Vienna Escorts
Escorts in Vienna

- Natalie
- Vienna

- Grace
- Vienna

- Julia
- Vienna

- Johanna
- Vienna

- Claire
- Vienna

- Jill
- Vienna
Escorts available to travel to Vienna
Varying notice is required to book the following escorts for Vienna.

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Vienna History
- Settlements in the area of Vienna date back to 5000 BCE, and the Celts established the Kingdom of Noricum in 200 BCE, which was then captured by theRoma ns in 15 BCE. They later established a garrison Vindobona in 100 CE. In 976 CE the Babenberg monarch, Leopold, was made Duke of the Eastern March, and in 1030 the first use of the name Vienna was seen. In 1156 Vienna became the official residence of the Babenbergs which cemented its development as a commercial centre of trade. After the death of the last Babenberg ruler, the Hapsburg family came to power when Rudolf I was elected king in 1273. Vienna became the heart of the Holy Roman Empire and remained the royal city of Hapsburg rule until 1918. In 1529 the Turks had attempted to invade Vienna but had failed. In 1683 they tried again, and this time they held the city for three months, but still failed to capture it when Polish soldiers helped to liberate the city. The threat of the Ottoman Empire was finally removed in 1717 when Prince Eugen won a victory against them in Belgrade.
Vienna played a pivotal political role in 1814-15, when European powers met in the city following Napoleon’s defeat at Leipzig, to discuss division of territory and power. Highly important officials descended on the city and the whole period was classified by elegance and power, accompanied by glamorous balls. In 1848 the city was again a centre of unrest when social discontent erupted in revolution, peaking in the October Revolution when the strict State Chancellor was removed from power, and a conservative monarchy under Franz Joseph I instigated instead. In 1916 the popular monarch died, and when his heir Karl was not able to lead the country to victory in the First World War the Hapsburgs lost both their country and their crown. Vienna had suffered greatly during the war and the loss of their monarchy only increased their plight.
In 1918 the post-war face of Europe created the small Republic of Austria. The country suffered both politically and financially under this new rule, which led to a social revolt resulting in civil war in 1934. This then led to a period of authoritarian rule, which was halted in March 1938 when Hitler marched into Vienna, and declared Austria as part of the Third Reich. During the Second World War the city suffered a lot of damage due to bombing, and many of its famous landmarks were destroyed. In 1945 following the end of the Second World War, Vienna was divided into four zones each occupied by one of the four Allies (Britain, France, Russia and America). Ten years later the last of these countries’ soldiers left Austria and it became the Second Republic of Austria following the signing of the State Treaty in 1955. Today Vienna is the capital of a thriving, modern state, and the city is a haven of architecture and culture, attracting millions of tourists each year.