Chapter

Post-War Reconstruction & Contemporary Cultural Region

On May 4, 1945, Salzburg was handed to the US Army without a fight. The American zone brought reconstruction, and the Festival was revived—its post-war identity shaped by selective memory of the Nazi years. The Grosses Festspielhaus, built 1956–1960 to plans by Clemens Holzmeister, gave the Festival a permanent grand stage. The UNESCO World Heritage designation in 1996 canonized the Baroque cityscape, centering the Counter-Reformation built environment as Salzburg's defining heritage—while rendering less visible the pre-Baroque layers, the folk Bräuche of the valleys, and the coercive dimensions of the archbishopric. In the Lungau, the Samsontragen—carried in twelve villages around Tamsweg on Corpus Christi and Bruderschaftsmontag—remains a living ritual, now UNESCO-recognized. Stolpersteine brass stones in the pavement commemorate Holocaust victims; the rebuilt synagogue at Lasserstrasse serves the re-established IKG community of 100–200 members—memory recovery, not continuity. The Alpine folk calendar still runs: Krampusläufe on December 5–6, Perchtenläufe in the Rauhnächte, Aperschnalzen at Easter, Almabtrieb in autumn. These customs may carry pre-Christian ritual content, but distinguishing ancient survival from modern revival or tourist elaboration requires careful source work, especially given the Nazi-era instrumentalization of Volkskunde.

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modern

Grosses Festspielhaus (Festival Hall)

Built 1956–1960 to plans by architect Clemens Holzmeister, the Grosses Festspielhaus provides the Salzburg Festival with its grand performance venue. The Salzburger Festspielfonds (Festival Foundation, established by federal law 1950) manages the building and publishes the annual program. The Festspielhaus embodies the post-war Festival's institutional continuity—but also its selective memory: the Festival was founded by largely Jewish artists in 1920, continued under Nazi oversight 1938–44, and was revived post-war without fully confronting that rupture. The building's address at Hofstallgasse 1 connects it to the former archbishop's stables, layering modern cultural infrastructure over the ecclesiastical state's material legacy. Anchor modes: custodian; material_layer; living_ritual; signal | Search hooks: Grosses Festspielhaus; Great Festival Hall Salzburg; Clemens Holzmeister; Salzburger Festspielfonds; Festival program schedule

Attend a Festival performance in the 2,179-seat hall during July–August; tour the building to see Holzmeister's architecture and the preserved archbishop's stables incorporated into the structure; check the Festspielfonds website for year-round concert programming.

minority hinge

Salzburg Synagogue

The original synagogue at Lasserstrasse 8, built in 1901 by Prof. Gottlieb Winkler, represented the re-establishment of Jewish communal life after approximately 300 years of official judenrein status (1498–19th century). Destroyed on Kristallnacht 1938, it was rebuilt post-war and now serves the IKG Salzburg—today one of only five Jewish provincial communities outside Vienna, with 100–200 members largely composed of immigrants and refugees, not descendants of pre-1938 families. The IKG publishes service times on its website. The synagogue represents both memory recovery (a community re-established after two ruptures) and the absence of continuous Jewish festival tradition in Salzburg. Anchor modes: custodian; material_layer; living_ritual; signal | Search hooks: Salzburg Synagogue; Synagoge Lasserstrasse; IKG Salzburg; Kristallnacht 1938; Jewish community re-establishment

See the rebuilt synagogue at Lasserstrasse 8; visit the IKG Salzburg office; note the memorial plaque recording the 1901 original and its 1938 destruction; attend Shabbat services (arrange in advance through IKG).

rupture

Stolpersteine Salzburg

Brass Stolpersteine (stumbling stones) embedded in sidewalks across Salzburg commemorate Holocaust victims at their last voluntary addresses—the most distributed and legible memory infrastructure for the Jewish absence in the city. The Initiative Stolpersteine Salzburg maintains and researches the stones; the city of Salzburg hosts a searchable database of addresses, names, and biographical data on stadt-salzburg.at. These stones make visible a rupture that tourism and heritage narratives typically skip: Salzburg was officially judenrein from 1498 to the 19th century, and the 1938 Kristallnacht destruction and deportation of approximately 230 Salzburg Jews means the post-WWII community is a re-establishment, not a continuation. Anchor modes: custodian; signal; material_layer | Search hooks: Stolpersteine Salzburg; stumbling stones Holocaust; Jewish expulsion memory; stadt-salzburg.at database; Kristallnacht victims

Walk the streets of Salzburg and find Stolpersteine at victims' last addresses; search the stadt-salzburg.at database for specific names and biographies; attend Stolpersteine-laying ceremonies organized by the Initiative.

continuity vault

Tamsweg

The main town of the Lungau basin, Tamsweg is one of twelve communities where the Samsontragen—giant biblical figures carried in procession—is performed on Corpus Christi and Bruderschaftsmontag (Brotherhood Monday). The tradition was inscribed on UNESCO's intangible cultural heritage list in 2010 and is documented as dating back to the Baroque era, when Capuchin monks staged processions with biblical figures on large parade floats. The local Heimatvereine (heritage associations) maintain the Samson figures and publish event schedules on lungau.at. Lungau's geographic isolation preserved traditions not found elsewhere in Salzburg, including distinct Kirchtag and Prangtag customs. Note: Lungau was also affected by the 1731-32 Protestant expulsion, raising questions about whether current customs represent continuous tradition or post-expulsion Catholic replacement culture. Anchor modes: custodian; living_ritual; signal | Search hooks: Tamsweg; Samsontragen Lungau; Kirchtag Prangtag; Corpus Christi procession giant figure; UNESCO intangible heritage 2010

Attend the Samsontragen procession in Tamsweg on Corpus Christi or Bruderschaftsmontag; see the giant Samson figure (up to 8 meters tall) carried by a single bearer performing the Samsonwalzer; check lungau.at for the Samson event calendar across all twelve Lungau communities.

Celebrations and traditions

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Chapter

Festival Foundation & Nazi Rupture

1918 - 1945

On August 22, 1920, Max Reinhardt staged Hugo von Hofmannsthal's Jedermann on the Domplatz—cathedral square—founding the Salzburg Festival as a Catholic-baroque communal theater, not merely a Mozart celebration. The founders were largely Jewish and cosmopolitan: Reinhardt himself, banned after the Anschluss, fled to America. After the Anschluss of March 1938, Jewish artists were excluded, the Festival continued under Nazi oversight, and Herbert von Karajan's career benefited. The Festival was used for cultural propaganda; the 1938–44 period represents a rupture in the institution's founding ideals, not a continuation. Villa Trapp, the actual home of the von Trapp family, stands as a corrective to the Sound of Music fantasy—the real Maria was stern, the real Georg was warm, and they escaped by train to Italy, not over mountains to Switzerland. Do not treat the Festival's founding vision as unbroken; the 1938 rupture and its selective post-war memory are essential to understanding which traditions were preserved, interrupted, or reinvented.

Chapter

Napoleonic Secularization & Habsburg Integration

1803 - 1918

The Reichsdeputationshauptschluss of 1803 secularized the prince-archbishopric, ending over a millennium of ecclesiastical sovereignty. Salzburg became a secular electorate, then passed through Napoleonic reassignment before permanent Austrian annexation in 1816—a rupture, not a continuation. The Residenz and cathedral chapter lost political power but the monasteries survived as religious institutions, bridging the old and new regimes. Under Habsburg administration, Mozart—who had been a contentious servant of the late archbishopric—was recast as Salzburg's cultural emblem. Mozart's Birthplace at Getreidegasse 9 became a pilgrimage site for a new kind of secular devotion. A fire in 1818 destroyed much of Mirabell Palace; it was rebuilt in Neoclassical form under Austrian administration, its Baroque origins literally overlaid. After 300 years of official judenrein status, Jewish community life re-emerged: a synagogue was built at Lasserstrasse 8 in 1901, only to be destroyed on Kristallnacht 37 years later. The festival traditions of the archbishopric persisted, now under Habsburg rather than ecclesiastical patronage.

Chapter

Confessional Cleansing & Late Archbishopric

1731 - 1803

On October 31, 1731, Archbishop Leopold Anton von Firmian issued the Emigrationspatent ordering the expulsion of approximately 20,000 Protestants—the Vertreibung—from the mountain valleys of Pongau, Pinzgau, and Lungau. Imperial troops were called in; 33 alleged ringleaders were arrested; children under twelve were forcibly removed from their parents (the Kinderraub). Those who survived the trek over the Tauern passes found refuge in East Prussia, Holland, and eventually Georgia in North America. The valleys were repopulated with Catholic settlers, meaning that folk traditions documented in these areas today may represent post-1732 replacement culture, not continuous local tradition—a fact often obscured in heritage narratives. The Protestantenweg hiking trail now traces the Exulanten escape route; Museum Hüttau preserves the memory of the Pongau communities that were torn apart. This memory was suppressed within Salzburg for over 200 years; ecumenical reconciliation services since the 1990s have only begun to recover it. Read the Emigrationspatent alongside the Vertreibung—the same event, opposite framings.

Chapter

Counter-Reformation & Baroque Ecclesiastical State

1500 - 1731

The Counter-Reformation reshaped Salzburg's built environment and ritual life with deliberate theatrical force. Prince-archbishops modeled their city on Rome, hiring Italian architects—Santino Solari built the Baroque cathedral (1614–1628), the largest early Baroque church north of the Alps; Fischer von Erlach designed the Holy Trinity Church (1694–1702) as an ecclesia triumphans statement; Giovanni Antonio Dario built the pilgrimage church at Maria Plain (consecrated 1674), creating a Counter-Reformation pilgrimage destination. Archbishop Markus Sittikus built Hellbrunn as a pleasure palace with trick fountains (1613–1615). Wolf Dietrich erected the original Mirabell (Altenau, 1606) for his consort Salome Alt. In Lungau, the Samsontragen—giant biblical figures carried in procession, first documented 1635—emerged from Jesuit Baroque spectacle and was inscribed on UNESCO's intangible heritage list in 2010. These were not neutral artistic commissions; they were political-religious programs projecting Catholic triumphalism. Do not call this a 'Golden Age'—it was also the period of escalating coercion against crypto-Protestants that would culminate in the 1731 expulsion.