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St. Stephen's Cathedral, Austria

The mother church of the Archdiocese of Vienna is the Roman Catholic St. Stephen's Cathedral in Vienna, Austria. Christoph Schönborn, the Archbishop of Vienna, resides there.
Duke Rudolf IV (1339–1365) was largely responsible for the cathedral's current Romanesque and Gothic design, which is located on the Stephansplatz. It was built on the foundations of two previous buildings, the first of which was a parish church that was dedicated in 1147. St. Stephen's Cathedral, Vienna's most significant ecclesiastical structure, has seen many significant moments in Habsburg and Austrian history and has grown to become one of the city's most identifiable landmarks because to its multicolored tile roof. From the top to the bottom, there are 256 stairs.The enormous south tower of St. Stephen's Cathedral, which is 136 meters (446 feet) high and lovingly called "Steffl" (a short form of "Stephen") by the city's residents, is the cathedral's highest point and a prominent landmark in the Vienna skyline. It took 65 years to build, from 1368 to 1433.The initial plan for the north tower was to mirror the south tower, but construction was stopped in 1511 because the design was too ambitious given the end of the Gothic cathedral era. The Viennese called this Renaissance cap the "water tower top" and it was added to the tower-stump in 1578. At its current height of 68 meters (223 feet), the tower is about half as tall as the south tower.

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