these were far away from the Lainzer church. In 1935 the parish church of St. Hubertus and Christophorus (see St.-Hubertus-Platz ) was consecrated. The addressless square is located at the meeting of Heimschollegasse and Modl-Toman-Gasse in the immediate vicinity of the Tiergarten wall .
  • Schrutkagasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1925 after the lawyer Emil Schrutka von Rechtenstamm (1852-1918), professor of civil law at the University of Vienna (1885-1918), rector ( 1900/1901 ), member of the Lower Austrian Parliament ( 1899/1900). Of his numerous scientific publications, the outline of the Civil Process Law (1909) was particularly popular. Before that, the street was called Windmühlgasse like a street in the 6th district that is still named today.
  • Schweizertalstrasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after some villas that were built here in Swiss style. The alley that leads from the Ober-St.-Veiter village center southwest uphill towards Lainzer Tiergarten was previously called the Swiss Valley from 1873 to 1894 , and part of it was called Neustiftgasse .
  • Sebastian-Brunner-Gasse (Lainz, Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1888 after the theologian and writer Sebastian Brunner (1814–1893); In 1848 he founded the " Wiener Kirchenzeitung ", which he published until 1865. As a writer, Brunner recalled Abraham a Sancta Clara with his witty to crude humor and wit ; not only in his popular theologizing style, but also through his sharp ecclesiastical-Catholic anti-Judaism .
  • Seckendorff-Gudent-Weg (Hietzing, Schönbrun), named in 1988 after the forest specialist Arthur von Seckendorff-Gudent (1845–1886), professor at the Mariabrunn Forest Academy (1870–1875), head of the Federal Forest Research Institute (1874–1886), professor the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (from 1875). He made the first attempts to overlap annual rings from different trees and can therefore be considered a forerunner of dendrochronology . See also Forstschulstraße in the 14th district of Penzing . The path that forms the eastern boundary of the Hietzinger Friedhof leads to the Federal Research and Training Center for Forests, Natural Hazards and Landscape , the Maxingen entrance to the Schönbrunn Palace Park and the neighboring Maxing Park.
  • Seelosgasse (Lainz), named in 1930 after the painter Gottfried Seelos (1829–1900); He created several landscape series that were distributed as lithographs , including Views of Tyrol and Vorarlberg (1856) and The Salzkammergut and Berchtesgaden with Surroundings (1865). Seelos also painted landscapes for the Natural History Museum . The street was previously a planned part of the Camillianergasse, named in 1911, and was actually created when the Lockerwiese settlement was built between 1928 and 1932.
  • Seifertstrasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the farmer and innkeeper Andreas Seifert (1748–1832); In 1823 he built the restaurant "Zur Einsiedelei" on the property of a former hermitage (see Einsiedeleigasse ), which was very popular but burned down in 1908. Before that, the street was called Kaiser-Franz-Joseph-Straße .
  • Seuttergasse (Hacking), named in 1894 after the factory owner Karl Seutter von Loetzen (1820–1892); In 1880 he built the villa named after him in the neighboring Vinzenz-Heß-Gasse 14, so named in 1906, and was considered a benefactor. The alley was previously called Wasagasse because at its eastern end was the area of ​​the Hackinger Schlösschen , which was owned by members of the Swedish royal family Wasa from 1832–1879 . Today the urban youth hostel Hütteldorf-Hacking is located on the site.
  • Sillergasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1934 after the official Franz Siller (1893–1924), President of the Central Association of Allotment Gardeners, Settlers and Small Animal Breeders in Austria; he played a leading role in the organization of the allotment garden movement in starving Vienna after 1918. Sillerplatz (see below) and traffic areas in settlements in the 2nd, 11th, 12th, 19th and 22nd districts are also named after him . The street was called from 1927-1934 after the Viennese painter Rudolf Böck or Boeck (1865-1927) Rudolf-Boeck-Gasse .
  • Sillerplatz (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1927; see Sillergasse . The place was called 1934-1938 after the last dictatorial ruling, 1934 murdered Federal Chancellor Dr.-Engelbert-Dollfuss -Platz .
  • Silvinggasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1981 after the musician, conductor and composer Bert Silving (actually Berthold Silbiger, 1887–1948); he began his career as a violin virtuoso and also worked as a conductor. In 1923 he founded the Vienna Radio Artist Ensemble and played with it and with his Silvings Radio Jazz Band in the newly founded RAVAG , of which he became music director. As a composer he wrote numerous songs and some operettas.
  • Slatingasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1951 after the officer, explorer and governor Rudolf Slatin (also Slatin Pascha, 1857–1932), finance inspector (from 1879) and governor (from 1881) of the Darfur province ( Turkish-Egyptian Sudan ), Inspector General of the Sudan (1900–1914). In the course of his extremely adventurous life he was appointed pasha by the Egyptian Khedive in 1895 , raised to the rank of British nobility in 1898 by Queen Victoria (Sir) and in 1906 to the status of Austrian baron by Emperor Franz Joseph . His funeral in the Ober-St.-Veiter cemetery in 1932 was like a state funeral.
  • Sommerergasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the senior teacher Leopold Sommerer (1819–1875), local councilor in Ober-St.-Veit . The street was previously called Brunnengasse . The alley that can be driven from Auhofstrasse at Streckerplatz narrows in its southern part to Hietzinger Hauptstrasse to an extremely narrow pedestrian passage between walls.
  • Sonnenbergweg (Speising), not officially named after the "Sonnenberg" allotment garden in which the path runs.
  • Sorgogasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1963 after the physician Josef Sorgo (1869–1950), Head of the Second Medical Department at the Wilhelminen Hospital (1919–1933). He earned services to the creation of pulmonology as an independent subspecies of internal medicine . Sorgo applied sunlight treatment to combat larynx tuberculosis , which gave impetus to the further development of modern heliotherapy in other tuberculosis herds as well . The alley was a previously planned part of Joseph-Lister-Gasse , but is not accessible from there, but a dead-end street that can be driven from Jennerplatz.
  • Speisinger Strasse (Speising), named in 1894 after the formerly independent municipality of Speising , which was first mentioned in a document in 1365 and was incorporated into the 13th district in 1892. The street was previously called Wiener Straße in Speising . The street begins in the north as a continuation of Lainzer Straße at the level crossing with the connecting train (S-Bahn stop Wien Speising), forms the district boundary 13 (west) / 23 (east) between Riedelgasse and Wittgensteinstraße in the middle of the street and continues in the 23rd 3rd district to Maurer Hauptplatz . No. 28: → Hansi Niese . No. 46–48: → Hildegard Burjan . No. 104, corner of Linienamtsgasse : Linienamt on the city limits that existed until 1938. No. 109: Speising Orthopedic Hospital .
  • Spitzweggasse (Lainz), named in 1938 after the German painter Carl Spitzweg (1808–1885), a popular Biedermeier painter ; As his specialty he developed the funny punch line picture, which later often turned into an idyll. The three most popular Spitzweg pictures are The Poor Poet , The Bookworm and The Intercepted Love Letter . The street was previously called 1930-1938 after the painter Karl or Carl Zewy (1855-1929) Zewygasse .
  • Spohrstraße (Lainz, Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1906 after the German composer , conductor and violinist Louis Spohr (1784–1859); Alongside the Italian Niccolò Paganini , he was one of the greatest violinists of his time. Spohr was already a celebrity during his lifetime and as a composer far better known than Robert Schumann, for example . In the field of dramatic music he was one of the main exponents of romantic opera . 1813-1815 he worked as Kapellmeister at the Theater an der Wien . The street, which was newly laid out after 1900, mostly runs immediately west of the railway line and shows only one building with an even number on the electronic city map of the Vienna City Administration: a former stationer's house at No. 20. Its counterpart on the eastern side of the railway line is called Hummelgasse .
  • Stachlgasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1933 after the master carpenter Hans Jakob Stachl (1725–1803), local judge of Mauer (1781/1782); the Stachl family has been recorded in Mauer since 1689.
  • Stadlergasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1900 after the clergyman, composer , music historian , organist and pianist Maximilian Stadler (1748–1833); he was one of the most prominent personalities in Viennese musical life at the turn of the 18th and 19th centuries. Stadler was friends with Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart , Joseph Haydn , Ludwig van Beethoven and Franz Schubert and wrote numerous works on Mozart. His “Materials on the History of Music” are considered the first music history in Austria. (The alley is on the southern edge of Unter-St.-Veit between Hummelgasse and Lainzer Straße. It crosses Münichreiterstraße.)
  • Stampfergasse (Hacking), named in 1894 after the mathematician , geodesist and inventor Simon Stampfer (1790–1864), professor at the Polytechnic Institute (1826–1849). His best-known invention is that of the “ wheel of life ” (1832), the first device for animating images into motion sequences as the forerunner of film. The alley was previously part of the Vienna river crossing, according Hütteldorf leading Bräuhausgasse , which referred to the there until 1937 operated Hütteldorfer brewery on Nos. 7 and in the 14th District since 1894 Bergmillergasse is. The two streets are connected by the Brauhausbrücke, which has existed since 1896, across the Vienna.
  • Steckhovengasse (Hietzing, Penzing), named in 1899 after the Dutch garden designer Adrian van Steckhoven (1705–1782); he came to Vienna in 1753 and became the first gardener in the Schönbrunn palace gardens . He built a fountain house above the beautiful fountain that gave the park its name, which was given its final shape in 1771 by Isidore Canevale . The overall concept of Steckhoven shapes the Schönbrunn Palace Park to this day. The street, originally only laid out between Auhofstraße and Hietzinger Kai and first mentioned in its current length in 1906 by Adolph Lehmann , was called Josefigasse until 1894 like a street in Ober-St.-Veit . When traffic areas were renamed, the names of which appeared several times in the urban area, which was greatly enlarged by the incorporation of many suburbs, in 1894 both Josefigassen in the 13th district were erroneously renamed to Stock im Weg ; therefore it was renamed again in 1899, in Steckhovengasse.
  • Steinhardtgasse (Lainz), named in 1956 after the physician Oskar Steinhardt (1909–1955), doctor, university lecturer for cardiovascular surgery .
  • Steinklammergasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1933 after the Steinklammer family of winemakers and binders, which has been documented in Mauer since 1697.
  • Steinlechnergasse (Lainz), named in 1894 after the Steinlechner family, who were long -established in Lainz . Before that, the street was called Neugasse .
  • St.-Hubertus-Gasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1932 after the St. Hubertus Church opposite the northern end of the lane on Dr.-Schober-Straße , which was built in 1934/1935 . It is named after St. Hubertus , according to legend, Bishop of Maastricht and Liège and patron saint of hunters.
  • St.-Hubertus-Platz (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named before 1956, forecourt of the St. Hubertus church north of Dr.-Schober-Straße ; see St.-Hubertus-Gasse south of this street.
  • Stiglitzgasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1933 after the Stiglitz family of vintners who were long-established in Mauer .
  • Stock im Weg (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after a field name. Before that, the street was called Josefigasse . The Steckhovengasse in Alt-Hietzing, previously also Josefigasse , was erroneously also called Stock im Weg from 1894–1899 .
  • Stoesslgasse (Unter-St.-Veit), named in 1955 after the writer Otto Stoessl (1875–1936); his work includes novels , short stories , essays , poems and plays . While his first dramatic attempts were still characterized by naturalism , in his later works he shifted to the description of the fallen Austro-Hungarian monarchy . Before that, the street was called Leopold-Müller -Gasse .
  • Strampfergasse (Speising, Hermeswiese settlement), named in 1955 after the actor and theater director Friedrich Strampfer (1823–1890); he headed the Theater an der Wien from 1862–1869 . In 1870 he acquired the Theater in den Tuchlauben , which was known as the Strampfer Theater until 1874 . In 1878 he became director of the Komische Oper ( Ringtheater ) and at the same time directed the Carltheater . The ring theater fire in 1881 led him to bankruptcy; see also Jaunerstrasse . Before that, the street was called Hörndlwaldgasse (see there).
  • Stranzenberggasse (Speising, Lainz), named in 1909 after the 237 m high Stranzenberg, whose name is derived from a late medieval vineyard. The highest point of the hill is at the nearby crossing of Wattmanngasse / Elisabethallee at the Josef-Afritsch-Siedlung there ( Alban-Berg-Weg ). In the year the street was named, the inmates of the old Viennese house for disabled people were moved to the new house for disabled soldiers in the 3rd district (the area was sold by the state after 2000). The Stranzenberg Bridge, opened in 1971, connects to the street in the south via the connecting railway.
  • Streckerplatz (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1908 after the railway technician Alexander Strecker (1818–1908), operations engineer at the Gmunden-Budweiser Bahn , the Vienna-Gloggnitzer Bahn and the Kaiserin Elisabeth Bahn . From 1861 to 1873 he was a representative of the Krupp cast steel factory in Austria. In Ober-St.-Veit he worked as a benefactor and was mayor from 1877 to 1879. The Streckerpark is located on the square at the confluence of Rohrbacherstrasse and Auhofstrasse .
  • Streitmanngasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement ), named in 1955 after the singer Karl Streitmann (1853–1937); he sang as tenor a . a. at the Carltheater , and he made several guest appearances at the Court Opera in Berlin , at the Court Theater in Stuttgart and in Amsterdam. Before that, the street was called Anzengrubergasse .
  • Stuweckengasse (Lainz), named in 1913 after the historical field name Stuwecken . Alley on the southeast slope of the Küniglberg .
  • St.-Veit-Gasse (Unter-St.-Veit, Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the formerly independent community of St. Veit an der Wien , which was constituted in 1850 and which was divided into Unter-St.-Veit and Ober -St.-Veit was divided. Both parts were incorporated into the 13th district in 1892. Before that , the street was called Kirchengasse because it leads past the Unter-St.-Veiter-Parish Church (No. 48), consecrated in 1867 . No. 10: House Steiner by Adolf Loos . No. 25: Don Bosco House. No. 57, corner of Auhofstrasse 76–78: Hans Moser's former home . At the northern end of the alley at the Wien River ( Hietzinger Kai ) are the Unter St. Veit , previously since 1898 rail station , and the Baumgarten bridge in the district part Baumgarten , since 1938 in the 14th district.
  • Suppégasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1898 after the composer Franz von Suppè (actually Francesco Ezechiele Ermenegildo Cavaliere Suppè – Demelli, 1819–1895); he left behind an oeuvre with over 200 stage works, mostly operettas , of which the overtures to Poets and Peasants and Light Cavalry are best known. His opera Boccaccio is part of the standard repertoire of German-speaking theaters. The apostrophe is wrongly set in the street name.
  • Swobodagasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1955 after the singer and actor Albin Swoboda (1836–1901); he emerged as a tenor with comical singing roles. In 1857 Johann Nestroy engaged him at the Carltheater , where he had great success in folk plays. In 1859 he moved to the Theater an der Wien and played in operettas and singspiele. In 1874 he worked for a short time in the artistic direction of the Ringtheater . The street was previously called Pestalozzigasse .

T

  • Testarellogasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the clergyman and historian Johann Matthias Testarello della Massa (1636–1693), Canon of St. Stephan (from 1661). Its importance lies in its detailed description of the Vienna churches up to the year 1685, which is of great cultural and historical value. The alley, previously only laid out between Hietzinger Hauptstrasse and Auhofstrasse , was called Sachsengasse until 1894 .
  • Tewelegasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1955 after the actor and theater director Franz Tewele (1841–1914); from 1865 he was part of the ensemble of the Vienna Carltheater , which he directed from 1878 (or 1879) to 1882. Tewele was very popular and undertook u. a. with his stage partners Josefine Gallmeyer and Wilhelm Knaack guest performance trips to the USA; see also Gallmeyergasse in the 19th district and Knaackgasse in the 21st district. The street was previously called Moritz-von-Schwind -Gasse .
  • Thomas-More-Gasse (Speising, Lainz), named in 1932 after the English statesman and humanist writer Thomas More (1478–1535); his best-known work is De optimo statu rei publicae deque nova insula Utopia (From the best state of the state or from the new island of Utopia), in which he describes an invented island kingdom. The book was so formative that from now on every novel that portrays an invented, positive society is called a utopia or a utopian novel . See also the Utopiaweg in the 18th district.
  • Tiroler Gasse (Hietzing), named before 1859 (listed in the first edition of Lehmann's address book), after the Tyrolean Garden in the park of Schönbrunn Palace , towards which the alley runs towards the east. In 1803 Archduke Johann built a Tyrolean farmhouse in the castle park on the hill on which the Gloriette stands in the center , ran a small cattle farm and laid out an Alpine garden. After the end of the monarchy, the farm became a popular excursion inn. In the 1970s the buildings were demolished, and in 1997 the “Tirolergarten” inn was rebuilt as a copy.
  • Titlgasse (Lainz, Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1898 after the conductor and composer Anton Emil Titl (1809–1882); In 1840 he was hired to succeed Heinrich Proch at the theater in der Josefstadt , where he stayed until 1846. (See also Prochstrasse in the 14th district.) From 1850 to 1870 he worked as Kapellmeister at the Burgtheater . As a composer, Titl created numerous songs and stage music.
  • Tolstojgasse (Lainz, Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1932 after the Russian writer Lev Nikolajewitsch Tolstoy (1828–1910); he is one of the most important poets in Russian literature . His main works War and Peace and Anna Karenina are classics of the realistic novel. The alley leads uphill from Spohrstraße on the eastern slope of the Red Mountain .
  • Trabertgasse (Speising, Hermeswiese settlement), named in 1924 after the meteorologist Wilhelm Trabert , professor of meteorology at the University of Innsbruck (1902–1908) and at the University of Vienna (1908–1915), director of the Central Institute for Meteorology and Geodynamics (1909–1926 ).
  • Trauttmansdorffgasse (Hietzing), named in 1894 after Countess Therese Trauttmansdorff (1784–1847); she worked as a charity in Hietzing and founded a poor house. Before that, the street was called Alleegasse . No. 27, corner of Woltergasse: from 1911 Alban and Helene Berg's home . No. 33: The famous actress Charlotte Wolter lived in the previous building until 1897 .
  • Trazerberggasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the 277 m high Trazerberg to which it leads. It is located 400 m southeast of the Ober-St.-Veiter parish church . The Lainzer Tunnel of the railway has been running under the Trazerberg since 2009 . The alley originally only existed in the Ober-St.-Veiter village center and was called Feldgasse there ; this was - contrary to the Vienna numbering rules created in the 1860s, which did not apply to the area incorporated in 1892 - numbered from Ober-St.-Veit towards the city center. Between No. 73 and 75 or No. 74 and 76 the street is interrupted on both sides of the street by the Goldmarkplatz (with a monument to Karl Münichreiter ).
  • Treffzgasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1955 after the singer Henriette Treffz-Chalupetzky (1818–1878); it was one of the most important soubrettes of its time and performed a. a. at the Theater am Kärntnertor , the Theater in der Josefstadt and the Theater an der Wien . She had seven illegitimate children with various men and in 1862 married the seven years younger Johann Strauss son , with whom she lived at 18 Maxingstrasse for a few years. The street was called from 1927 to 1955 Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn -Gasse .
  • Treumanngasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten ), named in 1955 after the actor and singer Louis Treumann (actually Louis Pollitzer, 1872–1943). He played as bon vivant and character comedian at the Carltheater (1899–1905 and 1918–1926), at the Theater an der Wien (1905–1909) and at the Johann Strauss Theater (1910–1929) and died in the Theresienstadt ghetto . Before that , the street was called Girardigasse ; it runs on the western edge of the settlement near the Lainzer Tor of the Lainzer Tiergarten .
  • Tuersgasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after Wilhelm Tuers von Aspern († 1439), Canon (from 1404) and Provost (from 1409) to St. Stephan . In 1433 he founded the Ober-St.-Veiter parish church . Tuers (spoken with a long "u") is an old spelling for the family name Turs , a family of knights that can be traced back to the 12th century and which died out with Wilhelm Tuers in 1439. The spelling of the street was originally Tuërsgasse ; Before 1894 it was called Wiengasse .
  • Turgenjewgasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1932 after the Russian writer Iwan Sergejewitsch Turgenew (1818–1883); he is considered one of the most important representatives of Russian realism . He was one of the first to write about the needs and fears of Russian society. His work had a great influence on the development of "melancholy impressionism" in Western Europe .

V

  • Veitingergasse (Lainz, Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the historical field name Veitinger Feld , which refers to the town of St. Veit (today Ober-St.-Veit ). Before that, the street in Lainz, where it branches off from Lainzer Strasse in the center of town , was called Ober Sankt Veiter Strasse ; At that time, it ran west of the connecting line, like today's Schrutkagasse, north-west towards Ober-St.-Veit; there was then no street in the course of today's Veitingergasse. The continuation of the alley, later to the south of the Red Mountain, bounds the Werkbundsiedlung Vienna , which was opened in 1932 and is located south of the alley .
  • Veitlissengasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the field name Veitlissen , derived from the place name St. Veit (today Ober-St.-Veit ) and the word Lüssen . This comes from the Middle High German luz and refers to a piece of land that was awarded by lot. The winner of the lottery received the right of use for one year. The alley that leads uphill from the Schweizertalstrasse to the wall of the Lainzer Tiergarten was previously called the Gartengasse .
  • Versbachgasse (Lainz), named in 1913 after the officer Mansuet von Versbach-Hadamar (1852–1918), General of the Cavalry, Major General (from 1898), Feldzeugmeister (from 1908), Head of Department in the Austro-Hungarian War Ministry . The alley, which divides into two parts, runs on the eastern slope of the Küniglberg .
  • Supply home place (Lainz), named in 1910 after the predecessor of the municipal geriatric center Am Wienerwald , which was closed in 2015 , a geriatric facility opened in 1904 as a supply home Lainz . After it was fully expanded in 1913, there were 29 pavilions with 4,498 home places, mostly in dormitories with 30 beds each. The square is dominated by the elevated supply home church in the home area with two towers visible from afar. Since 1994 the modernized facility has been called the Geriatric Center . From the square leading supply Heimstraße to S-Bahn station Wien Speising at the communication path.
  • Supplyheimstrasse (Lainz), named in 1908; see care home place . The Lockerwiese settlement built by the city administration in 1928–1932 extends north of the street.
  • Viktor-Leon-Gasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1955 after the librettist Victor Léon (actually Victor Hirschfeld, 1858–1940); he wrote the libretti for 75 operettas and worked for Franz Lehár and Johann Strauss Sohn , among others . His best-known texts are those on The Opera Ball (1898), Wiener Blut (1899) and The Merry Widow (1905). The street was previously called Zolagasse .
  • Vinzenz-Hess-Gasse (Hacking), named in 1906 after Vinzenz Hess (1807–1894), Mayor of Hütteldorf (1849–1878). Hütteldorf belonged to the 13th district from 1892 to 1938. The street used to be called Am Schlossberg or Schlossgasse ; this referred to the no longer existing Hackinger Schlösschen , the area of ​​which is occupied by the municipal youth hostel Hütteldorf-Hacking.
  • Vitusgasse (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after the Ober-St.-Veit parish church of St. Vitus on this alley. The church was donated in 1433 by Wilhelm Tuers von Aspern; see the Tuersgasse . The Saint Vitus (Vitus) died at 304 under Diocletian as martyrs and is one of fourteen emergency responders . Before that, the street was called Bognergasse (like one that still exists in the 1st district today) .
  • Volkgasse (Hietzing), named in 1910 after Georg Volk (1819–1901), local councilor in Hietzing . The alley runs from the height of the Stranzenberg on the edge of Maxing gently sloping towards Alt-Hietzing.

W.

  • Waldemarweg (Auhof, Mauer; Friedensstadt settlement), named in 1954 after the actor Richard Waldemar (actually Richard Kramer, 1869–1946); he stepped u. a. in the Theater in der Josefstadt , in the Ronacher , in the Carltheater and in the Raimundtheater . At first mainly in the serious subject, later he played more and more as a comedian. Waldemar also spoke at RAVAG and played in silent and sound films. The Richard-Waldemar-Park in the 6th district, Mariahilf , and the Richard-Waldemar-Hof are also named after him.
  • Waldvogelstraße (Lainz), named in 1919 after the technician and traffic planner Anton Waldvogel (1846–1917); In 1872 and 1892 he made drafts for the light rail network and the design of the transport systems in Vienna. He wrote numerous books, including a. on flood protection in Vienna. The road runs to the west right next to the connecting line, on which S-Bahn traffic has existed since 1987 . At its southern end, where it borders on the Lockerwiese settlement built between 1928 and 1932, the Vienna Speising S-Bahn station connects.
  • Walter-Caldonazzi-Platz (Speising), named in 2006 after the forest engineer Walter Caldonazzi (1916–1945). After graduating, he joined the Catholic, monarchist resistance organization run by chaplain Heinrich Maier , which became the Maier-Messner-Caldonazzi group . His resistance to National Socialism resulted in his arrest in 1944; In 1945 he was executed. The address loose course is located at the junction of Gallgasse from the Speisinger road . See also Dr.-Heinrich-Maier-Straße in the 18th district of Währing .
  • Wambachergasse (Lainz), named in 1893 after the coffee house owner Franz Wambacher (1793–1871); his son Karl Wambacher (1824–1908) was the last mayor of Lainz (1884–1891) until the town was incorporated into Vienna and presumably initiated the naming of the street. The nearby Wambacher company at today's Lainzer Straße 123 was the preferred snack station for the Habsburgs in the Biedermeier period (Emperor Ferdinand I is said to have been Wambacher's personal friend, and Franz Joseph I played there as a child). Today the establishment is run as a café, restaurant and wine tavern.
  • Wattmanngasse (Hietzing, Lainz, Speising), named in 1894 after the physician Joseph Wattmann von Maëlcamp-Beaulieu (1789–1866), personal surgeon for Emperor Franz I (from 1834) and Ferdinand I (until 1848). He was an important surgeon who, among other things, is considered a pioneer of plastic surgery in Austria. The street used to be called Neugasse or Schmidtgasse . It was gradually extended from Alt-Hietzing to the Stranzenberg and down its southern slope and extends, crossing under the connecting railway in a pedestrian passage, to Hetzendorfer Straße . No. 29: Chocolate House , built by Ernst Lichtblau in 1914 . After No. 35, corner of Gloriettegasse 9: Villa of Katharina Schratt , a confidante of Franz Joseph I. Between No. 66 and 84: Josef-Afritsch -Siedlung. No. 105, corner of Fasangartengasse: St. Hemma Church . No. 112 and 114, corner of Hetzendorfer Straße: Remise Speising of the Vienna tram .
  • Weidlichgasse (Hietzing), named in 1894 after the butcher Anton Weidlich (1813–1876), mayor of Hietzing (1864–1876). Before that, the street was called Feldgasse . The alley is the entrance to the United States Embassy residence .
  • Weinbergerplatz (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1955 after the composer Charles Weinberger (1861–1939); he composed several operettas and was President of the Austrian Composers' Association from 1922 to 1925. The square was previously called Bertha-von-Suttner -Platz (see Bertha-von-Suttner-Gasse in the 22nd district and the former Suttner and today's Rilkeplatz in the 4th district).
  • Weindorfergasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1933 after the wine maker Matthias Weindorfer (1694–1770), local judge of Mauer (1761–1763).
  • Weinrothergasse (Speising), named around 1891 after Ferdinand Weinrother (1835–1900), the last mayor of Speising (1877–1891) until the town was incorporated into Vienna.
  • Wenzgasse (Hietzing, Unter-St.-Veit), named in 1893 after the master builder Josef Wenz (1826–1892), local councilor in Hietzing. No. 2: former Blaimschein villa, where State Chancellor Karl Renner worked in the spring of 1945. No. 5–11: Wenzgasse grammar school . No. 12: House Beer by Josef Frank . The alley was created on the site of the abandoned entertainment establishment “New World” .
  • Wientalstraße (Auhof, Hacking), named in 1937 after its course in the Wiental . The street, part of the former B1 or the western entrance to Vienna, is accompanied in sections on its south side by Hofjagdstraße and the promenade . It continues in the west in the 14th district to the Auhof-Center and the A1 Westautobahn . In the east it merges with Hackinger Kai at Hackinger Steg ( Wien Hütteldorf train station ) .
  • Wilhelm-Karczag-Weg (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1981 after the theater director and writer Wilhelm Karczag (1857–1923); In 1901 he leased the Theater an der Wien , in 1908 the Raimund Theater and in 1917 bought the Stadttheater . This meant that all major Viennese operetta stages were in one hand. Under his direction the operetta experienced a new heyday in Vienna. The Karczaggasse in the 22nd district is also named after him.
  • Wilhelm-Leibl-Gasse (Lainz), named in 1931 after the German painter Wilhelm Leibl (1844–1900); he was the most important painter of realism and a purely painting style in Germany. His pictures from the rural area of Upper Bavaria have nothing of idyll or genre-like narrative pleasure, but are characterized by the unadorned representation of people. Alley in the Lockerwiese settlement built by the city administration in 1928–1932.
  • Wimpissingerweg (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1987 after Johann Wimpissinger (1866–1950), an important dairy farmer in Ober-St.-Veit (75 cows), as well as council of poor and district council.
  • Winkelbreiten (Speising), named in 1911 after the historical field name Winkelbreiten . Since the middle part of the planned alley was built, it is divided into two non-contiguous parts (between No. 5 and 6 in the east part and No. 31 and 32 in the west part there are buildings with different addresses).
  • Winzerstraße (Ober-St.-Veit), named around 1876 after the local wine cooperative .
  • Wittegasse (Unter-St.-Veit), named after Stephan Witte (1809–1886) in 1894; he was considered a benefactor and made services to the poor. Before that, the street was called Zwerchgasse .
  • Wittgensteinstrasse (Mauer), named before 1925, date unknown, after Herrmann Christian Wittgenstein (1802–1878), from 1856 owner of the Wall near Vienna. The street was previously called Tiergartenweg ; up to No. 156 the middle of the street forms the district boundary 13/23, from there westwards the wall of the Lainzer zoo on the northern edge of the road. The area on both sides of the street did not come to Vienna until 1938.
  • Wlassakstraße (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1931 after the physiologist and psychiatrist Rudolf Wlassak (1865–1930); he devoted himself particularly to alcoholism, which had become a popular disease among the workers . In 1905 he founded the workers' abstinence union in Austria with the politician Anton Hölzl and the doctor Richard Fröhlich . In 1922 he became head of the newly founded drinking sanctuary at Am Steinhof . The road is interrupted between nos. 87 and 89 (south) and nos. 96 and 98 (north) from Jennerplatz .
  • Woinovichgasse (Lainz, Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1936 after the general and military historian Emil Woinovich (1851–1927); from 1870 he served in the troops, 1888-1892 he taught at the war school, 1892-1896 he headed the records office of the General Staff. 1901–1915 he was director of the kuk war archives . Gasse in the Werkbundsiedlung Vienna opened in 1932 .
  • Wolfrathplatz (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1894 after Bishop Anton Wolfradt (1582–1639); Because of his abilities in administrative and financial matters, Emperor Ferdinand II appointed him to his council in 1620 and in October 1623 as President of the Court Chamber . In 1631 the emperor was appointed bishop of the diocese of Vienna . His motto If God doesn't want it, it's no use became very popular, a well-known Viennese song also uses this phrase. The square in front of the Ober-St.-Veiter parish church at the western end of Hietzinger Hauptstrasse was previously called Kirchenplatz .
  • Wolkersbergenstraße (Speising, Lainz), named in 1911 after the historic site name Wolkersbergen , which is shown on the 1898 city map in the run-up to the Lainzer Tiergarten near today's Wlassakstraße . According to an old popular rule, the clouds moving over the mountains to the west brought bad weather. Immediately to the west of the street are the former geriatric center Am Wienerwald and the Hietzing hospital , to the east the Lockerwiese housing estate. The terminus of tram line 62 has been located here since 1915. Between numbers 52 and 56, the building numbering from the care home place at the main entrance to the geriatric center is interrupted.
  • Woltergasse (Hietzing), named in 1898 after the German actress Charlotte Wolter (1834–1897); from 1862 she played at the Vienna Burgtheater , where she was celebrated as a tragic heroine in many roles. She was known to always design her own costumes, and her powerful mezzo-soprano voice (the Wolter scream ) was loved by the audience. The street was called Zieglergasse until 1894 and Eskelesgasse from 1894–1898 . Charlotte Wolter lived around the corner at Trauttmansdorffgasse 33 until her death .
  • Wüllenweber-und-Jordan-Platz (Hacking), named in 2009 after the nun, Mother Mary of the Apostles (actually Therese von Wüllenweber , 1833–1907) and the clergyman Franziskus Maria vom Kreuz Jordan (actually Johann Baptist Jordan, 1848–1918). The two founded the religious order of the "Sisters of the Divine Savior" ( Salvatorian Sisters ) in Tivoli near Rome in 1888 , which has long been active in hacking. The addressless square is located at the confluence of Schlossberggasse and Auhofstraße .
  • Würzburggasse (Lainz, Speising), named in 1909 in memory of the Battle of Würzburg (1796), in which an Austrian army under Archduke Karl defeated a French contingent under Marshal Jean-Baptiste Jourdan . Alley on the Küniglberg ; No. 30: ORF center .

Z

  • Zamaragasse (Auhof; Auhofer Trennstück settlement), named in 1955 after the harpist and composer Alfred Zamara (1863–1940); he worked as solo harpist at the kk Hofoper . As a composer he wrote salon pieces , transcriptions for the harp, and the operetta Der Doppelgänger based on the libretto by Victor Léon ; see also Viktor-Leon-Gasse . The street was previously called Goethegasse from 1927–1955 (No. 1: house with a bust of Goethe).
  • Zdarskyweg (Speising), named in 1951 after the teacher, painter and ski pioneer Mathias Zdarsky (1856–1940); In 1890 he developed the Lilienfeld steel sole binding , which enabled steep slopes to be negotiated for the first time. In 1905 he organized the first gate run in ski history near Lilienfeld ; he won the race, making him the first historically documented winner of a ski race .
  • Zeifgasse (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1933 after the Zeif family of winemakers who were long-established in Mauer and can be found here since 1686.
  • Zenzlsteig (Ober-St.-Veit), named in 1969 after the popular writer Vinzenz Jerabek (1875–1963), grew up and local poet in Ober-St.-Veit . He wrote over 1,200 articles for the Oesterreichische Volks-Zeitung and Das Kleine Blatt as well as a collection of short stories published in 1956 under the title Experienced and Heard from Vienna's suburbs . His popular nickname was Zenzl (Austrian for Vinzenz).
  • Zillehof (Lainz); 1930 named after the German graphic artist , lithographer , painter , draftsman and photographer Heinrich Zille (1858–1929); he preferred topics from Berlin's “ Milljöh ”, which he portrayed both locally patriotic and socially critical; his figures and scenes came primarily from the social “ lower class ” or from marginalized groups and from the Berlin tenements . A small square accessible from Egon-Schiele-Gasse in the Lockerwiese settlement built by the city administration between 1928 and 1932.
  • Zwerenzweg (Auhof; settlement in the former Lainzer Tiergarten), named in 1954 after the actress and singer Mizzi Zwerenz (1876–1947); she played and sang in the Carltheater 1901–1920 . She was also seen in a number of films, including a. in Little Veronika (1929) and Waltz about the Stephansturm (1935). Before that, the path was called Raabgasse .

Historic street names

  • Adalbert-Stifter-Gasse: see Heubergergasse
  • Adlergasse: see Fleschgasse
  • Aichbühelgasse: see Lilienberggasse
  • Alleegasse: see Trauttmansdorffgasse
  • Alleestraße: see Pallenbergstraße
  • Altmannsdorfer Weg: see Hetzendorfer Straße
  • On the Schlossberg: see Vinzenz-Heß-Gasse
  • Anzengrubergasse: see Streitmanngasse
  • Arbeitergasse: see Napoleonwaldgasse
  • Augasse: see Pröllgasse
  • Bäckergasse: see Pfeiffenbergergasse
  • Badgasse: see Hietzinger Kai, Jodlgasse, Eduard-Klein-Gasse
  • Badhausgasse: see Dommayergasse
  • Bahngasse: see Eduard-Jaeger-Gasse
  • Bauernzeilgasse: see Glasauergasse
  • Beethovengasse: see Eisenbachgasse
  • Berggasse: see Jenbachgasse
  • Bergstrasse: see Adolfstorgasse or Raschgasse
  • Bernbrunngasse: see Münichreiterstraße
  • Bertha-von-Suttner-Platz: see Weinbergerplatz
  • Billrothgasse: see Gnedgasse
  • Bischofgasse: see Erzbischofgasse
  • Bognergasse: see Kremsergasse or Vitusgasse
  • Bräuhausgasse: see Stampfergasse
  • Brückengasse: see Rußpekgasse
  • Brunnengasse: see Sommerergasse
  • Brunngasse: see Chrudnergasse
  • Burgenlandstrasse: see Kalmanstrasse
  • Bürgergasse: see Anatourgasse
  • Conrad v. Hötzendorf-Gasse: see Granichstaedtengasse
  • Defreggergasse: see Möginasse
  • Dr. Julius-Ofner-Gasse: see Overbeckgasse
  • Dr.-Engelbert-Dollfuss-Platz: see Sillerplatz
  • Dr.-Josef-Bayer-Gasse: see Buchbindergasse
  • Dr.-Julius-Angerer-Gasse , Brammergasse
  • Dr.-Seipel-Gasse: see Dirkensgasse
  • Eichenstrasse: see Kramer-Glöckner-Strasse
  • Einsiedeleigasse: see Jagdschloßgasse
  • Eisenbahngasse: see Biraghigasse
  • Elisabethstrasse: see Lainzerbachstrasse
  • Endlergasse: see Engelbrechtweg
  • Eskelesgasse: see Woltergasse
  • Feldgasse: see Feldkellergasse, Feldmühlgasse, Trazerberggasse, Weidlichgasse
  • Floragasse: see Flurgasse
  • Försterweg: see link path
  • Franz-Karl-Strasse: see Cranachstrasse
  • Franz-Schubert-Gasse: see Keplingergasse
  • Friedensstrasse: see Friedenshöhegasse
  • Friedhofstrasse: see Friedenshöhegasse or Gemeindeberggasse
  • Friedrich-Ludwig-Jahn-Gasse: see Treffzgasse
  • Gartengasse: see Veitlissengasse
  • Gärtnergasse: see Olmagasse or Rotenberggasse
  • Gemeindegasse: see Fehlingergasse
  • Georg-Ritter-von-Schönerer-Gasse: see Kardinal-Piffl-Gasse
  • Girardigasse: see Treumanngasse
  • Goethegasse: see Zamaragasse
  • Goldmarkstrasse: see Amalienstraße
  • Gustav-Groß-Gasse: see Beckgasse
  • Hagenberggasse: see Himmelhofgasse
  • Hauergasse: see Nästlbergergasse
  • Hauerzeile: see Firmiangasse
  • Hauptstrasse: see Hietzinger Hauptstrasse, Lainzer Strasse, Speisinger Strasse and Hetzendorfer Strasse
  • Hausbergstrasse: see Gemeindeberggasse
  • Heinrich Heine-Gasse: see Brammergasse
  • Hetzendorfer Gasse: see Fasangartengasse
  • Hetzendorfer Strasse: see Fasangartengasse or Maxingstrasse
  • Hetzendorfer Weg: see Hetzendorfer Straße
  • Hietzinger Hauptstrasse: see Schönbrunner Schloßstrasse
  • Hietzinger Kai: see Eduard-Klein-Gasse
  • Himmelhofgasse: see Hagenberggasse
  • Hörndlwaldgasse: see Strampfergasse
  • Horngasse: see Käthe-Leichter-Gasse
  • Hügelgasse: see Braunschweiggasse
  • Invalidengasse: see Oskar-Jascha-Gasse
  • Josefigasse: see Steckhovengasse or Stock im Weg
  • Kaiser-Franz-Joseph-Strasse: see Seifertstrasse
  • Kirchengasse: see St.-Veit-Gasse
  • Kirchenplatz: see Am Platz or Wolfrathplatz
  • Kreuzstrasse: see Rohrbacherstrasse
  • Künstlergasse: see Dostalgasse
  • Lainzer Cottage: see In der Hagenau
  • Lange Gasse: see Firmiangasse
  • Leopold-Müller-Gasse: see Stoesslgasse
  • Malfattigasse: see Eitelbergergasse
  • Maria-Theresien-Straße: see Hietzinger Hauptstraße or Jaunerstraße
  • Marinonigasse: see Bergenstammgasse
  • Mayergasse: see Angermayergasse
  • Mayerhofgasse: see Fasholdgasse or Gallgasse
  • Moritz-von-Schwind-Gasse: see Tewelegasse
  • Mozartgasse: see Eyslergasse
  • Mühlbachgasse: see Preindlgasse
  • Mühlgasse: see Mittermayergasse
  • Neugasse: see Wattmanngasse or Steinlechnergasse
  • Neustiftgasse: see Schweizertalstrasse
  • Ober Sankt Veiter-Gasse: see Veitingergasse
  • Parkgasse: see Anton-Langer-Gasse or Ghelengasse
  • Pestalozzigasse: see Swobodagasse
  • Plankengasse: see Diabelligasse
  • Promenade path: see Alois-Kraus-Promenade
  • Raabgasse: see Zwerenzweg
  • Raschgasse: see Gaheisgasse
  • Reichgasse: see Beckgasse
  • Resselgasse: see Granichstaedtengasse
  • Robert Riedl-Gasse: see Heubergergasse
  • Rudolf-Boeck-Gasse: see Sillergasse
  • Rudolfsgasse: see Glasauergasse
  • Sachsengasse: see Testarellogasse
  • Sarajevo Square : see Hevesigasse
  • Schillergasse: see Palmaygasse
  • Schillingergasse: see Klitschgasse
  • Schloßgasse: see Schlossberggasse or Vinzenz-Heß-Gasse
  • Schmidtgasse: see Wattmanngasse
  • Schönbrunner Strasse: see Schönbrunner Schlossstrasse
  • Schützengasse: see Hentschelgasse
  • Serpentine path : see Hansi-Niese-Weg
  • Siedlergasse: see Modl-Toman-Gasse
  • St. Marienplatz: see Am Platz
  • St. Veiter Allee: see Münichreiterstraße
  • St. Veiter Gasse: see Hietzinger Hauptstraße
  • Stephaniebadgasse: see Jodlgasse
  • Stock in the way: see Steckhovengasse
  • Theodor-Körner-Gasse: see Grobeckergasse
  • Tiergartengasse: see Felixgasse or Hermesstraße
  • Tiergartenweg: see Wittgensteinstraße
  • Tolstoigasse: see Hedy-Urach-Gasse
  • Under Sankt Veiter Allee: see Münichreiterstraße
  • Waldgasse: see Friedensstadtgasse
  • Waldmüllergasse: see Aschergasse
  • Wasagasse: see Seuttergasse
  • Wiener Strasse: see Speisinger Strasse
  • Wiener Weg: see Gaßmannstrasse
  • Wienflussgasse: see Hügelgasse
  • Wiengasse: see Hietzinger Kai, Lilienberggasse, Tuersgasse
  • Windmühlgasse: see Veitingergasse or Schrutkagasse
  • Winzerzeile: see Firmiangasse
  • Zenogasse: see Grünbergstrasse
  • Zewygasse: see Spitzweggasse
  • Zieglergasse: see Woltergasse
  • Zolagasse: see Viktor-Leon-Gasse
  • Zwerchgasse: see Wittegasse

1938-1945

  • Ambergerweg: see Hirschfeldweg
  • Burgkmairgasse: see Fleschgasse
  • Dühringweg: see Fürthweg
  • Emil-Wimmer-Gasse: see Eduard-Klein-Gasse
  • Hüsinggasse: see Ranzenhofergasse
  • Justus-Möser-Weg: see Paoliweg
  • Stuttgarter Strasse: see Münichreiterstrasse
  • Vernalekengasse: see Lynkeusgasse
  • Walter-Flex-Platz: see Goldmarkplatz
  • Wilhelm-Riehl-Weg: see Leon-Kellner-Weg

Individual evidence

  1. Kraus, Alois. In: Austrian Biographical Lexicon 1815–1950 (ÖBL). Volume 4, Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Vienna 1969, p. 222.
  2. Anna Strauss ( Memento of the original from May 23, 2010 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. at portraetgalerie.wordpress.com, accessed September 21, 2010 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / portraetgalerie.wordpress.com
  3. HLTW13 Bergheidengasse
  4. Blebanngasse in Vienna History Wiki of the city of Vienna
  5. Giuseppe Bossi at www.1133.at, accessed on September 23, 2010
  6. Peter and Alexius Chrudner in Franz Xavier Joseph Schweickhard: Presentation of the Archduchy of Austria under the Ens, 3rd volume, p. 65. Vienna 1831.
  7. a b The hermitage of Ober St. Veit on www.1133.at, accessed on September 26, 2010
  8. Adolf Swatschinas café-restaurant "To the old hermitage", Vienna. In:  Wiener Bilder , No. 24/1931 (XXXVI. Year), June 14, 1931, p. 12 center. (Online at ANNO ). Template: ANNO / Maintenance / wrb.
  9. Engelbrecht August. In: Austrian Biographical Lexicon 1815–1950 (ÖBL). Volume 1, Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Vienna 1957, p. 251.
  10. Gross Benedikt. In: Austrian Biographical Lexicon 1815–1950 (ÖBL). Volume 2, Publishing House of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna 1959, p. 72 f. (Direct links on p. 72 , p. 73 ).
  11. ^ Edition of the Gutenberg Book Guild, Vienna 1970, p. 159 ff.
  12. Josef Holzapfel (a1133): Ober St. Veit - Der Weidman-Murl , note 27
  13. Hilda Fonovits ( Memento of the original from December 29, 2008 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. at www.univie.ac.at, accessed on November 16, 2011 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.univie.ac.at
  14. settlement Peace City on www.hietzing.at, accessed on 29 September 2010
  15. † Richard Genée .. In:  Neue Freie Presse , June 16, 1895, p. 6 (online at ANNO ).Template: ANNO / Maintenance / nfp
  16. ^ Walter Steinhauser: Slavic in Viennese. Vienna 1962. Notring Publishing House of the Austrian Scientific Associations.
  17. ^ Nina Gned in operas and concerts in the Hoftheater zu Hannover bis 1860 , p. 117, accessed on October 4, 2010
  18. Lehmann's Vienna address book 1907
  19. ^ Nora Hiltl in the Vienna History Wiki of the City of Vienna
  20. Nora Hiltl at www.hietzing.at, accessed on November 21, 2011
  21. Nora Hiltl at http://diepresse.com/ , accessed on November 21, 2011
  22. ^ Digby Smith: The Napoleonic Wars Data Book . London 1998, p. 476. ISBN 1-85367-276-9
  23. ^ Lehmann's Vienna address book 1903
  24. Rudolf Holowatyj on http://netzwerke.oegb.at/ , accessed 21 November 2011
  25. Kurt Horeischy. In: dasrotewien.at - Web dictionary of the Viennese social democracy. SPÖ Vienna (ed.); Retrieved October 6, 2010
  26. Harold C. Schonberg: The great pianists . Scherz, Bern / Munich / Vienna 1965. P. 108 f.
  27. Irene Jerusalem ( Memento of the original from March 3, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. at www.lettertothestars.at, accessed on October 7, 2010 @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.lettertothestars.at
  28. Jagdschlossgasse at www.hietzing.at, accessed on October 8, 2010
  29. Friday, October 16, 2009 - "125 Years of Jesuits in Lainz" P. Klaus Schweiggl SJ in P. Klaus Schweiggl: 125 Years of Jesuits in Lainz , accessed on October 8, 2010
  30. Carl Theater on epub.oeaw.ac.at, accessed 10 October 2010
  31. Leopold Schwarz at www.bswien.at, accessed on July 1, 2018
  32. Link-Dessau Antonie. In: Austrian Biographical Lexicon 1815–1950 (ÖBL). Volume 5, Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Vienna 1972, p. 226.
  33. Marienbach on www.hietzing.at, accessed 14 October 2010
  34. Martha Rohs at www.aeiou.at, accessed on October 14, 2010
  35. Josef May www.eduhi.at (PDF), accessed on January 3, 2015
  36. Meiller, Andreas von. In: Austrian Biographical Lexicon 1815–1950 (ÖBL). Volume 6, Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Vienna 1975, ISBN 3-7001-0128-7 , p. 194 f. (Direct links on p. 194 , p. 195 ).
  37. Czeike , Volume 4, p. 283, and search for graves at www.friedhoefewien.at; there as Gabriele Tomann
  38. Franz Mögele on data.onb.ac.at, accessed 15 October 2010
  39. Robert Nästlberger on maxalvary.blogspot.com, accessed 16 October 2010
  40. Robert Nästlberger  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. at www.filmportal.de, accessed on October 16, 2010@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.filmportal.de  
  41. Bertha Olma at epub.oeaw.ac.at, accessed on October 17, 2010
  42. Bertha Olma on bildarchivaustria.at, accessed on October 17, 2010
  43. Wolfgang Beck: Pallenberg, Max. In: Brauneck, Beck: Theaterlexikon 2 . 2007, p. 545. ISBN 3-499-55650-2
  44. Ilka Pálmay on the English Wikipedia retrieved 18 October 2010
  45. Emil Ranzenhofer on ranzenhofer.info, accessed 19 October 2010
  46. Ratmannsdorf family in Friedrich Schweikhardt: Presentation of the Archduchy of Austria under the Ens , Vienna 1831, Volume 3, p. 65, accessed on October 19, 2010
  47. family Ratmannsdorf in Historical and topographical representation of Medling and its environs , Vienna 1824, p 85, accessed 20 October 2010
  48. ^ Entry about Ratmannsdorf on Burgen-Austria , accessed on October 19, 2010
  49. Beatrix Bastl: Virtue, love, honor: the noble woman in the early modern age . Böhlau, Vienna 2000, ISBN 3-205-99233-4 , p. 580 ( limited preview in Google Book Search [accessed January 4, 2017]).
  50. ^ Family Ratmannsdorf Historical and topographical presentation of Meidling and its surroundings , p. 85. Vienna 1824, accessed on October 20, 2010; erroneously mentioned here as Struckelmayr
  51. ^ Felix Czeike : Historisches Lexikon Wien , Volume 5, Kremayr & Scheriau, Vienna 2004, ISBN 3-218-00749-6 , p. 52
  52. Anton Schrefel at www.mauer.at (PDF), accessed on January 3, 2015
  53. Schrutka of legal base, Emil. In: Austrian Biographical Lexicon 1815–1950 (ÖBL). Volume 11, Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Vienna 1999, ISBN 3-7001-2803-7 , p. 265 f. (Direct links on p. 265 , p. 266 ).
  54. Silving, Bert. In: Austrian Biographical Lexicon 1815–1950 (ÖBL). Volume 12, Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Vienna 2001-2005, ISBN 3-7001-3580-7 , p. 271.
  55. ^ Biographical Lexicon of the Austrian Empire , Volume 59, Vienna 1890, p. 353
  56. Tirolergarten at www.zoovienna-gastro.at, accessed on April 29, 2019
  57. Mansuet von Versbach-Hadamar at www.dlib.si, accessed on October 27, 2010
  58. ^ Mansuet von Versbach-Hadamar at www.austro-hungarian-army.co.uk, accessed October 27, 2010
  59. ^ Website of the Wambacher restaurant, as of January 14, 2013
  60. First mentioned in: Lehmann's Allgemeine Wohnungs-Anzeiger , Vienna 1938, Volume 2, Section IV, p. XIII (= p. 486)
  61. Johann Wimpissinger on www.1133.at, accessed October 28, 2010
  62. Vinzenz Jerabek , biography at www.1133.at, accessed on October 29, 2010
  63. ^ Vinzenz Jerabek , autobiography on www.1133.at, accessed on October 29, 2010

literature

  • Felix Czeike (Ed.): Historisches Lexikon Wien , 6 volumes, Kremayr & Scheriau, Vienna 2004, ISBN 3-218-00742-9 , ... 743-7, ... 744-5, ... 748-8 , ... 749-6
  • Peter Autengruber : Lexicon of Viennese street names. 6th edited, updated and expanded edition, as of January 1, 2007. Pichler Verlag, Vienna 2007, ISBN 978-3-85431-439-4 .
  • Peter Simbrunner: Vienna street names from A - Z. 4th completely revised and redesigned edition. Ueberreuter, Vienna 1989, ISBN 3-8000-3300-3 .
  • Peter Csendes , Wolfgang Mayer: The Viennese street names. Association for the History of the City of Vienna, Vienna 1987 ( Wiener Geschichtsblätter. Supplement 1987, 2, ZDB -ID 43529-6 ).

Web links