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You don’t need to wait for Christmas to get in the holiday spirit in Salzburg, Austria. The advent season is full of cheer and traditions (some of which pre-date Christianity altogether!).

Christkindlmarkts — stalls selling homemade crafts, ornaments, local food specialties like leberkase and hot mulled wine called gluhwein – line several squares in the city, and special concerts and choir performances fill the air daily.

Revelers roam the street dressed as Krampusse – strange (and slightly menacing) shaggy creatures that symbolize the pagan alpine goddess, Perchta. If you touch them or get swatted, consider yourself lucky – they are thought to bring good luck, and are also said to scare away the evil spirits before the arrival of St. Nick.

Once you spend a few days here, it’s not hard to understand how Joseph Mohr, a native Salzburger who wrote the lyrics to “Silent Night,” came up with that atmospheric carol, which was first performed in nearby Oberndorf in 1818 (you can still visit the chapel where it debuted).

Watch this short film by National Geographic photographer Bob Krist to get a taste of Salzburg during the Advent season:

Advent in Salzburg from Bob Krist on Vimeo.

See more of Bob’s stunning work at bobkrist.com.

Comments

  1. Nancy D. Brown
    San Francisco, California
    December 14, 8:54 pm

    Magical video!

  2. Johanna Bradley
    http://www.restlessjo.wordpress.com
    December 16, 10:51 am

    Yes, that’s Christmas alright! Those horses were looking pretty damp when we were in Saltzburg last- one May, many years ago.

  3. Paul Zink
    Gloucester, MA
    December 18, 9:01 pm

    Lovely video, captures some of the the unique spirit of Salzburg. However, I was rather expecting to hear part of a Mozart Divertimento or piano sonata as the soundtrack…