The church is incorporated in the
Deutschordenshaus, the seat of the Order. Next to the cobbled inner courtyard is the
Schatzkammer (the Treasure Room), a real ecclesiastical treasure trove that has been turned into a museum, consisting of five rooms on the second floor. The different collections have been built by successive Grand Masters during eight centuries. They constitute one of the oldest treasure collections in Vienna, covering the Gothic,
Renaissance, and Baroque periods. The real start of the
Schatzkammer can be dated to 1525 when the Grand Master
Albert of Prussia converted to
Lutheranism and declared the collections his private property. The museum was reopened on 22 April 2006 after an extensive renovation. The first room displays Gothic coins, medals, seals, crosses, and a 13th-century coronation ring. The second room shows
chalices with silvery
filigree, but also some more extravagant features. There is a salt-cellar tree, made from red coral, hung with sharks' teeth. In medieval times these were thought to be fossilized
adders' tongues, able to detect poisoned food. Also remarkable are a number of vessels made of coconut shells, such one from
Goa with silver mountings and another one in
chinoiserie style. Also notable is a silver chain () for the sword carried by the members of the Order. It carries a hanger depicting the
Madonna and Child and the insignia of the Order. A precious table clock is adorned with
garnets and
turquoise and surrounded with a garland of gilded leaves. The other rooms contain a collection of oriental arms such as a
Sumatran
kris with a wavy blade and a rhino horn handle, carved in the shape of
Buddha with precious stones. Another valuable piece of the collection is the charter by
Pope Gregory IX from 1235, declaring Elisabeth of Thuringia a saint. Finally, there are several Gothic paintings and a
Carinthian woodcarving of
Saint George and the Dragon. The treasury is open on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays 10am-12noon, Wednesdays and Fridays 3-5pm. Image:Deutschordenshaus Wien 1733.jpg|Preceptory (
Deutschordenshaus) in 1733 (Drawing of S. Kleiner). Image:Wien Deutschordenskirche Flügelaltar 01.jpg|Winged triptych made in part by Jan van Wavere in 1520. Image:Wien Deutschordenskirche Flügelaltar Flügel L 01.jpg|
Capture of the Lord (detail of triptych) Image:Wien Deutschordenskirche Flügelaltar Flügel R 01.jpg|
Burial and resurrection of the Lord (detail of triptych) Image:Coronation of Virgin Mary with the Patron saints of the Teutonic Order Saint Elisabeth and Saint Georges - Tobias Pock.jpg|
Coronation of Saint Elisabeth of Thüringen by the Virgin Mary and Christ, together with
Saint George and
Saint Helena (
Tobias Pock, 1667). ==See also==