Innsbruck's Hofburg and Hofkirche
Tourist Attraction in Austria
The Hofburg (English: Imperial Palace) is a former Habsburg palace in Innsbruck, Austria, and is considered one of the country's three most significant cultural buildings, along with Vienna's Hofburg Palace and Schönbrunn Palace. The Hofburg is the main building of a large residential complex once used by the Habsburgs that still houses the Noblewomen's Collegiate Foundation, the Silver Chapel, the Hofkirche with the Cenotaph of Emperor Maximilian, and the Schwarzen Mandarin, the Theological University, the Tyrolean Folk Art Museum, Innsbruck. Cathedral, Congress and Hofgarten (Court Garden).
The original Hofburg Palace was built around 1460 under Archduke Sigismund from different materials. These structures included parts of the medieval castle that ran along the eastern city wall. The building included the Rumer Gate, which was later converted into a heraldic tower in 1499 by Georg Koldera under Emperor Maximilian I. The palace was expanded several times over the next 250 years. Between 1754 and 1773, the Hofburg Palace underwent two phases of Baroque structural changes under Empress Maria Theresa: the southern tract was built (1754–1756) on the Hofgas to plans by JM Gump the Younger, and the main facade was added (1766–1773). Renweg as planned by C. J. Walter. During this period, the Giants Hall F. A. The ceiling was completed with frescoes by Maulberts, and the Imperial Chapel (1765) was built in the room where Maria Theresa's husband, Emperor Francis I, died.
Gothic Hall
The Gothic hall in the basement of the north wing was built in 1494 as a five-nave hall with a cross-grooved vault and medieval brickwork. This hall was once the entrance connecting the north side gate with the drawbridge. The western part of the hall is still in its original Gothic state. The southern part of the hall was probably lowered during the Renaissance period. The eastern part of the hall was altered in the eighteenth century when partition walls with low arches were erected between 1765 and 1779. The converted hall was once used as a kitchen. The total area of the Gothic hall is 650 square meters (2133 sq ft).
Palace grounds
The large stone palace courtyard measuring 1300 square meters (4265 sq ft) is surrounded by the Hofburg building and represents "the most beautiful inner courtyard in Innsbruck". Since the Baroque reconstruction, the courtyard has been decorated with sculptural elements such as pilasters, frames, cornices and cartouches with Austrian striped shields on the front gable. Variations arise from various older structures in the east, south, north and west. Four portals allow access to the courtyard.
holy house
The Hofburg currently has two chapels that are available for Roman Catholic and ecumenical services as well as cultural events.
Silburne Chapel has a Renaissance organ.
The Hofburgkapel is a spacious, light chapel on the second upper floor of the south wing.








