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    Breitenseer Pfarrirche

    4.0 (1 review)

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    Michaelerkirche - no drip candles

    Michaelerkirche

    4.5(11 reviews)
    4.3 kmInnere Stadt

    Michaeler Kirche (St. Michael's Church), is located in Michaelerplatz, a block east adjacent to the…read moreHofburg Palace/Museum complex. On a weekday early evening it was pretty empty, many more tourists were walking around the square and taking pictures outside than inside. In 2021 this church celebrated their 800th year, wild! Its beginnings were as a church founded around 1220, which became a court parish church in 1784, then a parish and monastery of the Salvatorian order of Catholicism in its current form. Its building style is originally Romanesque, with various additions and removals of Gothic, Baroque, Classical elements, though after all the shifts it remains largely Romanesque and considered one of the largest and oldest Romanesque structures in Wien. Not knowing what to expect, entering I was really astounded by the number of figures sculpted in life size surrounding and directly attached to the front altar and apse...my eyes certainly got wider as I stared at all the details. I hadn't recalled the last time seeing such elaborate carved figures in an altar composition like this except maybe at the Toledo Cathedral in Spain. Of course the rest of this building isn't as gigantic as other cathedrals or basilicas, though if I had more time I would gladly come back to admire the sculpture and intricate designs in the rest of the church interior. Free to enter the church building though the crypt is by ticketed tour. Public tours ~45 min long are available in German only: every Friday at 12 pm and 2 pm every Saturday at 10 am and 12 pm Admission: € 10.00 per person / € 5.00 per child Opening hours: Monday-Friday: 7am-10pm Saturday-Sunday: 8am-10pm Easily accessible via public transit U-bahn (metro), buses and trams. For more info: https://www.michaelerkirche.at/en/

    Located just outside and behind the Hofburg complex, the Michaelerkircke is a fairly simple looking…read morechurch, compared to many others around Vienna. When you step inside, it doesn't have the same wow factor of the other churches either, but that doesn't mean it isn't worth a visit. This church is beautiful in it's simplicity; white is the dominant color throughout, with gold, red, and brown accents. The alter area is, of course, the fanciest part of the church, and it really is! However, check out the remains of the frescoes on the walls, the artwork, the confessionals, and the sculptures everywhere. Stunning! Check it out. Be respectful, be surprised. I highly doubt you'll be disappointed. 69/2025

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    Michaelerkirche - Massive pipe organ upstairs

    Massive pipe organ upstairs

    Michaelerkirche
    Michaelerkirche

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    Jesuitenkirche

    Jesuitenkirche

    4.8(10 reviews)
    5.1 kmInnere Stadt

    Incredible ceiling. It's hard to believe that one is looking at a flat surface. A really marvellous…read moreexample of a Baroque Church. The Inlay work in the pews is also so intricate and I imagine most of the tourists never even glance at them, if they enter this humble church at all. From the outside, you wouldn't give this church a second glance. But it is one of the oldest, and it is associated with the original Vienna University next door. The modern altar looks very plain but is actually constructed of 11 chairs with a table on top to represent the last supper. The twelfth chair is cleverly placed off to one side. So simple, yet powerful. So glad I visited this hidden gem. No tickets required. They also have concerts here. Well worth a visit, and if you can attend a musical performance, even better.

    The Jesuitenkirche is certainly worth a visit. It is not particularly impressive from the outside…read morebut the inside is definitely over the top in early Baroque style and well worth seeing. The architect, Andrea Pozzo, was a Jesuit who was responsible for several notable Jesuit churchs including the Chiesa del Gesu, which is the mother church of the Jesuit order in Rome and the burial place of St Ignatius Loyola. My wife and I were visiting Vienna with our daughter, her husband and our two young grandchildren over Christmas. Our daughter and I decided to go to midnight Christmas Eve mass (the rest decided not to go). We knew nothing of the Jesuitenkirche but it was the closest church to our apartment At first I declined as it was late and cold but we went anyway and I am glad we did. We aren't Catholic nor do we speak German but we felt very welcome and the mass which was mostly music was superb. It ended with Silent Night which we sang in English while everyone else sang in German. I am not particularly religious and my heritage is Protestant but this was very moving and my most memorable Christmas Eve service ever. When I am traveling I always try to attend local church services even if I don't understand the language as it provides insights you don't get any other way. I have always been welcomed and recommend it to you.

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    Jesuitenkirche - Jesuitenkirche - Universitätskirche (Mariä Himmelfahrt)

    Jesuitenkirche - Universitätskirche (Mariä Himmelfahrt)

    Jesuitenkirche
    Jesuitenkirche - Ceiling

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    Ceiling

    Breitenseer Pfarrirche - churches - Updated May 2026

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