Salm-Vetsera Palace

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Palais Salm-Vetsera 1915

The Palais Vetsera (also: Palais Salm-Vetsera ) was a 1794-built, late Baroque house in the Salesianergasse 11 in the 3rd Vienna district highway .

history

Since its construction, the building has changed hands several times during the 19th century. An Eleonora Goldstein can be found as an owner in what was then Waaggasse No. 388 in 1812. Other owners are listed in 1833 and three years later in 1836, where house numbering has again been made (old no. 434 / new no. 507). In 1863 Waaggasse was renamed today's Salesianergasse.

In 1852 a new owner was mentioned before the building was acquired by Prince Milosch Obrenović of Serbia in 1855 . The building was expanded into a palace and received two side wings facing Salesianergasse, which together with the main wing formed a small courtyard. A high iron grille was installed to separate the sidewalk from the three-sided front garden. A garden stretched out at the rear so that the palace, in the language of the time, was located between “Cour et jardin”. A side wing formed an extension into the garden. There was a small mirror gallery there, while stables were in the front side wing.

In 1875 Julie Obrenovic owned the building with two floors and an apartment (party). In total, the property was 547 square fathoms (325 square fathoms were built on). The palace was for rent.

In 1880 the Baroness Helene Vetsera and her four children Ladislaus "Lazi", Johanna "Hanna", Marie Alexandrine "Mary" and Franz Albin "Feri" moved into the palace in Salesianergasse. After moving in, some important adaptations were made to the premises and some of the rooms were refurbished by the well-known company " Portois und Fix ". In Vienna, the house was known as the Vetsera-Palais and social events, balls and celebrations were often held here.

After the single Helene Vetsera moved out of the palace around 1900 due to financial shortcomings, American and Japanese embassies set up in the palace.

In 1905, Prince Alexander Solms-Braunfels was the owner of the palace. The building was demolished around 1916, as it was already damaged during the First World War .

Individual evidence

  1. Lenobel, Josef: House cadastre of the imperial capital and residence city of Vienna: written on the basis of the imperial Oesterr. Source material made available to the Ministry of Finance and the Municipality of Vienna . Ed .: Vienna Library in the City Hall; Magistrate of the City of Vienna - MA 9; https://www.digital.wienbibliothek.at . tape 1 . Lenobel, Vienna 1905, p. 88 .
  2. Fraissl, Aloys: Directory of all numbered houses and squares, names of the owners, house signs, streets and alleys / umgearb in the imperial and royal capital and residence city of Vienna and all the suburbs within the lines. v. Alois Edlen v. Fraissl . Ed .: Vienna Library in the City Hall; Magistrate of the City of Vienna - MA 9; https://www.digital.wienbibliothek.at . No. 88 . Published in the Carl Gerold'schen Buchhandlung, Vienna 1812.
  3. Vienna Library in the City Hall; Magistrate of the City of Vienna - MA 9; https://www.digital.wienbibliothek.at (Ed.): The latest improved scheme of all houses in the Imperial and Royal Capital and Residence City of Vienna and in its suburbs: a necessary manual for everyone as a correct guide through the city and all 34 suburbs ; with exact details of all the house numbers, all current house owners and house signs, streets, squares, land authorities, then police and parish districts . tape 1 . Stöckholzer von Hirschfeld, Vienna 1833, p. 95 .
  4. ^ Ziegler, Anton: House scheme in the kaiserl. royal Police districts Landstrasse: Contains the suburbs: Landstrasse, Weißgärber and Erdberg . Vienna 1836.
  5. Vienna Library in the City Hall; Magistrate of the City of Vienna - MA 9; https://www.digital.wienbibliothek.at : Comparison table of the old and new house numbers in the city of Vienna and its suburbs . Förster and Bartelmus, Vienna 1863, p. 20 .
  6. Vienna Library in the City Hall; Magistrate of the City of Vienna - MA 9; https://www.digital.wienbibliothek.at : Latest, improved house scheme of the kaiserl. royal Imperial capital and residence city Vienna: with all the suburbs, the Brigittenau, the intermediate bridges and the Prater huts; With exact details of the house numbers, house owners, house signs, alleys, squares, court, city administration and parish districts; For the year 1852 . Dorfmeister, Vienna 1852, p. 150 .
  7. a b Palais Salm-Vetsera on www.mayerling-archiv.de  ( 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.@1@ 2Template: Toter Link / www.mayerling-archiv.de  
  8. a b Hermann Swistun: Mary Vetsera - companion for the death , ISBN 3-8000-3727-0
  9. Schlesinger, Josef: Der Cataster: Handbook for offices, architects, builders, capitalists, house owners, etc., etc. about all the houses in the imperial capital and residence city of Vienna . Ed .: Vienna Library in the City Hall; Magistrate of the City of Vienna - MA 9; https://www.digital.wienbibliothek.at . Schlessinger, Vienna 1875, p. 112 .
  10. Lenobel, Josef: House cadastre of the imperial capital and residence city of Vienna: written on the basis of the imperial Oesterr. Source material made available to the Ministry of Finance and the Municipality of Vienna . Ed .: Vienna Library in the City Hall; Magistrate of the City of Vienna - MA 9; https://www.digital.wienbibliothek.at . Lenobel, Vienna, p. 88 .

literature

Coordinates: 48 ° 11 ′ 57 "  N , 16 ° 22 ′ 52.3"  E