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There’s still time to make this a Christmas to remember with a festive journey along the dazzling Danube! Embark in Vienna, the “City of Music,” then cruise in pampered luxury to Krems for a special holiday visit to the Kittenberger Adventure Gardens. With each stop, experience the Advent specialties and jolly atmosphere of the Christmas Markets, both big and small. You won’t want to miss a taste of the world-famous cake in Linz or time in the alpine jewel of Salzburg with its connections to Mozart, “The Sound of Music” movie, and some of Europe’s most breathtakingly beautiful Christmas Markets. Christmas Eve and Day are in Germany, where three rivers converge in Passau.
Vienna is a city that defies simple description. Over the centuries, it has been an imperial city, seat of the Holy Roman Empire, capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and capital of sovereign Austria. Today, Vienna retains the grand Baroque architecture, historic style, and Lebenskunst (art of living) that attracted famous composers like Mozart and Strauss. It's a wonderland of lavish palaces and cathedrals, world-class museums and music venues, atmospheric coffee houses, and romantic fiakers (horse-drawn carriages) clip-clopping past it all.
First mentioned in 995 AD, Krems became prosperous as a trade center for salt and wine. Its cobblestoned Old Town is home to well preserved buildings, like the 15th-century Steiner Tor (city gate), symbol of the city. Also worth seeing: the Krems Art Mile with Austria's only caricature museum and the State Gallery of Lower Austria; 11th-century Göttweig Abbey; and wine! Surrounded by vineyards, Krems produces some of the country's best wines!
After the Third Reich's annexation of Austria in 1938, the tiny market town of Mauthausen became home to a Nazi concentration camp. Today, the former camp serves as a memorial to the 200,000 men, women, and children who were imprisoned and perished there—and a site committed to political and historical education.
Austria’s third largest city, Linz is a European Capital of Culture worth exploring. Highlights include the Feichtinger House with its Glockenspiel, Castle Museum, Lentos Art Museum, and the Neo-Gothic Mariendom with its impressive stained-glass windows and 20,000-person seating capacity. A hike up Pöstlingberg Hill delivers outstanding views over the Danube and is best followed by a coffee and piece of scrumptious Linzer Torte, invented here as the world's first cake!
As early as 1293, the market town of Engelhartszell was known as a lovely place of recreation. Rich in history, its cultural highlights include the ancient Cistercian Abbey—a Trappist monastery known for centuries for its outstanding liqueurs, beers, and cheeses. The abbey church is among the country's finest example of Rococo architecture, while the town's Parish Church is decidedly Baroque. Other highlights include the imperial toll gate, 400-year-old blacksmithy, pretty Old Town center, and newly opened Schütz Art Museum.
Situated along the Route of Emperors and Kings where the Danube, Inn, and Ilz Rivers meet, Passau was settled as early as the Neolithic Age. During the Renaissance, this City of Three Rivers was a major manufacturing center of swords, crafting bladed weapons stamped with the Passau wolf, which legend claimed would grant invulnerability. Today, the most famous sights lining the narrow cobblestone streets of the Old Town are the artistic Town Hall and the Baroque St. Stephen's Cathedral with its green-domed towers and one of the largest organs in the world.