!!!Fasching

Fasching (carnival), in Western Austria called "Fas(t)nacht", the 
period between Epiphany and the beginning of Lent on  Ash Wednesday. 
Carnival celebrations are characterised by music, dancing, the wearing 
of masks, masked parades, wearing clothing of the opposite gender, 
silliness and farcical court trials, the custom of "verkehrte Welt" 
and a general joie de vivre. The carnival reaches its high point in 
the last week, beginning on Thursday and continuing through the three 
"holy days of carnival" (Shrove Sunday through Tuesday before Ash 
Wednesday). Carnival customs include elements of old peasant culture, 
masked balls at court and late-medieval, early Renaissance fools' 
festivals held by tradesmen and guilds.

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In spite of the recent tendency toward uniformity to incorporate 
elements of the Rhenish Carnival (Carnival guilds, "royal couples", 
parades, and cabaret-like shows) and elements of the Villach Carnival 
(Carinthia) many local customs in Austria have remained, such as  
Blochziehen in South-east Austria, the carnival race and bear hunt in 
the Murtal valley in Styria, the "Fetzen-Fasching" ("Rag Carnival") in 
Ebensee, the carnival custom in Aussee of wearing the characteristic 
masks, "Pless", "Trommelweiber" und "Flinserl", the "Fasching der 
Vereinigten" in Tamsweg or the carnival dance with its custom of 
satirically "reprimanding" carnival participants on  Rudenkirtag in 
Sierning near Steyr. Larger parades held in Tyrol every few years are 
also very popular, named for the characteristic masks to be seen 
there; the mask names include  "Schleicherlaufen" in Telfs,  
"Schemenlaufen" in Imst, "Schellerlaufen" in Nassereith, 
"Mullerlaufen" or "Huttlerlaufen" in Thaur und "Wampelerreiten" in 
Axams. Carnival celebration in urban area, in particular in Vienna, 
are characterised by dances and balls.

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Carnival ends in some areas with a symbolic "Fasching-Begraben" burial 
ceremony, "Fasching-Verbrennen" burning ceremony or the custom of 
"Geldbeutelwaesche" ("purse washing") on Ash Wednesday. In parts of 
Tyrol and Vorarlberg, carnival lasts until "Funkensonntag" (the first 
Sunday of Lent, also called "Holepfannsonntag" or "Scheibensonntag"), 
when piles of wood are set on fire, a doll ("Hex", or "witch") is 
burned and burning wood chips are thrown into the valley  
Scheibenschlagen).

!Literature
A. Doerrer, Tiroler Fasnacht, 1949; F. Grieshofer, 
F.-Brauchtum, in: Oesterr. Volkskundeatlas, 5%%sup th/%  edition, 
1974. - O. Bockhorn, Umzug der "Markter Trommelweiber" in Bad Aussee, 
1977; H. Fielhauer, Die "Pless", 1977 (both educational films of the 
OeWF).


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