1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
Politics

Austria sends large delegation to China

April 8, 2018

Austrian leaders have signed economic agreements worth €1.5 billion during a state visit to China. The delegation also included a 7-year-old musician and a violin used by the young Mozart.

Violinist Anna Cäcilia Pföss wearing a traditional Austrian dress while holding a violin
Image: picture-alliance/picturedesk.com/H. Neubauer

Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz and President Alexander Van der Bellen were received by Chinese President Xi Jinping on Sunday for political talks.

Kurz and Van der Bellen are at the head of what is the largest delegation in Austria's diplomatic history, with 250 members. The leaders planned to hold talks with Premier Li Keqiang among others during the state visit. Van der Bellen also planned to meet with Chinese human rights activists.

The delegation signed economic agreements worth some €1.5 billion ($1.84 billion) on Sunday involving 150 Austrian companies, reported the People's Daily Online.

Austria, which will hold the rotating EU presidency in the second half of this year, intends to focus on EU-Asian ties during that period. China is Austria's second largest non-European trade partner after the United States.

Young cultural ambassador

The visit also features a cultural note reflecting Austria's rich history as a musical nation: At a state banquet in Beijing, the 7-year-old Austrian musician Anna Cäcilia Pföss will perform on the violin used by the famous 18th-century Austrian composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart as a child.

"Anna Cäcilia Pföss will accompany us as a musical ambassador to China and will represent Austria as a cultural nation. I'm sure she will do an excellent job," Van der Bellen said on Friday before the delegation departed Austria.

Pföss' concert will include minuets by Mozart, who achieved fame early on as a brilliant pianist, violinist and composer. His first documented work is a minuet and trio for piano written when he was just 5 years old.

The young Mozart's violin was probably made around 1740, and was then owned by his sister, Maria Anna — better known as Nannerl — until 1820. It is normally exhibited in Mozart's birthplace in Salzburg.

Read more: Mozart's mysterious grave in Vienna 

A city tour of Salzburg

02:37

This browser does not support the video element.

kw, tj/jlw (dpa, AFP)

Each evening at 1830 UTC, DW's editors send out a selection of the day's hard news and quality feature journalism. You can sign up to receive it directly here.

 

Skip next section Explore more
Skip next section DW's Top Story

DW's Top Story

Skip next section More stories from DW