Stephansdom Katakomben

Vienna


The area on Stephansplatz around the cathedral was originally a graveyard – making it the dead centre of Vienna in a very literal sense. But with plague and influenza epidemics striking Europe in the 1730s, Karl VI ordered the graveyard be closed and henceforth Vienna buried its dead beneath Stephansdom in the ‘New Tombs’, which in the 19th century became more wistfully known as Katakomben (catacombs). Entrance is allowed only on a tour.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Vienna attractions

1. Cathedral Pummerin

0.01 MILES

Weighing 21 tonnes, the Pummerin is Austria's largest bell and was installed in the north tower of Stephansdom in 1957. While the rest of the cathedral…

2. Cathedral South Tower

0.02 MILES

In 1433, Stephansdom's south tower reached its final height of 136.7m. Today, you can ascend the 343 steps to a small platform for one of Vienna’s most…

3. Dom- & Diözesanmuseum

0.03 MILES

The Cathedral and Diocesan Museum of Vienna is a treasure trove of religious art pieces spanning a period of more than 1000 years. Among the collection's…

4. Stephansdom

0.04 MILES

Vienna’s Gothic masterpiece Stephansdom – or Steffl (Little Stephan), as it’s ironically nicknamed – is Vienna's pride and joy. A church has stood here…

5. Equitable Palais

0.09 MILES

Now containing ground-level shops and upper-level offices, this grand 1891-completed mansion designed by Andreas Streit was one of the few in Vienna never…

6. Mozarthaus Vienna

0.1 MILES

The great composer spent close to three happy and productive years at this residence between 1784 and 1787. Exhibits include copies of music scores and…

7. Ankeruhr

0.16 MILES

A Jugendstil (Art Nouveau) masterpiece created by Franz von Matsch in 1911, this mechanical clock was named after the Anker Insurance Co, which…

8. Pestsäule

0.16 MILES

Graben is dominated by the twisting outline of this gold-topped baroque memorial, designed by Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach in 1693 at the behest of…