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Votivkirche church description and photos - Austria: Vienna (Topic)

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Votivkirche church description and photos - Austria: Vienna

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Votivkirche church description and photos - Austria: Vienna

Votivkirche church description and photos - Austria: Vienna. Detailed information about the attraction. Description, photographs and a map showing the nearest significant objects. The name in English is Votivkirche.

Photo and description

The Votivkirche (Votive Church) is a Roman Catholic church located in the center of Vienna on the Ringstrasse near the university. It is one of the most important neo-Gothic religious buildings in the world. The height of the Votivkirche is 99 meters.

The decision to build the church was made after a journeyman attacked Emperor Franz Joseph I with a knife on February 18, 1853. The knife stuck into the button, thanks to which the emperor remained alive. The emperor's brother urged people to collect donations to build a church in Vienna in gratitude for the emperor's miraculous salvation. Some 300,000 people are known to have donated. By April 1854, all donations had been collected, after which a competition was announced among architects. The preference was given to the project of Heinrich Ferstel. The first stone was laid by Emperor Franz Joseph himself on April 24, 1856, in the presence of many people, clergy, bishops and archbishops. The construction of the church took as long as 20 years. Interior decoration continued for another 3 years. So, on April 24, 1879, the grand opening of the Votivkirche took place.

By order of the emperor, soldiers who arrived in the capital after the 1848 revolution were housed in the church. Votivkirche was one of the first buildings on the Ringstrasse and was located on Maximilianplatz.

Votivkirche was built in the Gothic style. This is evidenced by the turrets and spire of the transept, the facade, the pillars and the rose window. The church consists of a main and side aisles, which are two times lower than the main one.

Votivkirche church is built of white sandstone, therefore, it needs frequent repairs. Large-scale restoration was carried out after the Second World War.

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