Uhrenmuseum

This is where things will really
run like clockwork for you ...

the 3000 clocks from the collection of the Wien Museum.
The Clock Museum has a collection that is unique in Europe. It is accommodated in an enchanting Viennese house in the historical city, with foundation walls dating from the Middle Ages, and situated very close to Judenplatz.

At the stroke of every full hour,
three floors re-echo with chimes, sounds and carillons from the many clocks that are kept working. They document the measurement of time and the technology of horology from the fifteenth century until the present day.

The greatest imaginable diversity
of types and models from all over the world is on show in the Clock Museum: witty and ingenious picture clocks with hidden dial-plates; richly decorated longcase commode clocks telling of the social rank of their owners; pocket watches and pendants with luxurious ornamentation as the most exquisite pieces of jewellery.

Among the highlights
of a visit to the museum is the astronomical art clock by David a Sancto Cajetano from the eighteenth century. Besides telling the time, this technical masterpiece informs on the length of the day and the orbital phases of the planets, and with sensational precision. The world-famous „Laterndl“ (lantern) clocks are witnesses of the heyday of the Viennese art of clockmaking. The smallest clock is a „Zappler“ (with „fidgety“ front pendulum) and fits under a thimble; the heaviest example is the turret clock of St Stephen's Cathedral, of solid cast iron. Viennese Biedermeier and the Belle Èpoque are represented in a multitude of different models.

The exquisite inventory
of the Clock Museum, which was founded in 1917, goes back in its essentials to two private collections: that of the intermediate-school teacher and first director of the museum Rudolf Kaftan, and the extremely valuable collection of the writer Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach.

Take the time for a fascinating and kaleidoscopic walk through time and the cultural history of chronometry.

Download the museumfolder in PDF-format.



Pendant watches, c. 1810, © Wien Museum

Movement train for turret clock of St. Stephen's, Vienna 1699, © Wien Museum
ADMISSIONS


Adults
€ 4,00
Senior citizens, Vienna Card, Ö1-Club, disabled persons, students up to 27,  military and civil service and groups of 10 and more persons
€ 2,00
For children and adolescents under 19 years
free entry
Every first Sunday of the month for all visitors
free entry
GUIDED TOUR FEES


Attendance of  a public guided tour (per person)€ 2,00
Adult group flatrate (rec. number of participants: 20)
€ 45,00
School- and youthgroups flatrate
€ 15,00