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If you’re looking for the macabre side of Europe, skip the hokey rip-off “torture museums” and visit a cemetery — they’re authentic, artsy and oozing with history. In honor of Halloween, here is a list of some of my favorites.

Pere Lachaise Cemetery, Paris: Littered with the tombstones of many of the city’s most illustrious dead, this is your best one-stop look at Paris’ fascinating, romantic past residents. The cemetery is relatively new, having opened in 1804. Today this city of the dead (population 70,000) still accepts new residents, probably those who had heart attacks after learning the price: A 21-square-foot plot costs more than $15,000.

The cemetery holds the remains of Frederic Chopin, Moliere, Edith Piaf, Gertrude Stein, Heloise and Abelard, and many more — but the grave of rock legend Jim Morrison is perhaps its most visited tomb. A funky bust of the rocker, which was stolen by fans, has been replaced with a more toned-down headstone. Another hot spot is Oscar Wilde’s final resting place. This writer and martyr to homosexuality is mourned by “outcast men” (as the inscription says) and by wearers of heavy lipstick, who cover his gravestone with kisses.

Catacombs of Priscilla, Rome: Of the countless catacombs honeycombing the ground just outside Rome’s ancient city walls, only five are open to the public. Most tourists and nearly all tour groups go out to the ancient Appian Way to see the catacombs of San Sebastiano and San Callisto, but the Catacombs of Priscilla (on the other side of town, northeast of the main train station) are less crowded and feel more intimate, as catacombs should.

Visitors enter from a convent and explore the result of 250 years of tunneling that occurred from the second to fifth centuries. The underground tunnels are rich in early Christian graffiti, such as doves, peacocks and fish, which functioned as a secret language. You will see a few thousand of the 40,000 niches carved here, along with some beautiful frescoes, including what is considered the first depiction of Mary nursing the baby Jesus.

Highgate Cemetery, London: Located in tea-cozy-cute Highgate, north of the city, this Victorian burial ground represents an offbeat piece of London history. Built as a private cemetery, it was the fashionable place to bury the wealthy dead in the late 1800s. It has themed mausoleums, professional mourners and several high-profile residents in its East Cemetery, including Karl Marx, George Eliot and Douglas Adams. The tomb of “Godfather of Punk” Malcolm McLaren (manager of the Sex Pistols) is often covered with rotten vegetables.

Monumental Cemetery, Milan: Europe’s most artistic and dreamy cemetery experience, this place was built just after Italy’s unification to provide a suitable final resting spot for the city’s “famous and well-deserving men.” It’s a long walk from Milan’s Garibaldi Metro station, but it’s worth it. Any cemetery is evocative, but this one with its superemotional portrayals of the deceased and their heavenly escorts (in art styles circa 1870-1930) is in a class by itself. It’s a vast garden art gallery of proud busts and grim reapers, heartbroken angels and weeping widows, frozen on yellowed black-and-white photos.

Kaisergruft, Vienna: For centuries, Vienna was the heart of a vast empire ruled by the Habsburg family, but visiting their imperial remains is not as easy as you might imagine. These original organ donors left their bodies — about 150 in all — in the Kaisergruft (the Imperial Crypt at the Capuchin Church), their hearts in the Augustinian Church (vaults closed to public), and their entrails in the crypt below St. Stephen’s Cathedral.

Unless you have a thing for organs preserved in alcohol, visit the Kaisergruft. You will find the tombs of all the Habsburg greats here. Flanking the appropriately austere military tomb of Emperor Franz Josef are the tombs of his son, the archduke Rudolf, and his wife, Empress Elisabeth. Rudolf and his teenage mistress supposedly committed suicide together, and it took considerable legal hair-splitting to win Rudolf a place in this consecrated space. Elisabeth, a 19th century version of Princess Diana, always gets the “Most Flowers” award.

When traveling, if you become dead tired of dusty art museums, rude waiters or ticket lines, don’t give up the ghost. Add some life to your European experience and visit a cemetery.

Rick Steves (ricksteves.com) writes European travel guidebooks and hosts travel shows on public television and public radio. Email him at rick@ricksteves.com and follow his blog on Facebook.