It's the spectacular, snowcapped mountains of
regions like the Tyrol that provide the most
familiar images of
Austria - a
landscape of jagged peaks and rampaging rivers,
giving way to green pastures studded with
onion-domed churches. Yet Austria is by no
means all alpine vistas: the country stretches
across central Europe for some 700km, from the
shores of the Bodensee in the west to the edge
of the flat Hungarian plain in the east. Far
removed from the archetype are the wetlands
and reed beds of Burgenland, and the dramatic
sequence of stopes that carve their way up the
Erzberg in Styria. In Upper and Lower Austria
in particular, a predominantly low-key
landscape of gentle rolling hills and
vineyards can come as something of a surprise
to first-time visitors. Yet this fertile,
low-lying northern half of the country is, in
fact, where the majority of Austrians live and
work, many of them within commuting distance
of the capital,
Vienna - the country's
chief tourist destination after the alpine
regions.
For all its bucolic charm and fondness for
the days of empire, when Vienna sat at the
centre of the vast, multinational Habsburg
dynasty, Austria today is thoroughly modern,
clean, efficient and eminently civilized, with
uniformly excellent tourist facilities. Like
neighbouring Switzerland, it's also a
supremely law-abiding nation, where no one
jaywalks or drops litter, and the trains and
trams run on time. Whether you're staying in
one of the popular skiing, hiking or spa
resorts, or in an out-of-the-way Gasthof, you're
likely to experience " Gemütlichkeit
" - a typically Austrian term expressing
a mixture of cosiness and hospitality - at
some point during your visit.
Looking at the country at the close of the
twentieth century - stable, conservative and
wealthy - you wouldn't think that Austria had
spent the first half of the century struggling
to find a national identity. After all, it was
only in 1918, when the Habsburg Empire
disintegrated, that the idea of a modern
Austrian nation was born. The new republic,
with a population of just eight million
reluctant citizens, was riven by left- and
right-wing political violence and, as a result,
the majority of Austrians were wildly
enthusiastic about the Anschluss with Nazi
Germany in 1938. The price of Austria's
participation, and ultimately defeat, in World
War II, however, was Allied occupation. For
ten years the country was split, like Germany,
into Soviet, American, British and French
zones. As a gesture of détente, the Soviets
finally agreed to withdraw their troops, in
return for Austria's "permanent
neutrality". At this point, Austria
turned over a new leaf, and recast itself as a
model of consensus politics, with an almost
Scandinavian emphasis on social policy as the
guiding principle of national life. Postwar
stability saw the growth of a genuine
patriotism, while the end of the Cold War put
the country, and its capital, back at the
heart of Europe.
In 1995, Austria became a full member of
the European Union, a move that for many was a
sign that the country had finally entered the
mainstream of European politics. From time to
time, Austria's more reactionary elements have
attracted widespread media attention, most
notably during the Waldheim affair, when the
wartime record of the president was called
into question, and in the recent rise of the
Far Right under the charismatic Jörg Haider.
But the reality is that the Socialist party
retains the strongest influence in government,
as it has for much of the postwar period, and
the country's political stability, for the
most part, continues intact.