About this route
Route overview
Mariazell is the most famous Marian shrine in Austria and one of the most important pilgrimage places of Central Europe, set in the heart of Upper Styria at 870 m above sea level in the Mariazellerland (the Alpine pilgrimage region). The shrines tradition goes back to 21 December 1157 — according to legend the Benedictine monk Magnus of St. Lambrecht carrying a miraculous statue of the Mother of God settled in a valley under a pine and set up a cella for Mary (German Maria Zell), founding the place of cult. The miraculous Mariazeller Magna Mater Austriae (48 cm, lime wood, around 1200) — in the main altar of the Basilica of the Nativity of Mary inside the richly decorated Gnadenkapelle (Chapel of Grace), her dress changed for each liturgical season (200+ vestments donated by monarchs, including Maria Theresa and the pope). The three-nave Romanesque-Gothic basilica of 1200 with Domenico Sciassis Baroque rebuild 1644 (3 towers, a facade), the Mariazell treasury with the gold gifts of pilgrims (Pope John Paul II 1983), monstrances and chasubles. Mariazell received the official title of Magna Mater Austriae (Great Mother of Austria) from Pope Paul VI in 1971, Magna Domina Hungarorum (Great Lady of the Hungarians) and Magna Mater Gentium Slavorum — a shrine of significance beyond Austria. The Mariazellerbahn — a historic narrow-gauge railway from St. Pölten to Mariazell across the Alps (84 km, over 100 years old, one of Europes oldest electric railways). 130 km via the A1 motorway to Mürzzuschlag and then the B20 and B21 Alpine switchbacks, 1 h 45 min. The service runs 24/7. A standard plan: 9:00 Vienna pickup, 11:00 a pilgrim Mass or prayer before the miraculous statue at the Mariazell Basilica, 12:30 lunch at Mariazeller Lebkuchen Pirker (1686, the oldest gingerbread maker in the region), 14:00 Treasury and Schatzkammer, 15:00 an evening service or a walk in the town, 17:00 return to Vienna. From EUR 580 in a Mercedes E-Class for 1-3 passengers, EUR 720 in a V-Class for 4-6.