ZENTRALFRIEDHOF

Exterior of the Dr. Karl Lueger-Gedächtniskirche, Zentralfriedhof, Vienna.






Franz Werfel's grave.

The 'Zentralfriedhof' (Central Cemetery) is situated in the district of Simmering, Simmeringer Hauptstraße 230-244, Vienna 1110, Austria, and is the largest and most famous cemetery among Vienna's nearly 50 cemeteries.
Opened in 1874, this enormous cemetery spans 2.4 square kilometres with 3.3 million interred here. It is also second largest cemetery by area and largest by number of interred in Europe.
Interred in the Zentralfriedhof are notables such as Beethoven and Schubert who were moved there in 1888.
The church in the centre of the cemetery is named ''Dr. Karl Lueger-Gedächtniskirche''.
In addition to the Catholic section, there is a Protestant cemetery, a small Russian Orthodox burial area, and two Jewish cemeteries. Although the older of the two, established in 1863, was destroyed by the Nazis during Kristallnacht, around 60,000 graves still remain intact. Prominent burials here include those of the Rothschild family and that of the author Arthur Schnitzler. The second Jewish cemetery was built in 1917 and is still in use today.
The musician Wolfgang Ambros honours the Zentralfriedhof in his song "''Es lebe der Zentralfriedhof''" ("''Long live the Zentralfriedhof''") in 1975.

Contents
Notables interred at the ''Zentralfriedhof'' (selection)
See also
External links

Notables interred at the ''Zentralfriedhof'' (selection)



Rudolf Ritter von Alt (1812-1905), painter

Leon Askin (19072005), actor

Ludwig van Beethoven (17701827), composer

Theodor Billroth (18291894), surgeon

Ludwig Boltzmann (18441906), physicist/mathematician

Max Böhm (19161982), actor

Johannes Brahms (18331897), composer

Ignaz Brüll (18461907), composer

Carl Czerny (17911857), piano teacher and composer

Anton Dominik Fernkorn (18131878), sculptor

Leopold Figl (19021965), statesman

Carl Ritter von Ghega (18021860), engineer

Alexander Girardi (18501918), actor

Christoph Willibald Gluck (17141787), composer

Karl Goldmark (18301915), composer

Theophil Freiherr von Hansen (18131891), architect

Johann Ritter von Herbeck (18311877), composer

Falco aka Johann (Hans) Hoelzel (1957-1998), rock singer

Curd Jürgens (19121982), actor

Thomas Klestil (19322004), the president of Austria (1992-2004)

Bruno Kreisky (19111990), statesman

Karl Kraus (18741936), writer

Josef Lanner (18011843), composer

Lotte Lehmann (18881976), opera singer

György Ligeti (19232006), composer

Theo Lingen (19031978), actor/director

Guido von List (18481919) 19th-century mystic Germanic and Runic revivalist

Adolf Loos (18701933), architect

Karl Lueger (18441910), politician

Hans Moser (18801964), actor

Siegfried Marcus (18311898), automobile pioneer

Karl Eugen Neumann (18651915), European pioneer of Buddhism

Walter Nowotny (19201944), World War II Luftwaffe pilot

Helen Odilon (18651939), actor

Georg Wilhelm Pabst (18851967), film director

Paula von Preradović (18871951), writer

Helmut Qualtinger (19281986), actor

Julius Raab (18911964), statesman

Geli Raubal (19081931), Hitler's niece and rumoured lover

Karl Renner (18701950), statesman

Albert Salomon von Rothschild (1844-1911), financier

Nathaniel Mayer Anselm von Rothschild (1836-1905), financier

Léonie Rysanek (19261998), opera singer

Antonio Salieri (17501825), composer

Franz Schmidt (18741939), composer

Arthur Schnitzler (18621931), writer

Arnold Schoenberg (18741951), composer

Franz Schubert (17971828), composer

Margarete Schütte-Lihotzky (18972000), architect

Alma Seidler (18991977), actress

Robert Stolz (18801975), composer

Eduard Strauss (18351916), composer

Johann Strauss I (18041849), composer

Johann Strauss II (18251899), composer

Josef Strauss (18271870), composer

Franz von Suppé (18191895), composer

Friedrich Torberg (19081979), writer

Franz Werfel (18901945), poet

Anton Wildgans (18811932), poet

Hugo Wolf (18601903), composer

Fritz Wotruba (19071975), sculptor

Alexander von Zemlinsky (18711942), composer

See also



List of famous cemeteries


External links



Unofficial website

Official website (in German)

Guide to the Cemeteries of Vienna

Google Maps

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