Difference between revisions of "Lustspieltheater im Prater [Vienna] (Q8400)"

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Theatre building in Vienna, Austria, opened in 1862

(‎Added [nl] description: theater in Wenen)
 
(‎Added qualifier: Source (P63): CARTHALIA (Q495), #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1757591661939)
 
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Property / opening date
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1862
Timestamp+1862-00-00T00:00:00Z
Timezone+00:00
CalendarGregorian
Precision1 year
Before0
After0
Property / opening date: 1862 / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Wikidata instance
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Property / Wikidata instance: Q19860854 / rank
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Property / Carthalia ID
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Property / Carthalia ID: 63 / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Preservation state
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Property / Preservation state: extinct building / rank
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Property / Preservation state
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Property / Preservation state: Disused / rank
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Property / Note
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Built 1862 for the theatre director, Johann Fürst. Opened 21 Apr 1862. 1865 rebuilding, re-opened as Fürsttheater. 1893 renamed Jantsch-Theater after the theatre director, Heinrich Jantsch. 1898 rebuilding by Kupka. 1905 renamed Lustspieltheater. 1927 converted into a cinema and renamed Lustspielkino. 1938 renamed Film-Palast, later renamed Tegethoff-Kino and again Filmpalast. 800 seats. Destroyed by a fire in 1981. (English)
Property / Note: Built 1862 for the theatre director, Johann Fürst. Opened 21 Apr 1862. 1865 rebuilding, re-opened as Fürsttheater. 1893 renamed Jantsch-Theater after the theatre director, Heinrich Jantsch. 1898 rebuilding by Kupka. 1905 renamed Lustspieltheater. 1927 converted into a cinema and renamed Lustspielkino. 1938 renamed Film-Palast, later renamed Tegethoff-Kino and again Filmpalast. 800 seats. Destroyed by a fire in 1981. (English) / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Note: Built 1862 for the theatre director, Johann Fürst. Opened 21 Apr 1862. 1865 rebuilding, re-opened as Fürsttheater. 1893 renamed Jantsch-Theater after the theatre director, Heinrich Jantsch. 1898 rebuilding by Kupka. 1905 renamed Lustspieltheater. 1927 converted into a cinema and renamed Lustspielkino. 1938 renamed Film-Palast, later renamed Tegethoff-Kino and again Filmpalast. 800 seats. Destroyed by a fire in 1981. (English) / qualifier
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Latest revision as of 12:12, 11 September 2025

Theatre building in Vienna, Austria, opened in 1862
  • Lustspieltheater im Prater
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Lustspieltheater im Prater [Vienna]
Theatre building in Vienna, Austria, opened in 1862
  • Lustspieltheater im Prater

Statements

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48°13'2.280"N, 16°23'48.696"E
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Jantsch Theater.jpg
561 × 362; 18 KB
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Built 1862 for the theatre director, Johann Fürst. Opened 21 Apr 1862. 1865 rebuilding, re-opened as Fürsttheater. 1893 renamed Jantsch-Theater after the theatre director, Heinrich Jantsch. 1898 rebuilding by Kupka. 1905 renamed Lustspieltheater. 1927 converted into a cinema and renamed Lustspielkino. 1938 renamed Film-Palast, later renamed Tegethoff-Kino and again Filmpalast. 800 seats. Destroyed by a fire in 1981. (English)
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1862
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1927
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1981
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1981
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Volksprater, Praterhütte 45, Wien
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1862
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Timeline

 

Wikidata