At the front of the square stands the Gate of Violence. It is made of
granite, as it was dragged by thousands of prisoners over the death stairs in the quarry of the
Mauthausen concentration camp. The sculpture on the left is intended to commemorate the victims of the mass murder perpetrated by the
National Socialists there and in other camps and prisons, as well as the victims of resistance and persecution for reasons of national, religious and ethnic origin, mental and physical disability, and sexual orientation. The group of figures on the right gate column is dedicated to the memory of all the victims of the war. The faceless body of a woman giving birth is supposed to symbolize the rebirth of Austria after the horrors of war. The first victims of the National Socialist rulers, along with the political opponents, were the
Jews. After the
Anschluss (annexation) of Austria to the
German Reich on 12 March 1938, Jews were forced to scrub the streets to remove pro-Austrian and anti-Nazi slogans. The bronze sculpture of a kneeling Jew scrubbing the street recalls this degradation and humiliation that preceded the merciless persecution and murder of Jewish citizens immediately after the
Anschluss. Orpheus enters Hades, a male figure rising in a block of marble, a memorial to the bomb victims and the sacrifices of those who resisted National Socialism at the risk of their lives. On 27 April 1945, when there was still fighting in western Austria, the representatives of the new or reconstituted political parties proclaimed the re-establishment of the
Republic of Austria in Vienna through the Austrian Declaration of Independence. Excerpts from the Declaration of Independence and the names of the men who signed it are perpetuated on the stone of the Republic. It is made of Mauthausen granite from the
Perg Trommelberg quarry, weighs 57 tons, is 8.4 meters high and is therefore the largest monolith ever supplied from the Mühlviertel quarries. == Gallery ==