Introduction
The Imperial Crypt is located beneath the Capuchin Church and is intended for members of Austria’s former Habsburg dynasty, who have been laid to rest in the crypt since 1633.
149 Habsburgs, including 12 emperors as well as 19 empresses and queens, have their final resting place here. The magnificent double sarcophagus of Maria Theresia and her husband, Emperor Franz I. Stephan von Lothringen, is a work by Balthasar Ferdinand Moll.
In strong contrast to this is the plain sarcophagus of her son Joseph II. The last emperor to be buried here was Franz Joseph I. (1916). The sarcophaguses of Empress Elisabeth and Crown Prince Rudolf are situated in the crypt, which is looked after by Capuchin monks. The hearts of the Habsburgs were buried in the Heart Crypt of the Church of the Augustinian Friars from 1654 to 1878.
Burials take place in the Imperial Crypt to this day: the last Austrian empress, Zita, was buried here in 1989. And on 16 July 2011, her eldest son, the former Crown Prince and European politician, Otto Habsburg, was laid to rest here alongside his wife, Regina.
Address
Imperial Burial Vault (Kaisergruft) Tegetthoffstraße 2 1010 Wien
www.kaisergruft.at
Contacts
+43 1 512 68 53
+43 1 512 68 53 19
Prices
Adults €5,00
Family €11,00
Cheaper with the Vienna Card
Opening hours
Mon - Sun, 10:00 - 18:00
closed November 1 and 2
Accessibility
Main entrance
no steps (Automatic sliding door 142 cm wide)
Elevator available
110 cm wide and 135 cm deep , Doors 90 cm wide
More information
Restrooms with access for disabled persons available.
Comments
Access to all exhibition rooms: no steps, except 3 steps to the tomb of emperor Franz Joseph and to the burial vault chapel.
The touching of objects is not permitted due to reasons of preservation.