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  1. This page was last edited on 30 June 2018, at 20:18. Files are available under licenses specified on their description page. All structured data from the file namespace is available under the Creative Commons CC0 License; all unstructured text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.

  2. Burials still take place in the Imperial Crypt to this day. The last Empress of Austria-Hungary, Zita, was buried here in 1989, and in 2011 her eldest son, former Crown Prince and European politician, Otto Habsburg, was also laid to rest here alongside his wife, Regina.

  3. The Kapuzinergruft (or Kaisergruft, the Imperial Crypt) on the Neuer Markt near the Hofburg has been the family burial place of the Habsburgs since 1617. Originally, Empress Anna specified its construction in her will only for herself and her husband Emperor Matthias, following the return of the imperial family from Prague to Vienna. But the burial place was constantly

  4. Another person, Empress Eleanor, 16 would normally have been entitled to space in the Imperial Crypt, but because her husband 19 was not buried there either, her body was sent to the Ducal Crypt. It is probably around this time that the body of Duke Albert VI was removed to make room for others, and that the body 15 whose sarcophagus is inscribed with only the year and name of the parents arrived.

  5. The Palatinal Crypt is located under the former Castle Church, built in 1768 (and finally destroyed in 1957), in the central wing of the palace. The underground crypt was first used as a burial place between 1770 and 1777. Only ten people were buried, including five infants, all of them commoners. Later their corpses were removed.

  6. Historical Tours. from. $5.47. per adult. The area. Tegetthoffstrasse 2, Vienna 1010 Austria. Neighborhood: Inner City. In Vienna's best-known district, pedestrian boulevards Kärntner Strasse and Graben connect you with landmarks such as the Wiener Staatsoper (Vienna State Opera), Vienna’s iconic Stephansdom (St. Stephen’s Cathedral) and ...

  7. A tour through the Capuchins' Crypt takes you through 400 years of Austrian and European history, from the Thirty Years' War to revolutions and the first ideas for a united Europe. The greatest artists of their time designed the rooms, symbols of power on the sarcophagi bear testimony to the dynasty's imperial claim.