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Sigmund Freud Museum Vienna

Sigmund Freud Museum Vienna

Step inside the apartment where psychoanalysis was born, at Berggasse 19 in Vienna's ninth district.
Location Vienna

At Berggasse 19 in Vienna's ninth district stands the apartment where Sigmund Freud lived, treated patients, and wrote the foundational texts of psychoanalysis for 47 consecutive years. Freud moved here in 1891 with his wife Martha, their six children, and his sister-in-law Minna Bernays, and it was within these rooms that he produced landmark works including The Interpretation of Dreams (1900), Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality (1905), and Beyond the Pleasure Principle (1920). He received patients in the adjoining surgery — the very setting in which the therapeutic model of the analyst's couch and free association took shape — until the Nazi annexation of Austria in March 1938 forced him into exile in London, where he died the following year.

The museum, which opened in 1971 and underwent an extensive 18-month renovation before reopening in 2020, preserves the original floor plan of the apartment and surgery across a single floor of the building. Because Freud took the majority of his furniture and personal effects with him when he fled — including his famous couch, a gift from a patient that now resides at the Freud Museum London — many rooms are deliberately spare. That absence is itself curated as a statement: the emptied spaces stand as a memorial to Nazi-era displacement. Key original fittings survive throughout, and archival photographs displayed room by room show exactly how each space looked during Freud's occupancy. The waiting room retains its original wall panelling, and the study preserves the layout in which Freud worked surrounded by his collection of antiquities. A virtual reconstruction allows visitors to experience the couch in situ without leaving Berggasse 19.

The museum holds the world's most significant collection of Freud-related primary material: original manuscripts, early editions, correspondence, professional instruments, and an extensive photographic archive spanning his childhood in Freiberg (now Příbor, Czech Republic) through his final months in Hampstead. Rotating temporary exhibitions broaden the frame to examine the cultural and intellectual milieu of fin-de-siècle Vienna — the same city that simultaneously produced Klimt, Mahler, Wittgenstein, and Arthur Schnitzler — situating Freud within the broader collapse of Habsburg certainties and the rise of European modernism.

The museum is located a short walk from the U4 Rossauer Lände station and is well served by tram lines D and 37. Audio guides are available in multiple languages, and the on-site shop is genuinely one of Vienna's better museum shops, stocked with scholarly editions, facsimile documents, and psychoanalysis-themed objects that go well beyond the usual souvenir fare. Visitors with a particular interest in Jewish Vienna can combine the visit with the nearby Jewish Museum Vienna on Dorotheergasse, as Freud's biography is inseparable from the city's Jewish intellectual history.

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