Persecution of Jews in Austria

Roman emperors
Under Christian emperors, Jews were persecuted in the Roman Empire, which included forbidding Jews from marrying Christians, restricting Jewish ownership of slaves, and punishing those that converted from Christianity to Judaism.

Host desecration accusations
Jews were murdered after accusations of host desecration in Laa in 1294, Korneuburg in 1306, Wolfsberg in 1338, Salzburg and Hallein in 1404. After an accusation in 1420, Duke Albert V issued the Vienna Gesera (Viennese Decree) that had imprisoned, burned, and banished Jews from Austria. He ordered the children of the murdered Jews to be forcibly baptized into Christianity. Albert V later bragged: “... I burned my Jews.”

Persecution of Jews during the Black Death
Jews were falsely blamed for the Black Death or bubonic plague pandemic in Europe during the mid-1300s. They were persecuted and massacred. Jews were often used by Christians to blame due to their resentment of them considering the antisemitic Christian belief that Jews as a people hold the responsibility for killing Jesus Christ or Jewish deicide. Many Jews were murdered in Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Poland, Spain, Switzerland, and the Netherlands.

Maximilian I
Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I (who reigned from the late 15th to early 16th century) decreed the expulsion of Jews from Styria.

Ferdinand I
Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor, expelled Jews from Lower Austria.

Ferdinand II
Jews of Vienna were forced to live in a ghetto in 1625 by the Holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand II.

Karl Lueger
Karl Lueger, the mayor of Vienna (1897-1910), pursued antisemitic practices, mostly by not employing Jews in the city services and limiting them from educational institutions. Lueger supported politicians who actively perpetuated the myth that Jews ritually sacrificed Christian children and supported a bill against Jewish immigration from Russia and Romania. He also founded a Christian antisemitic political party.