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| Wiener Neustadt | |
| Church of St. Peter | |
| Coat of arms | Location |
| Administration | |
| Country | |
|---|---|
| State | Lower Austria |
| District | Statutory city |
| Mayor | Bernhard Müller (SPÖ) |
| Basic statistics | |
| Area | 60.96 km2 (23.5 sq mi) |
| Elevation | 265 m (869 ft) |
| Population | 39,652 (1 December 2005) |
| - Density | 650 /km² (1,685 /sq mi) |
| Other information | |
| Time zone | CET/CEST (UTC+1/+2) |
| Licence plate | WN |
| Postal code | 2700 |
| Area code | 02622 |
| Website | [1] |
Wiener Neustadt (formerly German: Neustadt) is a town located south of Vienna, in the state of Lower Austria, Austria. It is a self-governed city and the seat of the district administration of Wiener Neustadt-Land.
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The city was founded by the Babenberger Duke Leopold V in 1194[citation needed], who financed the construction of the city with the ransom paid for the English king Richard the Lionheart, who had previously been held as a hostage in Austria at Dürnstein.
Wiener Neustadt, meaning more or less New Vienna ("Viennese Newtown"), first served as a fortress to defend against nearby Hungary. Important privileges were given to the city in order to enable it to prosper. In the 15th century, Wiener Neustadt experienced a population boom, when Emperor Friedrick III took up his residence here and in Graz. The Wappenwand (coat of arms wall) at the local castle displays the coats of arms of his possessions in the middle. His son Maximilian I maintained his court in Wiener Neustadt and is buried there in the St. George's Cathedral.
King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary conquered the city in August of 1487 after having laid siege to it for two years. He dedicated the Corvinus Cup to the inhabitants. Maximilian I managed to reconquer his native city in 1490. During the 16th century, Wiener Neustadt lost its status as imperial residence and much of its importance. However, it still fulfilled its function as bulwark against the Turks and the Kuruc. In 1751 it received greater attention when Empress Maria Theresa of Austria decided to dedicate the First Military Academy worldwide inside the imperial castle. In 1752, the Theresian Military Academy took up its operations, which have continued to this day with only a few interruptions. (Erwin Rommel became the commandant in 1938.) In 1768, Wiener Neustadt was destroyed by an earthquake and damaged the castle, which was rebuilt using plans made by the architect Nicolò Pacassi.[citation needed] In 1785, Emperor Joseph II transferred the see of the diocese of Wiener Neustadt to St. Pölten.
In the 19th century the city became an industrial town, especially after the opening of the Austrian Southern Railway in 1842. In 1909, the "first official Austrian airfield" was inaugurated north of the city.[1] It later served as a training ground for the flight pioneers Igo Etrich, Karl Illner and Adolf Warchalowski, who conducted their tests there.
Wiener Neustadt WWII bombings attacked strategic targets including the marshalling yards, the Wiener Neustädter Flugzeugwerke (WNF) factory, and[2] 2 Raxwerke plants which used Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp forced labor. Bombing operations such as Operation Pointblank left only 18 of 4,000 buildings undamaged:
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Wiener Neustadt connects to other major centers of population by the Austrian Federal Railway and the Autobahn. The city has two airfields (a military one which was the first airfield in Austria and a civil one owned by Diamond Aircraft) and is the starting point of Austria's only shipping canal, the Wiener Neustaedter Kanal, which was meant to reach out to Trieste but was never finished.
Austria's first and largest Fachhochschule for business and engineering, the University of Applied Sciences Wiener Neustadt, is located here.
The most recent extension of the city is the CIVITAS NOVA, Latin for new city, an ambitious project for an industrial, research and commercial center. In 2008, on the area of the Civitas Nova, a cancer research center for ion therapy will be opened under the name of Med Austron (link in German).
In 1996 Wiener Neustadt became internationally famous as a so-called "sidewalk" designed by a Japanese artist was built around the main square. The aerodrome is a big music venue (link in German).
In 1995 Wiener Neustadt was the host of 1995 Speedway Grand Prix of Austria. It was the first, and so far, only Austrian SGP.
Wiener Neustadt is the setting for the book Reluctant Return: A Survivor's Journey to an Austrian town.[2]
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