The Physical Properties of Vienna before 1848
Vienna was founded by the Romans in the first century
AD as a fortified camp as a part of their frontier defenses. Its
location on the Danube river not only led to its rise as one of
Europe's premier centers of trade (the first permanent bridge over
the Danube was constructed between 1435 and 1440), but also made
it significantly easier to defend. City defences were under constant
construction during the 15th and 16th centuries,
and because of this, Vienna was able to withstand Turkish attacks
in 1529 and 1683. Fortifiacations were built around the Altstadt,
the old city of Vienna, but suburbs began to spring up outside them
as the city became increasingly crowded. They were destroyed during
the sieges but quickly rebuilt. After the siege of 1683, the legal
boundary of the city was expanded to include the suburbs and so
a new series of fortifications was built to defend them. When Napoleon
captured the city in 1809, he destroyed many of the fortifications.
The ruins, which lay untouched until 1857, represented the end of
the Altstadt and the beginning of the suburbs.
In comparison with Paris and London, Vienna
grew to be much more of a cultural center than a political center.
Vienna was the residence of the Holy Roman Emperor, and this was
the main reason that much of the political power flowed there. Of
the three cities, Vienna was by far the most beautiful. Its avenues
were lined with trees, the air was fresh and crisp, and the mountains
and hills that surrounded the city provided a beautiful view from
any point in the city. Even the wall and its surroundings had been
decorated and turned into "walks of great beauty". The narrow streets
were lined with beautiful, expensively decorated mansions, and as
the city grew and grew, because the walls limited the area of available
land, these and other buildings increased in size. Another product
of the limited area was that the city was, in a way, inside-out
in that the poverty which was usually found in inner cities was
pushed out to the suburbs by the bourgeois and aristocrats, and
in time the bourgeois too were forced to leave.