The first
Spinnerin am Kreuz is located in Vienna's 10th district (
Favoriten), as a legendary old landmark on Wienerberg hill. It was erected in 1375, according to plans by stonemason Meister
Michael Knab, but was temporarily destroyed in 1446. Five years later, in 1451/52 (?), it was re-erected in a new design, still using the old foundations, by
Hans Puchsbaum. (He also designed the short spire on
Stephansdom cathedral.) The purpose of this limestone pillar was to mark the southern border of Vienna and also provide a navigational landmark for faring folk. Before the limestone
bildstock was created, a wooden column had stood at this site, first mentioned in a document from 1296. The stone tower is a tall yet elaborately structured
tabernacle pillar on an octagonal cross-shaped floor plan. The tower is decorated with
pinnacles plus
baldachins, with groups of figures in the baldachins (The Crucifixion, The Scourging Of Christ, Christ Crowned With Thorns,
Ecce Homo). The general area of Wienerberg hill had been used as a place of execution (mostly by hanging) until the year 1747 and during 1804-1868. The Vienna tower has been restored or renovated several times. ==Stone tower in Wiener Neustadt==