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up to 525 persons

640 m² area

The Carabini Hall

Life as theatre

up to 525 persons

640 m² area

The Carabinieri Hall – 50m long, 12m wide and equally high – is the largest room in the Residenz. As ever, it is the first room to pass through on the way to the inner sanctum of the archiepiscopal private quarters.

The hall is so called because the bodyguard of Prince-Archbishop Wolf Dietrich von Raitenau (1587-1612) was stationed here. Established after the model of the papal Swiss Guard, this was a mounted guard, equipped with leather shields, halberds and wheel-lock carbines. Some of these weapons are displayed in a show-case on a side wall.

From the beginning, this hall was the scene of grand celebrations and balls, expressing baroque joie de vivre and demonstrating the court's prestige. Theatrical performances were an integral part of festive occasions, and Monteverdi's L'Orfeo, staged here in 1614, was the very first opera performance north of the Alps.

The power of the rulers and their status within the Holy Roman Empire was magnificently emphasised in the ceiling fresco by Johann Michael Rottmayr, dating from the late 17th century. The four elements (earth, water, air and fire) are represented in the mythological  journey of Aeneas to Italy. Mastery of the elements, and thus of the world, symbolises the absolutist self-conception and claim to power of Salzburg's spiritual and secular rulers.

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Rooms
Carabinieri Hall 525 170 396 123 114 376 525 50x12 640,80
Knights Hall 250 108 160 64 69 186 250 25x10 254,18
Conference Hall 160 76 99 40 44 120 160 14,94x12,82 189,26
Antecamera 60 27 55 34 21 56 60 10,05x9,85 99,19
Audience Hall 90 48 90 42 36 30 100 13,79x9,84 134,97
Throne Room 120 48 132 52 52 120 120 20,24x8,76 177,44
White Hall 120 48 108 48 42 96 120 19,46x8,80 171,48
Imperial Hall 150 89 88 56 48 88 150 19,42x9,11 176,35
Inner courtyard with arcades 525 - - - - - 525 - 1.070