Standing in a small museum on the grounds of Viennaβs sprawling SchΓnbrunn Palace, Iβm staring at a beautiful dress that has the teeniest waist imaginable. Itβs most likely the long-lost wedding dress of Sisi, the royal rebel who married an emperor at 16 and whose colourful life has inspired movies and shows, including Netflixβs popular series, The Empress.
The opulent SchΓnbrunn Palace opened its doors to tourists looking to spend the night like Emperor Franz Josef and Empress Sisi.Credit: Reuters
Sisi, or Elisabeth, often referred to as a 19th-century Princess Diana, was obsessed with her appearance. She had a 50-centimetre waist, followed an exercise regime and adopted a strict diet. I actually feel breathless looking at the petite dress, which seems to shine in the dimly lit interior of the Imperial Carriage Museum.
The beautiful gold-and-silk wedding train is original, acquired from a descendant of the royal family, but the wedding dress Sisi wore has been a mystery until recently.
Museum director Monica Kurzel-Runtscheiner, who spent years trying to track down the wedding dress, says there were no trustworthy descriptions of it as the royal wedding was private. By chance, a Spanish researcher discovered an 1857 portrait of Sisi in a wedding dress and train in the Czech Republic. Once the portrait was verified, the director found someone to replicate the dressβs design. While this was definitely one of Sisiβs dresses, the director is still hoping to prove it was worn at the wedding.
Later, when I visit the Sisi Museum, part of the huge Hofburg Palace, the Empress really comes alive. The Sisi myth started when Emperor Franz Joseph fell in love with his 15-year-old cousin and insisted on marrying her β not her sister, as planned.
A silver brush that was used on her ankle-length hair is on display, as are the instruments she used to care for her teeth.
It was a love match that captivated Europe and the museum contains more than 300 of Sisiβs personal items. Itβs fascinating to see the timber gymnastic apparatus on which she worked out, much to the horror of the court. A silver brush that was used on her ankle-length hair is on display, as are the instruments she used to care for her teeth.
I see the desk where she wrote poetry and learn about some of her bizarre beauty routines: for example, she slept with slices of raw veal on her face. Next, I stroll to the Church of the Augustinian Friars, where Sisi and Franz Joseph were married. Thereβs an evocative smell of incense and the bells are ringing as I enter. The church, renowned for its music, dates from the 14th century and was redone in its now-gothic interior in the 18th century.
Vienna is also famous for its grand 19th-century cafes. I pass the queue at the iconic Cafe Central and head instead to Demel, a cake shop on Kohlmarkt Street, one of Sisiβs favourites. She loved candied violets (sugared violet flowers still on sale today), which Mr Demel himself used to deliver to the palace. Upstairs, the cafe is buzzing and I order some Viennese favourites β a fluffy melange coffee and a slice of sachertorte.