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1

Bertrandy, François. "Le culte de Mars dans la cité de Vienne." Revue archéologique de Narbonnaise 33, no. 1 (2000): 223–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ran.2000.1553.

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2

Rémy, Bernard, and Emmanuel Ferber. "Une inscription de la cité de Vienne retrouvée (CIL XII 2327)." Revue archéologique de Narbonnaise 24, no. 1 (1991): 267–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ran.1991.1389.

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3

Leveau, Philippe. "Les agglomérations de la cité de Vienne, un dossier en devenir." Revue archéologique de Narbonnaise 38, no. 1 (2005): 157–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ran.2005.1156.

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4

Rémy, Bernard. "La dénomination des notables locaux et municipaux de la cité de Vienne." Revue des Études Anciennes 102, no. 3 (2000): 413–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/rea.2000.4803.

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5

Béal, Jean-Claude. "Les agglomérations secondaires du sud-ouest de la cité antique de Vienne." Revue archéologique de Narbonnaise 38, no. 1 (2005): 15–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ran.2005.1146.

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6

Segard, Maxence, Rémi Corbineau, Cécile de Seréville-Niel, and Antoinette Rast-Eicher. "Sépultures privilégiées dans la cité des Pictons : l’espace funéraire de Jaunay-Clan (Vienne)." Gallia 76, no. 1 (December 12, 2019): 127–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/gallia.4704.

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7

Rémy, Bernard, and Jean-Pascal Jospin. "Recherches sur la société d'une agglomération de la cité de Vienne : Aoste (Isère)." Revue archéologique de Narbonnaise 31, no. 1 (1998): 73–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ran.1998.1497.

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8

Bertrandy, François. "Les stations routières dans la cité de Vienne : l'exemple d'Etanna et de Labisco." Revue archéologique de Narbonnaise 38, no. 1 (2005): 27–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ran.2005.1147.

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9

Soulard, Thierry. "Haute-Vienne. Limoges, à propos de l'enceinte de la Cité au haut Moyen Âge." Bulletin Monumental 146, no. 2 (1988): 126–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/bulmo.1988.3096.

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10

Remy, Bernard, and Rafaèle Crimier. "Un témoignage de la romanisation de la cité de Vienne au Haut-Empire : l’évergétisme." Ktèma : civilisations de l'Orient, de la Grèce et de Rome antiques 17, no. 1 (1992): 201–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ktema.1992.2065.

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11

Rémy, Bernard. "Loyalisme politique et culte impérial dans la cité de Vienne au Haut Empire d'après les inscriptions." Revue archéologique de Narbonnaise 36, no. 1 (2003): 361–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ran.2003.1130.

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12

Leveau, Philippe, and Bernard Rémy. "Présentation du dossier : les agglomérations urbaines de la cité antique de Vienne. Les éléments d'une problématique." Revue archéologique de Narbonnaise 38, no. 1 (2005): 7–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ran.2005.1145.

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13

Rémy, Bernard. "A propos du Rhône comme limite de la cité de Vienne au Haut-Empire (en amont de Lyon)." Revue archéologique de Narbonnaise 33, no. 1 (2000): 55–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/ran.2000.1542.

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14

Arnaud, Fabien, Joël Serralongue, Thierry Winiarski, Marc Desmet, and Martine Paterne. "Pollution au plomb dans la Savoie antique (II–IIIe s. apr. J.-C.) en relation avec une installation métallurgique de la cité de Vienne." Comptes Rendus Geoscience 338, no. 4 (March 2006): 244–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.crte.2005.11.008.

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15

Schäfer, Lea. "Between Fiction and Reality: The Vienna Jewish Cabaret as a Mirror of Vienna Jewish Speech." Journal of Jewish Languages 7, no. 2 (December 3, 2019): 261–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22134638-07021154.

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Abstract This article shows what we can learn from Vienna Jewish cabaret, so-called Jargontheater ‘jargon theater’ and the language situation of Vienna Jews at the end of the 19th century. By analyzing one of the most popular plays of this genre, we can see how structures from Yiddish dialects fused with Viennese German and what may have caused ‘Vienna Jewish speech,’ a Judeo-German city variety in the First Austrian Republic (1920s and 1930s).
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16

Rechter, David. "Galicia in Vienna: Jewish Refugees in the First World War." Austrian History Yearbook 28 (January 1997): 113–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0067237800016349.

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The arrival in Vienna of over one hundred thousand Jewish refugees fleeing the Russian army's advance into Galicia and Bukovina in the first months of World War I had a profound impact on Viennese Jewry. The refugees became a constant and pervasive theme of wartime Jewish debate in Vienna, and their influence was felt in many areas of communal life—political, cultural, economic, and religious. Moreover, their very visible presence in the city served to highlight the always prominent “Jewish Question” in Vienna for Jews and non-Jews alike, precipitating an eruption of virulent anti-Semitism that initially targeted the refugees but was later directed at Viennese Jews in general. (Indeed, one Jewish newspaper commented in September 1917 that anti-Semitism had become a “national sport.”) As the welfare problem posed by the refugees developed into a highly charged issue in Viennese politics, welfare work also became an important arena of Jewish politics.
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17

KORHONEN, JOONAS JUSSI SAKARI. "Urban social space and the development of public dance hall culture in Vienna, 1780–1814." Urban History 40, no. 4 (May 29, 2013): 606–24. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963926813000217.

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ABSTRACT:This article seeks to understand how the emergence of public dance hall culture affected the consumption of dance music among different social classes in Vienna between the years 1780 and 1814, when the number of dance halls more than tripled. Using mainly contemporary eyewitness accounts as sources, this article argues that social distinctions, rather than disappearing, were reinforced after the commercialization of the Viennese dance halls. As turn-of-the-century Vienna was a major city with a heterogeneous population, the diversity of social classes was reflected in its ballroom culture. This is because the Viennese elite, the nobility and the higher bourgeoisie, was very reluctant to share social space with the lower classes. Although to some degree the amount of social space expanded in the city at the time, the use of the space, however, remained socially diverse.
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18

Adunka, Evelyn. "Progressive Judaism in Austria." European Judaism 49, no. 1 (March 1, 2016): 32–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/ej.2016.490104.

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AbstractThe article describes the historical circumstances and context of the beginnings of Progressive Judaism in Central Europe in the nineteenth century, with the rabbis I.N. Mannheimer and A. Jellinek and the famous cantor Salomon Sulzer in the historic Viennese city temple (which still stands today) as the main protagonists. In the interwar period, the founding of the Verein für fortschrittliches Judentum in Vienna, its president Heinrich Haase (1864–1943) and its dissolution (in 1936) are discussed, and biographies of Liberal rabbis in Vienna and in some parts of the Austrian provinces are presented. After 1945 the focus is on the history of the Liberal Viennese community Or Chadasch, founded in May 1990, which is celebrating twenty-five years in November this year with a Festschrift and a Festakt with a keynote speech by Anat Hoffman.
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19

Koželouhová, Anna. "Housing Policy of the City of Vienna as an Example for the Czech Republic." Advanced Materials Research 1020 (October 2014): 726–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.1020.726.

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This work concentrates in its first part on the situation on the field of the social housing policy of the European Union. Subsequently, it collects and processes information about history and current state of the subsidized housing in Austrian capital Vienna, including its social, political and economic aspects. Viennese model, as a well-functioning system, is recommended as an example for the development of housing policy in the Czech Republic, especially in the city of Brno.
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20

Österreicher, Doris, and Stefan Sattler. "Maintaining Comfortable Summertime Indoor Temperatures by Means of Passive Design Measures to Mitigate the Urban Heat Island Effect—A Sensitivity Analysis for Residential Buildings in the City of Vienna." Urban Science 2, no. 3 (August 8, 2018): 66. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/urbansci2030066.

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The waste heat generated from the use of air conditioning systems in cities significantly contributes to the urban heat island effect (UHI) during the summer months. Thus, one of the key measures to mitigate this effect is to limit the use of active cooling systems. In the city of Vienna, air conditioning units are common in nonresidential buildings, but have so far been much less installed in residential buildings. This is mainly due to the fact that the Viennese summertime climate is still considered to be relatively comfortable and planning guidelines related to energy efficiency are already strict, resulting in high-quality buildings in regard to thermal performance. However, during the last decade, an increase in summertime temperatures and so called “tropical nights” has been recorded in Vienna and subsequently the postconstruction installation of air conditioning systems in residential buildings has significantly increased. In a study undertaken for the City of Vienna, a series of passive design measures have been simulated with current and future climate scenarios in order to determine the most effective combination of architecturally driven actions to avoid the use of air conditioning systems in residential buildings whilst maintaining comfortable indoor temperatures.
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21

Kaufmann, Alexander. "Euro-Commentary: The Role of Urban RTI Policy in Stimulating Innovation in the Local Economy: The Case of the City of Vienna." European Urban and Regional Studies 14, no. 1 (January 2007): 75–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0969776406072665.

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Innovation networks have been analysed at several spatial levels, from the local to the global, with increasing interest in innovation systems below the national level.A wide range of regions has been studied including cities as major centres of innovation. But there is often a difference between the importance of a city as a location of innovation activities and to what extent they can be influenced by politics and public institutions at the city level.This commentary focuses on Vienna, the capital of Austria. Analysing the innovation networks of firms located in Vienna shows the potential scope and limits of the city’s influence on innovation relations. Data from an innovation survey of the Viennese economy lead to the conclusion that only a minor share of the innovation relations of local firms can be influenced directly by the city’s institutions. The results give some indication of where and how the city could be able to increase its influence on the innovation activities of the local economy, reducing Vienna’s dependence on Austria’s federal research, technology and innovation policy.
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22

Protsiv, Lilija. "History of the Ukrainian Music Pedagogy: Viennese Meetings." Musical art in the educological discourse, no. 4 (2019): 59–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.28925/2518-766x.2019.4.8.

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The article substantiates the features of the history of musical pedagogy as meta-history, the content of which is immutable values, spiritual constants of mankind, as well as such phenomena as coincidence, meetings in time and space, their sign and symbolic interpretation. Along with people, cities are important participants in the complex drama of the Ukrainian history. They are spiritual and cultural centers important for the development of national culture and education. Many of them received symbolic names, for instance, Second Jerusalem (Kyiv), Chernihiv Athens, Galician Piedmont (Lviv, Galicia in general). Among the Western European cities, which have a leading role in the drama of national history and culture there is Vienna, “the golden apple of Europe”, a metropolis, at different times the political and artistic capital of Europe, and for many Ukrainians the juridical capital. Vienna holds the mission of the world’s city, which has summed up the experience of history and has become a stage of human drama, drama of events and nations. The cultural archetypes of Vienna, which finally determined the direction of further development of the European musical culture, include the works of “Viennese classics”, the era of Biedermeier, “Viennese waltz”, “Viennese secession”. Many significant events, real and symbolic meetings in the history of Ukrainian culture took place in Vienna. It was the Austrian capital, where a considerable part of the scientific and creative elite of Ukraine obtained European education. This was the place where the fighters for the Ukrainian statehood found political protection. The article briefly describes the activities of “the Ukrainian Viennese” Eusebius Mandychevsky and Serhiy Bortkevich, two artists, musicians, heroes of the national historical drama, representatives of different generations and regions, united by the time and space of the Ukrainian history and culture, whose life reflected the tragic fate of the people, took place transformation of the history into person’s destiny. The meta-history approach substantially expands and enhances the possibilities of traditional methodology. Sign and symbolic comprehension of the past requires highlighting spiritually significant processes in the development of history, their contrast, comparison, reading the “text” of historical events, the discovery of its “subtext”, which is “the semantic and vital awareness of being”.
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23

Kelly, T. Mills. "Taking It to the Streets: Czech National Socialists in 1908." Austrian History Yearbook 29, no. 1 (January 1998): 93–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0067237800014818.

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On the night of December 1,1908, the city of Vienna was lit up like a giant birthday cake in celebration of the sixtieth anniversary of the reign of Emperor Francis Joseph I. This final night of the monarch's diamondjubilee was the culmination of an entire season of ceremonial occasionsranging from visits to Vienna by the German emperor William II to a seemingly endless series of fětes—everything from concerts by children's choirs to the most magnificent royal balls Vienna could muster. The streets of the imperial capital were filled with the myriad languages of the empire asmore than one million citizens crowded the Ringstraßre and its many side streets and alleys hoping for a glimpse of their emperor-king. That evening the streets of Prague were filled with thousands of angry Czechs, whose moodwas much different from that of the crowd in Vienna. In contrast to the Viennese festival of light, the Czech demonstrators were extinguishing the street lanterns of Prague, hoping that darkness would decrease the likelihood that they would be arrested. According to the Neue Freie Presse, the Old Town(staré město/Altstadt) district of Prague was experiencing a “schrecktlichstag.”
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24

Silverman, Lisa. "Leopoldstadt, Judenplatz, and Beyond." East Central Europe 42, no. 2-3 (January 20, 2015): 249–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18763308-04202004.

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Discussions of Jews’ relationship to Vienna before 1938 tend to focus on their consumption of Viennese culture, including music, art, literature, and intellectual innovation. However, understanding place as a formative aspect of material culture can help us see another crucial aspect of how Jews—individually and collectively—came to terms with their place in the city. This essay examines the significance of place for Jews in Vienna through a variety of primary sources related to the Judenplatz, the square which is today the city’s premier site of Jewish memory, and Leopoldstadt, the district that encompasses Vienna’s most densely populated Jewish residential area. Memoirs, newspaper articles, caricatures, and maps written by both Jews and non-Jews reveal how the significance of these two areas changed over time, as they became deeply intertwined with the self-perceptions of both Jews and non-Jews. Analyzing how the Judenplatz and Leopoldstadt engaged Jewish difference over time helps us understand how the presence or absence of Jews remained a persistent dialectic in determining the meaning of place in Vienna.
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25

Mayer, Andreas. "THE HISTORIAN OF THE FREUD MUSEUM: LYDIA MARINELLI." Psychoanalysis and History 11, no. 1 (January 2009): 109–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/e1460823508000317.

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The Freud Museum in Vienna is certainly one of the best-known tourist attractions of Europe, drawing crowds of visitors every year. Over the past 15 years, it has also acquired a reputation for being the site of some of the most inventive intellectual work in the history of psychoanalysis. A set of highly original exhibitions, film and lecture series, and conferences all set a new tone that was unheard of in Vienna, a city where Sigmund Freud had been turned, as had so many other of the great figures of Austria's glorious past, into a piece of merchandise. It took the scholarly world and the larger public some time to realize that this fresh and courageous approach was the work of a young historian who was not even Viennese, but had arrived from the Eastern part of the Tyrol.
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Wingfield, Nancy M. "“The Sad Secrets of the Big City”: Prostitution and Other Moral Panics in Early Post-Imperial Vienna." Austrian History Yearbook 50 (April 2019): 99–123. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0067237819000067.

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So read some of the subheadings in a 14 June 1920 article in the Wiener Montags-Presse, analyzing prostitution in post-imperial Vienna. Many journalists—sometimes, even the same journalists—continued to employ the very vocabulary, “contagion,” “contamination,” and “filth,” in their postwar exposés that they had used in their prewar and wartime reports on prostitution in the Habsburg monarchy. Viennese officials in the newly founded German-Austria (Deutschösterreich) continued to consider tolerated prostitutes a “necessary evil,” arrest women they found engaging in clandestine prostitution, subject them to pelvic examinations for venereal disease (VD), and treat these women as operating outside the bounds of society. In fact, women who practiced prostitution were a long-entrenched part of the female working class. In matters of commercial sex, Austria-Hungary's defeat in the First World War did not constitute a decisive break with the past, but rather a juncture in long-term historical processes, as this analysis of post-imperial Vienna through 1923, when postwar inflation had been tamed, reveals.
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Meyer, Imke. "Gender and the City: Schnitzler’s Vienna around 1900." Literatur für Leser 40, no. 3 (January 1, 2017): 219–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.3726/lfl032017k_219.

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At first glance, Arthur Schnitzler’s narratives Die Toten schweigen and Lieutenant Gustl seem to be rather different from each other, both with regard to their respective sujets and with regard to form. Die Toten schweigen relates the horrific end of an illicit affair between a married bourgeois woman and a young man from her social circles. Lieutenant Gustl opens a window onto the emotional turmoil that engulfs a young lieutenant in the Austro-Hungarian army who fears that an insult he experienced has taken away his honor. The story of Die Toten schweigen is related to us by a third-person figural narrator who at various points utilizes both of the text’s main characters, Franz and Emma, as reflector figures.1 Lieutenant Gustl, by contrast, does away with the agency of a narrator and introduces to German-language literature the radically new concept of the Monolognovelle, a narrative presented in interior monologue, and entirely from the perspective of its central character.2 And yet, for all their differences, the two texts also share certain characteristics. They were published in fairly close chronological proximity to each other—in 1897 (Die Toten schweigen) and 1900 (Lieutenant Gustl), respectively. Moreover, both texts represent characters who move through the cityscape of Vienna while they live through personal crises. Thus, as Schnitzler allows his readers to access the inner lives of the characters at the centers of his stories, his narratives capture images of Vienna as a conflicted imperial city suspended between its past and the threshold of modernity.3 Most strikingly, though, the mapping of the topography of figural consciousness onto the chronotopography of Vienna4 makes plain that Schnitzler’s texts render the experience of urban spaces as distinctly marked by gender. On the following pages, then, I want to elucidate what I believe to be a particular kinship between Die Toten schweigen and Lieutenant Gustl, namely the representation of a gendered experience of the imperial city that was Vienna as the 19th century drew to a close.
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28

Nadirov, Rashid A. "The influence of the First World War on the social and economic position of Vienna in 1914–1916." Tambov University Review. Series: Humanities, no. 190 (2021): 235–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.20310/1810-0201-2021-26-190-235-241.

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The influence of the First World War on the social and economic position of Vienna, the capital of the dualistic Austro-Hungarian Empire in the first two years of the war, is considered. It was during these two years that there was an increase in contradictions between various social groups, which would ultimately lead to the collapse of the Empire in 1918. One of the important sources when analyzing the situation in Vienna is the weekly police reports. It is by studying the materials of police reports that a picture of wartime Vienna appears in front of us. As the problems grew, the volume of reports constantly increased, new headings appeared, which made it possible to study not only the existence of problems in the capital of Austria-Hungary, but also to trace their dynamics and the measures taken by the government of Franz Joseph. A special role is given to the food problem, in particular, the dynamics of prices, the deterioration of the quality of bread, the growing shortage, the growth of speculation. In addition, the national relations and the attitude of the Viennese towards the arriving refugees were analyzed. Based on the material studied, it was concluded that the First World War greatly changed the life of the population of Vienna, showed the inability of the government and local authorities to quickly solve the emerging problems of the city.
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29

Notley, Margaret. "Volksconcerte in Vienna and Late Nineteenth-Century Ideology of the Symphony." Journal of the American Musicological Society 50, no. 2-3 (1997): 421–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/831840.

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Late nineteenth-century journalistic criticism in Vienna offers many precedents for Paul Bekker's interpretation of the symphony. Beethoven's symphonies provided the model for an aesthetics of the genre-couched in metaphors connecting it to "the people"-that motivated the reception of works by Brahms and Bruckner. Activists who wished to inaugurate symphonic Volksconcerte in the city took the figurative utopian function of the genre literally. Though their efforts were confounded not only by institutionalized elitism but also by the preferences of the Viennese Volk for other kinds of music, their work bore fruit in the early twentieth century with the founding of the Wiener Konzertverein and the Arbeiter-Symphonie-Konzerte.
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30

Lutz, Wolfgang, and Alexander Hanika. "Vienna: A City beyond Aging." Bulletin of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 42, no. 4 (January 1989): 14. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3823139.

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31

Donia, Robert J. "Fin-de-Siècle Sarajevo: The Habsburg Transformation of an Ottoman Town." Austrian History Yearbook 33 (January 2002): 43–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0067237800013813.

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Sarajevo entered the twentieth century larger, more developed, and more European than it had been when Austro-Hungarian troops took control of Bosnia-Herzegovina in 1878. The cityscape acquired a Western-oriented face superimposed on its previous profile as a classical Ottoman town. Underlying this physical transformation were major changes in demography, political organization, cultural life, and social practices in the city. Taken together these changes may be characterized broadly as “modernization” or “Westernization,” but they reached Sarajevo mediated through the filters of Habsburg and Viennese experience and often mixed unpredictably with local culture and traditions. By 1900 Sarajevo was in two overlapping cultural orbits: a largely traditional world centered in Istanbul and increasingly dominant influences emanating from Vienna.
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32

Hawkins, Richard A. "Paprika Schlesinger." Journal of Historical Research in Marketing 9, no. 1 (February 20, 2017): 66–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jhrm-10-2015-0043.

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Purpose This paper explores the development of a luxury retail shoe brand in Belle Époque Vienna. Design/methodology/approach Footwear retailing and marketing history is a neglected area. Unfortunately, no business records have survived from Robert Schlesinger’s shoe stores. However, it has been possible to reconstruct the history of the development of the Paprika Schlesinger brand from its extensive advertising in the Viennese newspaper, the Neue Freie Presse, with the guidance of the founder’s grandson, Prof Robert A. Shaw, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry, Birkbeck, University of London, England. This case study would not have been possible without the digitization of some major collections of primary sources. In 2014, the European Union’s Europeana digitization initiative launched a new portal via the Library of Europe website which provides access to selected digitized historic newspaper collections in libraries across Europe. The project partners include the Austrian National Library which has digitized full runs of several major historic Austrian newspapers, including the Neue Freie Presse. Other project partners which have digitized historic newspapers which are relevant to this paper are the Landesbibliothek Dr Friedrich Teßmann of Italy’s Südtirol region, the National Library of France and the Berlin State Library. An associate project partner library, the Slovenian National and University Library’s Digital Library of Slovenia, has also digitized relevant historic newspapers. Furthermore, the City of Vienna has digitized a complete set of Vienna city directories as part of its Wienbibliothek Digital project. Findings This paper suggests that Robert Schlesinger created one of the first European luxury retail shoe brands. Originality/value This is the first academic study of the historical development of the advertising and marketing of a European luxury retail shoe brand.
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Wimmer-Puchinger, B., S. Blahout, and K. Waldherr. "Eating disorders: What has the society to do with it?" European Psychiatry 33, S1 (March 2016): S167. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2016.01.338.

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The prevention of eating disorders is a main concern of the Vienna Women's Health Programme, which was adopted by the Vienna City Council in 1998. Eating disorders are very serious mental health problems in adolescence. There is evidence that media exposure of the thin ideal body image leads to uncertainty, low self-esteem and dieting. To examine the current state of body (dis-)satisfaction and the risk of eating disorders among Viennese adolescents, we surveyed 1427 participants at the age of 12 to 17, using a self-assessment questionnaire that included the Eating Disorder Inventory (EDI-2), the SCOFF-questionnaire and the Rosenberg self-esteem scale. Results support our hypothesis. The highest concern among adolescents is about their weight and body shape. 76% of the girls surveyed wanted a skinny body, 31% were afraid of gaining weight, and 32% have already been dieting - 13% took appetite suppressants, 5% used vomiting, 3% took laxatives. According to the SCOFF-questionnaire, 30% of the girls were at risk of having eating disorders. Trends were evaluated via regression analysis. In 2012 girls used less dieting and had lower scores in the EDI-2 subscales ‘body dissatisfaction’, ‘drive for thinness’ and ‘bulimia’ than in 2001. Boys had less conspicuous scores than girls in total, but have shown an alarming increase in body dissatisfaction. School prevention programmes are indicated to enhance media literacy and encourage self-esteem among adolescents. To be successful, an interdisciplinary approach has to be established. The City of Vienna has already launched several awareness campaigns to counter unhealthy body ideals.Disclosure of interestThe authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.
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Christian, Erhard. "Verbreitung und Habitatpräferenz von Doppel- und Zangenschwänzen in der Großstadt Wien (Diplura: Campodeidae, Japygidae)." Entomologia Generalis 17, no. 3 (October 1, 1992): 195–205. http://dx.doi.org/10.1127/entom.gen/17/1992/195.

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35

Fujikura, Ryo, Mikiyasu Nakayama, Shanna N. McClain, and Scott Drinkall. "Addressing the Health Problems After Immigration Faced by the Marshallese in Springdale, Arkansas: Lessons Learned from the City of Vienna." Journal of Disaster Research 14, no. 9 (December 1, 2019): 1309–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.20965/jdr.2019.p1309.

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More than 10,000 people have migrated from the Republic of the Marshall Islands to Springdale, Arkansas in the United States. That number is increasing. The Marshallese living in Springdale are not effectively integrated into the host society. Many Marshallese are mentally stressed not only in their home country, but in Springdale as well. This problem will be alleviated if those in Springdale are well-integrated into the host society. The city of Vienna, Austria, has a history of accepting large numbers of immigrants. In this study, we analyzed the experience of integration in the city of Vienna and examined ways in which this can be applied to the situation in Springdale. Many Marshallese make few preparations for migration to the United States; this becomes an obstacle when they start residing there. Vienna Start Coaching, implemented by the City of Vienna, is a mechanism providing the information that is needed by foreigners when they arrive at the city. The city of Vienna has many therapists to provide mental health care for immigrants and citizens. This is to ensure the possibility of having people who can listen to them in their native language. Moreover, the city offers German language courses to immigrants. Provision of more English language education could facilitate their integration with the host community.
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36

Liepa-Zemesa, Mara. "THE IMAGE OF VIENNA: CITY AS MUSEUM OR DYNAMIC DEVELOPED METROPOLIS?" Mokslas - Lietuvos ateitis 2, no. 3 (June 30, 2010): 18–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.3846/mla.2010.048.

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The article discusses trends of Vienna’s architectonic spatial development. Vienna is a city that, one the one hand, lives in its historical arhitecture and city planning and, on the other hand, has allowed innovative building in certain areas. Historical development of Vienna was analyzed, underlining aspects which have had the most impact to the current urban fabric. Since in the federal country of Austria Vienna is a state and a municipality at the same time, it has created its own special planning instruments and regulation for city planning. In achieving more sucessfull city planning results, city planners have admitted that development of informal planning is necessary, paying large attention to involving society in the planning process.
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37

Rotenberg, Robert. "Extraordinary Vienna: Identity and the Metropolitan Project." City Society 8, no. 1 (January 1996): 82–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/city.1996.8.1.82.

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38

Palmer, Pat Niessner. "Vienna: A City of International Harmony." AORN Journal 50, no. 6 (December 1989): 1276–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0001-2092(07)67678-9.

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39

Wieber, S. "Vienna: City of Modernity, 1890-1914." Journal of Design History 22, no. 2 (May 22, 2009): 183–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jdh/epp008.

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Healy, Maureen. "A Thursday Before the War: 28 May 1914 in Vienna." Austrian History Yearbook 45 (April 2014): 134–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0067237813000647.

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On 28 May 1914, the Viennese press reported that a young man from the sixteenth district in Vienna had attempted suicide. Sitting on a bench at the Pezzlpark, twenty-one-year-old laborer Karl P. shot himself in the head with a revolver. “The motive,” one newspaper reported, “was said to be unrequited love.” By chance, the same park bench would see more action later that day. Pregnant twenty-three-year-old laborer Marie B. was on her way to a birthing clinic when she went into labor. Sitting on what the newspaper now deemed the Selbstmörderbankerl, with the help of two nearby watchmen, she gave birth to a girl. The headline “Death and Life on a Bench” highlighted one extraordinary coincidence in an otherwise ordinary day in the city.
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41

Rudas, Stephan. "On measuring the changes in psychiatric care systems: results in an urban area (Vienna)." Psychiatric Bulletin 14, no. 5 (May 1990): 262–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/pb.14.5.262.

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Vienna, a city with a population of 1.5 million, as well as being the capital of Austria is also one of its nine provinces. Care for the mentally ill in Vienna, as elsewhere, was for decades either misguided or poor. The large mental hospitals in the city were seriously overcrowded and understaffed. In the extramural sector, there was an enormous deficit in out-patient and complementary facilities.
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Šinko, Simona, Klemen Prah, and Tomaž Kramberger. "Spatial Modelling of Modal Shift Due to COVID-19." Sustainability 13, no. 13 (June 24, 2021): 7116. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13137116.

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The outbreak of COVID-19 caused many changes in people’s life. One of the most significant is the travel behaviour and transport mode choice. This study focus on the changes that the inhabitants of Vienna made in their travel choices because of the virus. The same research about spatial modelling the transport mode choice of commuters in Vienna was completed in 2019 and is a topic addressed in our previous work. Based on our developed methodology, this article indicates that public transport is not a dominant transport mode choice as it was before the virus outbreak. The main result of this paper is geographically defined areas of application of individual alternatives shown on the final map of modal shift in Vienna, which could provide theoretical support for policymakers and transportation planners. For the city of Vienna, we found that the area of the city where cars are now used has increased, which certainly has a negative impact on air quality and life in the city. The advantage of the methodology is that it can also be applied to other cities in the world.
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Gunter, Ulrich, and Irem Önder. "Determinants of Airbnb demand in Vienna and their implications for the traditional accommodation industry." Tourism Economics 24, no. 3 (September 18, 2017): 270–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1354816617731196.

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This study identifies key determinants of Airbnb demand and quantifies their marginal contributions in terms of demand elasticities. A comprehensive cross-sectional data set of all Viennese Airbnb listings that were active between July 2015 and June 2016 is examined. Estimation results, which are obtained by cluster-robust ordinary least squares, show that Airbnb demand in Vienna is price-inelastic. Significant positive drivers include listing size, number of photos, and responsiveness of the host. Significant negative drivers include listing price, distance from the city center, and response time of the host. Implications for the traditional accommodation industry are that, on the one hand, it should better communicate its sought-after advantages (e.g. lower average minimum duration of stay). On the other hand, it should increase its offer of bigger and better equipped hotel rooms since hosting more than two guests at a time is one of the major benefits of Airbnb.
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NODA, Hiroyasu. "City Structure and Housing Policy in Vienna." Japanese Journal of Real Estate Sciences 17, no. 1 (2003): 77–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.5736/jares1985.17.77.

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Psenner, Angelika. "‘Wiener Null’ – levelling the city of Vienna." Urban Research & Practice 13, no. 2 (September 11, 2018): 131–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17535069.2018.1510025.

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Glebova, Natalya, and Michael Klamer. "Red Vienna. 1919–1934." проект байкал 18, no. 68 (August 8, 2021): 26–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.51461/projectbaikal.68.1797.

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The political events and global socio-economic reforms carried out by social democrats in the early 20th century, expansion of the capital of Austria and the inflow of the working class caused the building of a “garden city” with rich infrastructure, parks and available and comfortable dwelling. The skills of advanced Austrian architects, ideological meaning together with economic forces, spatial concept and socialist slogans gave birth to a new architectural identity.
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Lutz, Wolfgang, Sergei Scherbov, and Alexander Hanika. "'Vienna: a city beyond aging' - revisited and revised." Vienna Yearbook of Population Research 1, no. 2003 (2003): 181–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1553/populationyearbook2003s181.

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48

Pamer, Volkmar. "Urban planning in the most liveable city: Vienna." Urban Research & Practice 12, no. 3 (July 3, 2019): 285–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17535069.2019.1635728.

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Prokopovych, Markian. "Lemberg (Lwów, L'viv) Architecture, 1772–1918: If Not the Little Vienna of the East, or the National Bastion, What Else?" East Central Europe 36, no. 1 (2009): 100–129. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/187633009x411502.

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AbstractThe historiography on the nineteenth-century architecture of Lemberg—and, for that matter, on Lwów, Lvov, and L'viv—remains a contested field among different national camps. At the same time, these conflicting historiographic traditions have not been able to treat the complex history of this multiethnic city in an adequate manner. On the one hand, there exists a prevailing tendency to view the Habsburg period in the city's history through a national lens, highlighting only those facts and figures that would confirm the city being—or becoming—a bastion of a particular national culture. Consequently, Polish and Ukrainian literature often neglected entire projects and even time periods, assuming that, prior to Lemberg's municipal autonomy of 1867, the entire urban planning achievement by the Austrian German-speaking bureaucracy was insignificant to the city's history and had therefore no consequence for the later fin-de-siècle developments. On the other hand, superficial assumptions of Lemberg serving as “crossroads of civilizations” and “little Vienna of the East” lacked a critical perspective and often overlooked significant local phenomena that evolved independently from Viennese or other influence. In arguing against these simplistic assumptions, this paper suggests an alternative, syncretic approach that combines entangled history and a careful treatment of the ethnic dimension in Lemberg's history.
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Stróżyńska, Beata. "The Stay and teaching activity of Władysław Kędra in Vienna (1957-1964) in the light of documents Kept at the academy of music and Performing arts, Vienna." Notes Muzyczny 1, no. 13 (June 9, 2020): 143–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0014.1947.

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The stay of Władysław Kędra, a charismatic virtuoso pianist representing the Columbus Gene- ration, in Vienna has so far seemed a very good and successful period in the life of this musician originating from Łódź. However, the studies conducted in the archives of the Akademie für Musik und darstellende Kunst Wien, cast a new light on these eight years. The information included in previous publications about the reasons why the Polish virtuoso left for Vienna and why he returned from the capital of Austria were not confirmed when confronted with the preserved documents. Thanks to a thorough analysis of source materials, the author of the article managed not only to recreate the course of events but also to uncover extremely important facts from the professor’s life, e.g. that he had Austrian citizenship. Now there is no doubt that Władysław Kędra intended to stay there and settle in Vienna for good. The analysis of the Viennese docu- ments allows for recreating to a significant extent the way how he fought for the life he had dreamt of during the occupation of the Stalin era. From the first preserved letter to Dr Hans Sittner, President of Vienna’s Akademie für Musik und darstellende Kunst, of 23 May 1957, we can follow the efforts of the Polish pianist to be given a contract, i.e., contract of employment for a fixed period, which was extended for him year by year, then to have an opportunity to see his family, have independent accommodation and bring his closest relatives to Vienna, and finally, find out how he applied for citizenship and was given a permanent contract of employment, which entailed awarding him with the lifelong title of Professor by Austrian authorities. Władysław Kędra achieved his goal – he became the citizen of his new home country, gained prestige and recognition, became music professor in the city of Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven and Schubert... And yet, at that very moment when he had everything and fulfilled his dreams, he suddenly left Austria in unclear circumstances. What dramatic events occurred on 2 June 1964 when Prof. Kędra suddenly wrote two applications for discharge from employment – in one of them he did not justify his decision, only referring very precisely to relevant regulations, which were undoubtedly dictated to him by some official, while in the second one he gave an untrue and completely unlikely in his situation reason for his quitting? There is no trace in the documents of the events which were the cause of that sudden decision. It needs to be stressed that the present article was written exclusively based on the docu- ments (including letters) kept at the Viennese Akademie für Musik und darstellende Kunst in Władysław Kędra’s personal file. The author did not refer to his family’s recollections or to texts published previously about the pianist so as to present facts in a reliable way, and not inter- pretations of these facts.
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