When the
Austro-Hungarian Empire was at its peak, people paid heavily to make sure they would be remembered. Their obsession of a "schöne Leiche" (a beautiful corpse) prompted them to save money to ensure their send off was as grand as possible. In
Vienna in the 1900s more than eighty private funeral companies competed for the business of burying the city's citizens in one of the 52 cemeteries in the suburban area. In 1951 the
Bestattung Wien, or
Undertaking Service of Vienna, was appointed as the only funeral company in the city. The museum was founded in 1967 and designed in 1987 by Wittigo Keller. Located in the 4th district at Goldeggasse 19, near the
Belvedere, Vienna, it also houses the intriguing Vienna Undertakers' Museum, which contains more than 600 artifacts documenting the Viennese interest in death and burial. There are elaborate black uniforms and regalia worn by the
pallbearers, from the French pompes funèbres, as well as
hearses, wreaths, sashes, lanterns, torches, black flags, even an urn in the shape of a football and a "sitting coffin". A real curiosity on display in the Bestattungsmuseum is
the re-usable coffin instigated in 1784 by
Emperor Joseph II, in an attempt to save wood and to hasten
decomposition. The coffins were equipped with a trap underneath to drop the bodies in the graves and kept for another funeral. But the Viennese protests led to the cancellation of the law within six months. With court decree of 29 May 1825, it was decreed that every deceased had to be placed in a sealed coffin before being lowered into the ground. Another curiosity is a device whereby a cord; attached to the hand of the deceased would ring a bell above ground to prevent
premature burial, just in case the person wasn't really dead. To avoid this, some Viennese stipulated in their will that after death they should be stabbed in the heart with a sword. To this day, the city's hospital is still occasionally instructed to administer a
lethal injection after death to avoid premature burial. == The new location ==