Posted on 14 September 2007
Getting There
Centrally-located Salzburg is easily reached by rail from almost any point in Europe. Munich is a mere 2 hours away, Vienna about 3. From Paris, Berlin, Budapest, Amsterdam, or Rome, a bit less than a day’s journey will bring you to Salzburg; if you prefer to wake up there, sleeper services are available [...]
Posted on 14 September 2007
In the end, though, Salzburg always comes down to music. Of the city’s many and famed festivals, the best-known are the 6-week Salzburger Festspiele which runs from late July to early September, and the Mozart Week sponsored each January by the International Mozarteum Foundation, a Salzburg organization which also puts on many individual concerts and [...]
Posted on 14 September 2007
Other small museums and galleries of note include the Dom’s own Cathedral Museum, whose Art and Rarities Collection presents some extraordinary items from the city’s long and important ecclesiastical history. There is also the Civic Hospital’s Toy Museum; the Galerie der Stadt Salzburg (Salzburg Art Gallery); and of course, the two Mozart houses. Of these, [...]
Posted on 14 September 2007
The Romans founded a settlement here and named the place Juvavum
but it became best known for its brisk trade in salt from the nearby Dürnberg mines, and Salzburg was the name that stuck. In time an even brisker trade would be conducted by men in red robes, as the town became and remained a [...]