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Innsbruck is a substantial tourist centre, with more than a million overnight stays. In Innsbruck, there are 86,186 employees and about 12,038 employers. 7,598 people are self-employed. [30] Nearly 35,000 people commute every day into Innsbruck from the surrounding communities in the area. The unemployment rate for the year 2012 was 4.2%. [31]
History of the Jews in Innsbruck; P. Pogrom Monument This page was last edited on 14 July 2024, at 16:07 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
Crucial to the choice of location was the site of the city of Innsbruck as a transport hub and the thriving copper mines of Tyrol, which had given rise to a flourishing arms industry in Innsbruck. In 1503 housed the armory about 150 guns Until the end of the monarchy in 1918 the place was still in use as the Armoury Barracks (Zeughauskaserne).
Innsbruck Castle Courtyard by Albrecht Dürer, 1495. The Hofburg was built on a site once occupied by the fortifications and towers of the medieval city. In the fourteenth century, when Innsbruck was ruled by the House of Gorizia, the city's defensive walls included a section located where the Hofburg main façade stands today on Rennweg. Three ...
The Goldenes Dachl (Golden Roof) is a landmark structure located in the Old Town (Altstadt) section of Innsbruck, Austria. It is considered the city's most famous symbol. [ 1 ] Completed in 1500, the roof was decorated with 2,657 fire-gilded copper tiles for Emperor Maximilian I to mark his wedding to Bianca Maria Sforza .
St. Anne's Column (German: Annasäule) stands in the city centre of Innsbruck, Austria, on Maria-Theresien-Straße. [1]It was given its name when, in 1703, the last Bavarian troops were driven from the Tyrol on Saint Anne's Day (26 July), as part of the War of the Spanish Succession.
History of Innsbruck (2 C, 2 P) M. Mass media in Innsbruck (3 P) O. Organisations based in Innsbruck (3 C, 7 P) P. People from Innsbruck (2 C, 38 P) S. Sport in ...
Innsbruck Town Hall is the building of the local government of the city of Innsbruck, Austria. The first building to house the local government was built in 1358, and was the first town hall in Tyrol, now known as Altes Rathaus. In 1897 the city administration moved to a new building, a former hotel donated to the city by the wholesaler ...