World Travel GuidesThe World Heritage Sites Homepage Kapuzinerberg, Salzburg, Austria


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Kapuzinerberg is the hill on the right bank of the Salzach River in Salzburg, Austria. It is across from the Old Town, but is also part of the core zone of the World Heritage Site.

A flight of 250-step staircase goes up Kapuzinerberg. It starts from Linzergasse. Half way to the top of the hill, you come upon the church of St Johann am Imberg, built in 1681.

At the top of Kapuzinerberg, there was once a medieval fortress. Part of it was incorporated into the Capuchin monastery, built in 1599-1605 by Bishop Wolf Dietrich von Rathenau. The Capuchin monastery reached its present shape in 1690. The monastery has an oak door which comes from the earlier fortress.


Kapuzinerberg, with the Church of St Johann am Imberg
Kapuzinerberg, with the Church of St Johann am Imberg
Author: Andreas Praefcke (Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported)

The site of the Capuchin monastery on Kapuzinerberg has seen human habitation going back to neolithic times. Archaeologists have unearthed two prehistoric settlements dating back to 1000 BC within the grounds of the monastery.

The Second World War was an unsettling period for the monastery. The monks were evicted from it in 1938, when the Nazis wanted to use the site as a forum. They only got the monastery back in 1945.

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Disclaimer

This website celebrating the World Heritage Sites is a hobby website that is not in any way connected to UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) and is not associated in any way with it. Any mention of UNESCO on this website is intended to describe the inscription and recognition of the World Heritage Sites by the institution, and does not in any way imply that UNESCO endorse the description and information provided.