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Tradition Thrives in Vienna

by Barbara Gibbs Ostmann

Vienna, like Paris, is wonderful anytime of year. At Christmastime, Vienna is more magical than ever. The city is transformed into a holiday wonderland of open-air markets and thousands of twinkling white lights.

For more than 700 years, Vienna has celebrated Advent with a Christkindlmarkt, literally Christ Child Market. This type of Christmas market is also traditional in Germany, Switzerland and Scandinavia. Wooden stalls trimmed with evergreen boughs feature handicrafts, ornaments, toys and decorations. Craftsmanship, creativity and high quality are typical of the items offered.

Food and drink are a big part of the Christmas market experience, too. Lebkuchen, a hard gingerbread baked in molds, is a holiday must. Almost every shopper at the market enjoys a cup of gluhwein (hot spiced wine) or punsch (wine-spiked fruit punch). Their spicy fragrances are a market hallmark.

St. Nicholas Day, Dec. 6, is when the holiday season begins in earnest for Austrian children. St. Nicholas strolls through the Christkindlmarkt, passing out sweets. He is often preceded by Krampus, a scary-looking figure dressed in an animal-skin suit and horned mask, ringing a cowbell. Parents warn their children that Krampus will carry them away if they don't behave. 

The focal point of the city's Christmas festivities is the Adventzauber (Magic of Advent) celebration in the square in front of the Rathaus (City Hall), from Nov. 18 through Dec. 24. A traditional Christkindlmarkt, the oldest in Vienna, is nestled amid elaborately decorated trees in the surrounding park. The scents of freshly roasted chestnuts and hot spiced wine waft through the air.

The market is but one part of the Magic of Advent. In the park, there's a walk through fairytale land, pony rides and the Christmas Express, a miniature train. Be sure to stop by the Old Viennese Post Office in the market area and send some cards with special holiday cancellations and postage stamps. Inside the Rathaus at Santa's Workshop, skilled experts help children create their own Christmas presents or bake their own cookies. Every weekend of Advent, choirs from around the world perform the Christmas music of their home countries in the Festival Hall of the Rathaus.

In addition to the main Christmas market at City Hall, there are dozens of markets in neighborhoods around the city. These smaller markets have distinct personalities and are possibly even more enchanting than the main market.

A favorite is the Christmas market in the Cour d'Honneur of the magnificent Schonbrunn Palace. The setting alone is magical: gaily decorated wooden booths tucked inside the courtyard of the butter-colored palace, with the sound of music filling the air and the aroma of gingerbread wafting through the crowd. The focus of this market is traditional handicrafts and tree decorations. There's also plenty to eat and drink. One booth sells generous servings of Kaiserschmarren, a traditional dish made of fluffy pancake torn into shreds and served with stewed plums. Another specializes in cheese dumplings and noodles, while others serve potato fritters, strudels, sausages and, of course, gluhwein.

While there, take time to visit the collection of historical Christmas items in the Silberkammer (Silver Room) in the palace. There are guided tours of the palace especially for children, and The Magic Flute is presented in the marionette theater on weekends.

The atmosphere is totally different at the Christmas market in Spittelberg, an old quarter with restored neoclassical houses built in the 19th-century Biedermeier period. The market stalls line the winding narrow streets of the quarter, which has a slightly bohemian feel. Handicrafts such as jewelry, ceramics, hand-blown glass, batik work, silk paintings and woven wall hangings are for sale.

At the art market at the Heiligenkreuzer Hof, one of the finest baroque courtyards in the old city, exquisite Viennese arts and crafts are the specialty. The Altwiener Christkindlmarkt on Freyung around the famous Austria Fountain is an old-style Viennese Christmas market, and the one on the Karlsplatz in front of the baroque Church of St. Charles Borromeo features crafts.

Austria is a deeply Catholic country, and the holiday festivities seem to be more firmly rooted in Christian celebration than crass commercialism.

In keeping with the spirit of the season, creche (nativity) displays are popular throughout Austria. In Vienna, don't miss the exhibitions of Christmas creches, called cribs, at St. Peter's Church and the Schonbrunn Palace.  

Austria's most beloved Christmas carol is "Silent Night," which was first performed on Christmas Eve in1818 in the village of Oberndorf, near Salzburg. The refrain of this simple carol echoes through Vienna's Christmas markets, reminding visitors and Viennese alike of the reason for the season.

Some cynics might say that Advent is mostly a countdown to New Year's Eve in Vienna, when the plaza around St. Stephen's Cathedral in the heart of the old city is transformed into a giant party -- the European version of New York's Times Square. A New Year's Market springs up along the mile-long New Year's Trail that winds from square to square in the old city. One hundred or so stalls along the trail serve champagne and snacks until the wee hours. The most popular tempo -- after all, this is Vienna -- is the waltz. If you need to brush up on your waltzing skills, there are free waltz lessons at the Neuer Markt.

Vienna offers even more opportunities to celebrate during the Carnival season. Some 300 balls take place in Vienna from New Year's Eve through Shrove Tuesday, culminating in the formal Opera Ball.

For more information about Christmas in Vienna, contact the Austrian National Tourist Office at 212-944-6880 or http://www.anto.com, or visit the Austrian Christmas market website, http://www.christkindlmarkt.at

Barbara Gibbs Ostmann, who was born on Christmas Day, is a big fan of Christmas markets everywhere.

Text copyright 2000 Barbara Gibbs Ostmann.

Images courtesy Wiener Adventzauber, copyright werbepool.

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