Prague Guide Book

Page 1

1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Strรกnka 1


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Strรกnka 2


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 3

Walk No.1

Walk No.4

Walk No.7

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.

(Walk has its own map)

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

Wenceslas Square Statue of St. Wenceslas National Museum Radio Free Europe State Opera Estates Theatre Charles University House of the Black

Madonna 9. Municipal House 10. Powder Tower 11. Celetná Street 12. Crosses 13. Astronomical Clock

1. Old-New Synagogue 2. Old Jewish Cemetery 3. Pinkas Synagogue 4. Klaus Synagogue 5. Burial Society Hall 6. Jewish Town Hall 7. High Synagogue 8. Spanish Synagogue 9. Franz Kafka Memorial 10. House of the Unicorn 11. Goltz-Kinsky Palace 12. House of the Minute 13. Celetná 3

Church of St. Francis Old Town Bridge Tower Calvary St. John of Nepomuk Brunswick Kampa Square

7. Vojanovy Sady 8. Wallenstein Palace 9. Wallenstein Gardens 10. Kampa Island 11. Devil's Creek Millwheel 12. Church of Virgin Mary Under the Chain 13. Infant Jesus of Prague 14. Entrance to St. Nicholas

Walk No.2

Walk No.5

1. Congress Centre 2. Tábor Gate 3. Leopold Gate

(Walk has its own map)

1. Ungelt Courtyard 2. T˘n Church

1. Malostranská kavárna 2. Lesser Quarter Town Hall

4. 5. 6. 7.

3. 4. 5. 6.

3. Smifiick˘-Montág Palace

Rotunda of St. Martin Vy‰ehrad Cemetery Karlach Park Devil's Pillar

8. Libu‰e's Baths 9. Brick Gate 10. Neklanova 30 11. Neklanova 2 12. Cubist House and Garden 13. Chochol Villa 14. Vy‰ehradská Street 15. Botanical Gardens 16. Emmaus Monastery 17. Faust's House 18. Dvofiák Museum 19. New Town Hall 20. Church of St. Cyril and St. Methodius

Walk No.3 1. Café Slavia 2. National Theatre 3. 4. 5. 6.

Marksmen's Island Goethe Institute Slavonic Island BoÏena Nûmcová

Memorial 7. Îofín 8. Masaryk Embankment 26 9. Masaryk Embankment 16 10. Mánes 11. Fred and Ginger Building

House of the Stone Bell Goltz-Kinsky Palace Pauline Convent Jan Hus Monument

7. St. Nicholas Church 8. Old Town Hall 9. House of the Blue Star 10. House of the Golden Unicorn 11. House of the Stone Table

Walk No.6 (Walk has its own map)

1. 2. 3. 4.

Small Square Rott House The Golden Tiger Montmartre Café

5. Theatre on the Ballustrade 6. Clam-Gallas Palace 7. House of the Golden Well 8. House of the Blue Pike 9. House of the Golden Serpent 10. Italian Chapel 11. Church of St. Clement 12. Church of the Saviour 13. Clementinum 14. Memorial of Swedish Invasion 15. Chapel of Mirrors 16. Entrance to Clementinum 17. Charles's Baths 18. Smetana Museum

Walk No.8

4. House of the Three Little Fiddles 5. Bretfeld Palace 6. House of the Two Suns 7. Departure Point for Walk No. 9 8. Castle Information Centre 9. St. Vitus Cathedral 10. Old Royal Palace 11. Basilica of St. George 12. Golden Lane 13. Powder Tower

Walk No.9 1. 2. 3. 4.

Funicular Paradise Gardens Archbishop's Palace Loreto Chapel

5. 'New World' 6. Strahov Monastery 7. Petfiín Observatory Tower 8. The Hunger Wall 9. Mozart Museum 10. Church of the Sacred Heart 11. Vinohrady 12. Giant Metronome 13. Technical Museum 14. Convent of St. Agnes 15. Church of St. Castullus

Shopping Areas


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 4

Get toPrague know Some of these people have been waiting to meet you for ten centuries! Nonetheless, your guide to Prague – compliments of Visa – has been designed for your busy schedule, and it covers everything from postmodern architecture to medieval legends. But use caution: Going on just one of these short walks may inspire you to extend your stay! The world’s best way to travel


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 5

CONTENTS Walk No.1 – Going Back in Time See where Václav Havel first spoke to the people during the Velvet Revolution. This introductory excursion starts in the present and takes you into Prague’s metaphysical past. Walk No.2 – Stepping Into the Legend The Premyslids. Explore an ancient keep shrouded in myth that formed the Czech national identity. Later, the walk will take you into the New Town. Chochol and unique Cubist architecture. Walk No.3 – Strolling by the Riverside Find out how Janáãek and Dvofiák got their start and why Smetana became a national hero even though Czech was not his strong language. Czech Surrealists. How does Frank Gehry fit into all this? Walk No.4 – Exploring Jewish Prague Rabbi Loew and the Kabbala. Kafka, Freud and Einstein under the same roof. Did you know that Albert Einstein was also an excellent violin player? Walk No.5 – Entering the Old Town Imagine the town as it was a thousand years ago. Then, at a leisurely pace, look around the Old Town Square and uncover the secrets of time. Walk No.6 – Following the King’s Road Trace the steps of Bohemian monarchs. Hear the tale of King Wenceslas’s daring escape from rebelling burghers and look into the theatre where Václav Havel drew inspiration for his plays. Walk No.7 – Crossing the Bridge The most beautiful medieval bridge in Europe? You be the judge. Then, visit the secluded side streets and gardens of the Lesser Quarter. Learn how General Wallenstein’s power-mongering caused his demise. Walk No.8 – Taking the Castle Cafe windows give a view of the palace where Thirty Years’ War began. The royal citadel. Alchemists and the Golden Lane where Kafka wrote The Castle. Walk No.9 – Visiting the Outskirts The best views of the magical city. Josip Pleãnik, the president’s architect, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Stalin all on one tour. Impossible? Not in Prague. Shopping for Czech Arts & Crafts A finely-cut Bohemian crystal vase, Franz Kafka marionette, replica of a medieval ceramic chalice, gilded Easter egg and other unique gift ideas. What to get and where to get it. Your guide to Prague's finest restaurants from Gourmet

Photographs by Miroslav Krob Jr., Guide text by Jan Jonak © Visa - All information was correct at the time of going to press. Visa can take no responsibility for accurancy of that infor mation.


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 6

Walk No.1 Going back in time Take the A or C metro line to Muzeum. When you exit the station you will find yourself at the top

adjoining streets offer a number of night-

of Wenceslas Square,

clubs, cinemas and other venues.

1 the commercial

If you look uphill, you will see

centre of town and

the domed National Museum 3 looming

historically an

above you. Unfortunately, centralised urban

important assembly

planning under the communist regime

point for the Czechs.

devised a highway that effectively cuts off the

Here Václav Havel, the

3

At night, retail makes way for entertainment. Wenceslas Square and the

landmark from the square. On the far side of the road is

dissident who

the former National Assembly, currently the

became President,

headquarters of Radio Free Europe. 4

spoke to the people

Further down along the highway is the ornate

massed on the

yellow State Opera, 5 which occupies a

square during the Velvet Revolution eleven

theatre originally built in 1888 to entertain

years ago. The square and the statue of St.

Prague's German community.

Wenceslas on horseback 2 also witnessed

The 'city of a thousand spires' –

less fondly remembered events: The arrival of

not as you might know it from postcards but

Soviet tanks in 1968 as well as the

the real thing – awaits when you walk down

triumphant march of invading German troops

the sloping square towards the Old Town.

shortly before the outset of World War II. Today, the square is regularly invaded by mobs of shoppers looking for value at its department stores, small shops, boutiques and bookshops.


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 7

9

Going back in time When you enter the pedestrian zone at the bottom of Wenceslas Square

its spacious cafe or explore its elegant interior. On your way to the Municipal House

make certain you follow your map to the

you will pass by the Powder Tower, 10 one

Estates Theatre. 6 Mozart's Don Giovanni

of the former gates to the Old Town.

premiered here in 1787, only six years after

However, you have two other

the theatre opened. Two centuries later the

alternate routes to choose from when leaving

building was a shooting location for Milo‰

the Black Madonna. One takes you across

Forman's Oscar-winning film Amadeus.

Celetná and through the Templova passage

Across the street from the

deeper into Old Town to explore the quiet side

Estates Theatre is an administration building

streets. Your other option is to go down

of Charles University. 7 Founded in 1348 by

Celetná, 11 a major commercial

Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor and King of

thoroughfare for centuries, to the Old Town

Bohemia, it is one of the oldest universities

Square, the heart of the historical town centre.

north of the Alps; although at first glance this particular hall would tempt one to believe otherwise. The present-day university is spread throughout the town centre. If you choose to walk down Ovocn˘ trh you will find the House of the Black Madonna, home to the museum of Czech Cubism. 8 At this point in the walk you have several options. If twentieth century architecture is what you enjoy, you shouldn't miss the Municipal House, 9 one of Prague's foremost Art Nouveau buildings. Recently restored to its original splendour, the gorgeously decorated building is just a few steps away. You can take a breather inside

6


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 StrĂĄnka 8

Going back in time the city, stop to see the mechanical wonder

Old Town Square and the adjoining streets have so much to offer it is

of late medieval engineering: The

best to look through your guide so you can

Astronomical Clock. 13 Along with the main

choose the places you want to visit and set

dial that shows Central European time,

your priorities. In the Old Town quarter your

a wheel with signs of the zodiac turns inside

every footstep is a leap into history.

the display revealing the position of the stars.

On your way across the square

The outer ring of the clock, marked with

you will pass a group of 27 white crosses

Arabic numerals, calculates the time from the

embedded in the pavement next to the Old

precise moment of sundown. If you come on

Town Hall. 12

the hour, you will see the twelve apostles

On this spot,

take turns peeking out from two small doors

27 Czech

above the clock. At the same time, figures

Protestant

symbolising Death, Vanity, Greed, and an

noblemen were

Ottoman invader placed around the clock

beheaded in

move with the sound of the bells. The Grim

1621 by

Reaper tolls a bell and turns an hourglass

a Habsburg

signifying that the time has come for the

decree – an

remaining figures

13

who shake their

event that ended the first phase of the Thirty Years' War and began the return of Bohemia to Catholicism. Unique paving-stone patterns are something to look out for when strolling through the city: Designs and symbols on the pavement commemorate historical events and speak of legends. Before you go inside the Old Town Hall and climb its tower to overlook

12

heads in denial.


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 9

Walk No.2 Stepping Into the Legend When you leave the back tract of

1140 onwards, when the seat of Czech kings

the Congress Centre 1 by Na Buãance Street

was permanently moved to the Prague

and then turn right at Na Pankráci you will

Castle, Vy‰ehrad played second fiddle.

soon encounter Vy‰ehrad (High Castle),

A century after Charles IV's reconstruction of

a keep full of old Slavonic myths, which played

the citadel it was razed by Hussite forces.

an important role in the defence of the city.

Entering through the Tábor Gate 2 past the outer fortifications you will soon pass through the more ornate Leopold Gate, 3 built by Italian architects in 1678, which guarded the interior of the fortress. Further along in V pevnosti Street is the Romanesque Rotunda of St. Martin (11th century), 4 the oldest standing building at Vy‰ehrad. Take note of a Prussian cannonball lodged in the stonework near the upper window of the rotunda.

4

Myths and legends surrounding the fortress were an inspiration for a number Much of the mystery

of artists during the national revival era:

surrounding Vy‰ehrad that particularly

Bedfiich Smetana in music, Alois Jirásek in

appeals to Czech national pride sprang up

literature and MikolበAle‰ in painting.

during the reign of Charles IV (1346 – 78).

Further down this road is the neo-Gothic

This Czech King and Holy Roman Emperor

church of St. Peter and St. Paul, which

heavily fortified the castle and also quite

adjoins the Vy‰ehrad cemetery, 5 a gallery

probably had court historians set the legend

of who's who in Czech arts.

of Libuse's prophecy about the greatness of Prague, at the site of his Premyslid ancestors' fabled birthplace. Several early Premyslid kings did indeed rule from Vy‰ehrad and also had a mint there. From


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 10

1

5

Stepping Into the Legend Smetana and Dvofiák are two of

Trastevere (one of the pillars is missing to this

the many music composers, musicians and

day). For this trespass St. Peter repeatedly

operatic divas buried here. The painter Alfons

struck him down into the sea near Venice on

Mucha and the sculptor J.V. Myslbek

his way back to Prague. So when the Devil

represent the visual arts, and literary figures

got back to Vy‰ehrad, the mass had just

include the poet Mácha, Jan Neruda and

finished. Enraged, he threw the pillar through

Karel âapek (the inventor of the word robot).

the roof into the nave of the St. Peter and St.

The Slavin monument (Pantheon), a common

Paul Church and it broke into three pieces.

tomb inside the cemetery designed and

As you stroll along the

completed by Antonin Wiehl in the 1890s,

battlements, drinking in the view of the Vltava

honours prominent Czech artists and thinkers.

and Prague suburbs, take note of the rocky

Remnants of a Romanesque

outcrop at the most westerly point of the

bridge across the road from the Peter

fortification and the ruined stone building

and Paul Church point the way into Karlach

known as Libu‰e's Baths. 8 Another

Park, 6 the display ground for statues of

Vy‰ehrad legend has it that in time of most

mythical Czech ancestors by Myslbek.

dire need, knights who are trapped inside the

Around the corner in another part of the quiet

cliff will come out – at Libu‰e's command – to

green park is the 'Devil's Pillar,' 7 a structure

the rescue of the Bohemian kingdom.

consisting of three broken stone columns that lean against each other and which might have been used as a sundial by the Premyslids. One of the many tales about the origin of the pillar involves, naturally enough, the Devil: A priest accrued heavy debts in gambling and to pay for them he bet Satan that he could serve a mass faster than the Horned One could bring a pillar from St. Peter's Cathedral in Rome. In order to get the priest's soul as fast as possible, the Devil cheated and took a pillar from Santa Maria in

6


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 11

10

the Botanical Gardens 15 in the university quarter or continue towards Karlovo námûstí (Charles Square). On your way up the hill towards the square, you will pass the Emmaus Monastery 16 on your left. Two sky-bound spires of a church near the building which is currently the home to the Czech Academy of Sciences dominate this part of the city skyline. Once on Charles Square, the largest square in Prague, the first noteworthy building you will come across is the pink, Baroque Faust's House, 17 where the alchemist Edward Kelly stayed during his employ by Rudolf II. Since the New Town is the most spread-out area for sightseeing in the city, there are several choices to be

Stepping Into the Legend

made. You can visit the Dvofiák Museum inside the Villa Amerika 18 in Ke Karlovu Street or cross Charles Square lengthwise to

Descending from Vy‰ehrad down the winding Vratislavova Street from

see where a mob led by the reformer priest

the Brick Gate 9 on the north battlement,

Jan Îelivsk˘ threw the mayor of the New

visit Neklanova Street, which branches off

Town and his councillors out a window of the

from Vratislavova further down the hill.

New Town Hall, 19 thus starting off the

Neklanova 30 is the address of a Cubist

Hussite revolution in 1419. Another option is to go down

apartment building 10 designed and completed by Josef Chochol in 1912 – 13.

Resslova Street to pay homage to Czech

The facade of house No. 2 on the same

agents sent by the government-in-exile in

street is another Cubist project from the

London, who, in 1942, assassinated

same period. 11 Nearby there is an

Reinhard Heydrich, the head Nazi in the

impressive Cubist house and garden 12 at

Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, and

the corner of Ra‰ínovo nábfieÏí and

after several weeks in hiding were cornered

Vnislavova where Chochol managed to make

at the Orthodox Church of St. Cyril and St.

the best possible use of an oddly-shaped

Methodius 20 by the Gestapo. The

property. Last, but not least, an additional

assassination brought a brutal retaliation by

Chochol villa on Ra‰ínovo nábfieÏí

the occupying forces and the Nazis

underneath the Vy‰ehrad rock tops off this

massacred, deported and levelled a whole

reservation of Cubist landmarks. 13

village outside of Prague (Lidice), among other severe reprisals.

From here, your best bet to continue the walk is to go back along the waterfront and up Vy‰ehradská 14 for two blocks into the New Town. When you reach Na Slupi, you can visit

18

19


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 12

1 1

Walk No.3 Strolling Along the Waterfront

The Absinthe Drinker looks

Across Národní tfiída (National

through the misty embodiment of his muse

Avenue) is the neo-Renaissance National

– some call the green figure in the painting

Theatre, built with private donations from

'the bad mood' – at the Cafe Slavia, 1 one

those in sympathy with the emerging Czech

of the former meeting places for dissidents

nationalism. Foundation stones for the building were brought in from important

2

historical sites in Bohemia and Moravia in 1868. However, a fire destroyed much of the new building just a few weeks after it opened to the public in 1881, and the theatre had to be completed two years later under the supervision of Josef Schulz, who also designed the National Museum and the Museum of Decorative Arts. Opening night premiere was Bedfiich Smetana's Libu‰e, an opera based on a tale about the grand future of Prague

and students during the Velvet Revolution.

predicted by the Premyslid soothsayer

The riverside windows of the cafe offer

Libu‰e. Paradoxically, Smetana, who grew

a dramatic view of the Prague Castle and

up speaking German, never fully mastered

Petfiín Hill and the Národní tfiída side looks

the Czech language. More than thirty years

onto the National Theatre. 2 Národní was

later, in 1916, Leo‰ Janáãek finally received

where security police cordoned off and

critical acclaim with JenÛfa, an opera he

battered demonstrating students in

had written in 1903. In fact, even Antonín

November, 1989, effectively launching more

Dvofiák got an early start with the

unrest. Theatres in Prague went on strike to

provisional National Theatre Orchestra

express solidarity with the students, the

before the building was completed. He

protests escalated and within a week nearly

played the viola under the baton of Smetana

a million Czechs gathered at Letná Plain,

in the 1860s.

toppling the government.


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 13

7

Strolling Along the Waterfront Looking down the Most Legií

Across the road from the

(Bridge of the Legions) from the National

Institute is a small bridge that leads to the

Theatre you will see Marksmen's Island, 3

Slavonic Island, 5 the former centre of

first used as a firing range in 1476. The

numerous social and Nationalist festivities

island is now a peaceful city park with an

in the mid-1800s. A Pan-Slavic Congress

outdoor cinema. Masarykovo nábfieÏí

chaired by the prominent Czech thinker

(Masaryk Embankment), named after the first

Franti‰ek Palack˘ was held on the island in

Czech president, offers an impressive

June 1848. The Congress was cut short

selection of early 20th century architecture

when an uprising in the city was

ranging from Art Nouveau to neo-

suppressed by the Austrian army.

Renaissance, and is also one of the most

One end of the island displays

pleasant parts of Prague to walk in.

a bronze memorial to BoÏena Nûmcová, 6

Masarykovo nábfieÏí No. 32 is a Secession

the most prominent woman writer of the

building from 1905 initially built for a bank; it

Czech ‘national awakening.’ Descend the

housed the East German Embassy until

steps to the river and you will find row boats

1990, and is now home to the Goethe

for rent here as at other accessible parts of

Institute. 4

the Vltava. Another set of stairs from this wooded island park leads you to a wellhidden outdoor cafe on a moored river raft. The Îofín concert and dance hall 7 is situated on the opposite side of the island. The hall was built in 1886, but with the opening of the Rudolfinum, a spacious Italian neo-Renaissance concert hall and gallery down river, home to the Czech Philharmonic and also the main venue for Prague Spring Music Festival, the Slavonic island lost some of its social prominence, but Îofín is still the place for a number of regular

10

societal balls, concerts and fashion shows.


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 14

1

4

Strolling Along the Waterfront Walking up river from the

functionalist Mánes building. 10 The art

Slavonic Island you will come across the

centre, named after the landscape painter

eclectic architectural styles Prague is

Josef Mánes, was built in the 1920s and was

known for. Not only the facades, but also

closely linked with progressive Czech art

the grand interiors are worth getting a peek

movements. The Mánes Association of

at. Masarykovo nábfieÏí No. 26 has a finely

Artists was founded in opposition to the Czech Academy of Arts at the end of the 19th century. Its members included Emil Filla,

11

Otto Gutfreund and Bohumil Kubi‰ta. The Association brought cosmopolitan elements into the Czech arts scene and the first major exhibition organised by the independents was that of Auguste Rodin in 1902. Edvard Munch followed in 1905. The first surrealist exhibition, titled Poetry 1932, included the works of Dali, Klee and Giacometti. The 'local' art scene was represented by ·t˘rsk˘ and Toyen among others. Avant-garde intellectuals Karel Teige and Vítûzslav Nezval held meetings at Mánes in the 1930s and the Association also hosted the likes of Paul Eluard and Andre Breton. Last stop on the walk is the Tanãící dum (Fred and Ginger Building). 11 The much-debated office building was

crafted Art Nouveau facade with plastic

completed in 1994, under the auspices of

motifs of owls and monkeys. 8 A colourful

President Václav Havel who owned the

mosaic near the roof and ornamentation

property. Vlado Miluniç's design was co-

surrounding the doorway of House No. 16

authored by Frank Gehry and the building

repays a closer look. 9

was erected on a lot that had been levelled

A Gothic water tower that was redesigned with Renaissance motifs and topped with a Baroque roof rises above the

during a bombing raid by the US Air Force in February 1945.


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 15

2

Walk No.4 Exploring Jewish Prague ‘A town built of stone and mortar

the Old-New Synagogue, 1 where Rabbi

where things are extraordinarily cheap, where

Loew (Jehuda Loew ben Bezalel, 1512-

poultry and grain can be purchased for next to

1609), the creator of the legendary Golem,

nothing and where man and beast can easily

held services during that era of cultural and

find enough to live on,’ said the Jewish

economic flowering which Prague

merchant Ibrahim Ibn Jacob of Prague in 965

remembers as the 'Golden Age.'

in the earliest written record of the town. Jews have lived in Prague for

Rudolf II, the Holy Roman Emperor and patron of arts and alchemy,

at least 900 years and survived dozens of

who admired all forms of occult knowledge,

persecutions that usually took place when

recognised Rabbi Loew's erudition and

local rulers were needy of funds. The Jewish

scholarship and granted the Chief Rabbi

community was confined to the ghetto, much

audience to discuss the Kabbala, an

of which was levelled to make way for

unprecedented gesture extended from

statuesque apartment buildings at the turn of the

1

a king towards the Jews. Rabbi Loew's magical powers

20th century [1893-1917].

reached even beyond his death, and the

Only half a dozen

legend goes that he enlarged his grave at the

synagogues survived the

Old Jewish Cemetery 2 to make room for

massive rebuilding of the

his grandson to be buried beside him.

ghetto's ten hectares, one

Between approximately 1400 and 1787, well

of them being the oldest

over 12,000 people (there are 12,000

standing in Europe,

tombstones, but far more people were buried there) were laid to rest at the cemetery and graves are stacked up to twelve layers deep. The gravestones bring testimony of the Jews' history and they are marked with symbols and encoded with inscriptions describing the deeds and professions of the deceased. Scissors, naturally enough, denote the tomb of a tailor, while a fish indicates the family name Karpeles, which sounds like 'carp.'


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 16

Exploring Jewish Prague Next to the cemetery in ·iroká

and traditions. Rare illustrated manuscripts

Street is the Pinkas Synagogue, 3 which

document the history of Prague's Jewish

serves as a memorial to Czech and

community since the 10th century. Part of the

Moravian Jews murdered in Nazi camps.

synagogue originally housed a School of

Their 77,297 names are written on the walls

Talmud – founded by Rabbi Loew – in the

inside the synagogue. Nearly half of the

1500s. Near the Klaus Synagogue is the

victims were from Prague. Also displayed

Burial Society Ceremonial Hall. 5 The Burial

here is an exhibition of children's artwork

Society was codified by, who else, Rabbi

from the Theresienstadt concentration

Loew. Here you can see artefacts and

camp. Of the 140,000 people, including

paintings illustrating the importance of the

15,000 children, who were sent to the camp,

Burial Society in the community, and an

17,000 survived the Holocaust.

exhibition of medical instruments.

On the other side of the

Across the street from the Old-

cemetery, in U starého hfibitova Street, is the

New Synagogue is the Jewish Town Hall, 6

Klaus Synagogue, 4 which houses

which was commissioned by Mordechai

a collection of manuscripts and books as well

Maisel (1528-1601), mayor of the Jewish

as an exhibition of items from Jewish festivals

town, after whom Maiselova Street is named. The clock hands with Hebraic numerals placed on a roof gable of the Town Hall turn 'counter-clockwise.' Maisel also founded the High Synagogue 7 next door to the Town Hall; until 1883 the two buildings were interconnected. Fire was a constant danger in the congested ghetto. A terrible conflagration swept the quarter in 1689, burning the Town Hall to the ground while the High Synagogue and just a few other structures remained standing.

6


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 17

8

Development plans of the Austro-Hungarian Emperor Franz Joseph for the Prague centre reached far beyond Josefov, and one version included the extension of PafiíÏská Avenue to meet up with the bottom of Wenceslas Square doing away with the Astronomical Clock tower in the process. Prague intellectuals, including Kafka, strongly opposed the proposals. The novelist frequented cafes where the thinkers gathered, including his good friend and publisher Max Brod, who refused to obey

Exploring Jewish Prague

Kafka's dying wish to burn his manuscripts. Brod is also credited with discovering and promoting Leo‰ Janáãek and also put Ha‰ek's The Good Soldier ·vejk to music.

The Spanish Synagogue, 8

One night, the Fanta Literary

which is located outside the ghetto in Du‰ní

Salon at Old Town Square No. 17, the

Street, was built on the site of the Old

House of the Unicorn, 10 saw Brod playing

9

School, allegedly the

piano, accompanying Albert Einstein who

oldest synagogue in

played a violin sonata by Mozart. Einstein

Prague, built in the

taught at Charles University in 1911. Kafka

1100s. Du‰ní, in

and the illustrious journalist Egon Kisch

fact, was the location

looked on. Reputedly the company also

of one of the oldest

included the pacifist Bertha von Suttner, the

Jewish districts in

first woman to receive the Nobel Peace

Prague. The present

Prize. Other people who visited the Fanta

synagogue was built

Literary Salon were Rilke, Meyrink (author of

in the 19th century

The Golem), and even Sigmund Freud!

and was designed to minister to

Across the square at the GoltzKinsky Palace, 11 Kafka confronted his

descendants of Sephardic Jews who settled

angst at the German-Language Imperial

in Prague after escaping the Inquisition in

school. His anxieties were also spurred on

Spain in the 16th century. With social reforms

by his nanny who used to walk him to

in the 1800s many residents left the ghetto,

school. Every single day she would warn

especially Reform Jews.

him: 'Today is when I will finally tell on you to

Franz Kafka's family also left the ghetto, and memorials dedicated to the writer are found all over the inner city (he

your teacher.' This early experience found its way into Kafka’s novels. Kafka's family lived in the

lived at more than 30 Prague addresses!), so

House of the Minute 12 which is now part of

it is advisable to visit the Kafka Museum if

the Old Town Hall. Back along Celetná

you want to follow his footsteps. The

Street, the house at No. 3 has a window that

museum facade carries a bust 9

leads directly into the T˘n Church; this is

commemorating Kafka's birthplace, although

another place the young Kafka lived and

the original building was torn down during the

eventually wrote about in The Trial. 13

redevelopment of the ghetto.


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 18

1 1

Walk No.5 Entering

the Old Town As you exit the T˘n courtyard

It takes an active imagination to visualise the Ungelt serving as a customs

through its western portal, you will come

house for traders in the dark ages. Some

across the Church of the Virgin Mary

historians believe that this was an early town

of T˘n. 2 The first church, which in its time

centre and one of the cross-roads of

was part of the T˘n hospice, stood on this

European trade. Merchants from Burgundy,

site as early as 1135, but the foundations of

Flanders and other parts of Europe unloaded

the present-day church were laid two hundred

their carts and paid taxes here (Geld means

years later. The T˘n church was completed in

money in German) and then sought

1457 under the reign of George of Podûbrady,

accommodations at the hospice inside the

the only Hussite king in history. However, as early as the late

T˘n (the Celtic word t˘n is akin to the English town) where they were under the full

1300s, the T˘n heard the first sermons of

protection of the king. The city within a city

reformist clergy and a few decades later the

was larger than today's Ungelt courtyard. 1

church became one of the religious centres

At night-time, townsfolk came

of the Hussite movement; the reformers

for news and to partake in festivities at the

believed that the chalice as well as the bread

Ungelt – the only rule was to leave all

should be received by the laity in the

weapons with the gatekeeper. Today you

Eucharist. After the defeat of the Protestants

can do your shopping here without fearing

at the Battle of the White Mountain in 1620,

for your life.

the T˘n came back under the control of the Roman Catholic Church. The great fire of 1689 led to a major reconstruction of the church and its Baroque interior is one of the finest Prague has to offer.

2


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 19

4 1

3

Entering the Old Town As you walk through the narrow

turn of the century, replacing the squalor on

T˘nská alley next to the towering church, the

the south boundary of the former Jewish

first building you will come to when you enter

ghetto. The only exception to the rule is

the Old Town Square is the House of the

a former convent of the Pauline order; it is

Stone Bell, 3 a building with the best

the three-storey Baroque building. 5

preserved Gothic facade in Prague. The Stone Bell now houses an art gallery. Next to the Stone Bell is the late

Across from the Goltz-Kinsky Palace is a monument dedicated to Jan Hus by the sculptor Ladislav ·aloun. 6 The

Baroque Goltz-Kinsky Palace. 4

religious dissenter Jan Hus (John Huss) was

A significant moment in modern Czech history

burned at the stake for his views in 1415. Past the God's Warriors and the other Utraquists lounging around the upright Hus

7

on the large pedestal in the middle of the square is the Church of St. Nicholas, 7 the patron of merchants, that was erected in 1735 by Killian Ignaz Dientzenhofer, an architect from a family of renowned Bavarian builders who settled in Prague. Dientzenhofer also designed the Church of St. Nicholas in the Lesser Quarter. The Old Town St. Nicholas changed hands several times and the present bare interior can be

took place at the Palace when Klement

attributed to its owners, the Czechoslovak

Gottwald announced the communist coup

Hussite Church.

from the palace balcony to a crowded square in February, 1948. In the 1800s, the same claim could be made of Alfred Nobel's stay at the palace. Nobel, the inventor of dynamite, was allegedly convinced by the Baroness Bertha von Suttner, a pacifist, to found the Nobel Peace Prize. Houses on the north side of the square across the palace were built at the


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 20

Entering the Old Town Directly across from St.

space and over the course of centuries all

Nicholas, the open area with benches is the

the buildings on the block were bought up

site of the former neo-Gothic north wing of

and reconstructed for the expanding

the Old Town Hall that was burned down by

municipal administration. First to be added

the Nazis as retribution for the Prague

was the KfiíÏ House in 1369. Mike‰ the

uprising that took place a week before the

Furrier's house followed in 1458 and several

war ended. To understand the eclectic

other buildings were eventually incorporated

structure of the Old Town Hall, 8 we have to

into the complex. The last acquisition was

trace the history of the Czech estates,

the House of the Minute, purchased in 1896.

especially of the Prague burghers who

Reconstruction of its Baroque facade

gradually gained power alongside Church,

revealed a previously undocumented

King and gentry.

Renaissance sgraffito of spectacular quality. Do not leave the Old Town Square without exploring its southern arcades. Many houses, Baroque and older, have house signs and this is something to keep a lookout for when sightseeing in the Old Town and the Lesser Quarter. In the past, the signs served to identify houses. For 8

example, House No. 25, across the

Prominent families from the

square from the

town provided loans to their sovereigns.

Astronomical Clock,

Hence, John of Luxembourg, needy of

is the House of the

war funds, allowed the Old Town to

Blue Star. 9 Further

found a hall for municipal purposes in

down the arcades,

1338. A tax on wine paid for the

No. 20 is the House

purchase and development of the Wolflin

of the Golden

House on the corner and the adjoining

Unicorn 10 where

tower that was completed in 1364. The

Bedfiich Smetana opened his first school of

astronomical clock was added in 1410 and

music in 1848. Some houses have less

perfected in 1490 and 1560.

abstract names such as No. 18, House of the

As the town grew and prospered, Old Town Hall claimed more

Stone Table, 11 where, a long time ago, the weary traveller could get a square meal.


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 21

Walk No.6 Following

the King's Road

Charles IV put on his shoes

Old Town Square was an

made of straw and began his walk from the

important stop, and from there the royal

Prague castle to Vy‰ehrad, the Crown of the

party continued to Malé námûstí (Small

Bohemian Kingdom resting firmly

Square), into Karlova (Charles Street) and

on his head. He was the first and the last

over the Charles Bridge. In the Lesser

monarch whose coronation exhibited such

Quarter the route went through Mostecká

a sign of humility before his subjects.

(Bridge Street) over Malostranské námûstí

Regardless of the theatrics, or maybe also

(Lesser Quarter Square) and up the hill by

because of them, Charles IV had an

what is now Nerudova (named after a poet)

immensely successful reign.

and Ke Hradu (To the Castle Street, literally)

He founded the New Town and the Prague (Charles) University, laid the

towards the front gate. In the middle ages, Malé

foundations of the St. Vitus Cathedral and the

námûstí 1 was a fruit and vegetable

Stone (Charles) Bridge and carried out many

market and the triangular square now

other civic improvements. The kingdom also

surrounds a well dating to 1560 that is

made territorial gains. Charles's name was

decorated with superb ironwork and topped

added to the bridge, different streets and

by a gilded Lion of Bohemia.

buildings, and institutions during the Czech national revival in the late 1800s. We will probably never know

Many houses in the area still have Romanesque cellars, but the gradual redevelopment of this part of Old Town,

whether his future subjects were put on

formerly inhabited by merchants and

a special cleaning detail the day before the

artisans, led to the more recent above-

procession (sewage used to be more than

ground structures you see today.

ankle deep in places); nevertheless, this walk and the next will follow Charles's and his successors' steps on the King's Road.


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 22

1

7

Following the King's Road in the 14th century. In 1907, the building The Rott House, 2 which now

housed Prague's first cinema. The House of

sports a neo-Renaissance facade and served

the Golden Serpent, 9 where, in 1714, the

as an ironmongers shop until recently, was

Armenian merchant Deodatus Damajanus

once owned by the printer Jan Pytlík, who, in

opened Prague's first coffee house, is right

1488, published the first Bible in Czech.

across the street. The Renaissance House of the

Continuing along the coronation route in the narrow Karlova, the street soon meets

Crown of France, Karlova 4, is where

Husova. A few short steps off the route to the

Johannes Kepler lived and researched the

left is the Golden Tiger, 3 a pub where the

physical laws that he later published in The

Czech novelist Bohumil Hrabal had a beer

New Astronomy. Starting in the late 1500s,

with the American President Bill Clinton. The

this area was also

Golden Tiger was also frequented by Czech

home to Italian

dissidents in the 1970s and 1980s. Around

craftspeople

the corner in ¤etûzova is the recently re-

invited by the

opened Café Montmartre, 4 haunt of artists

Emperor Rudolf II

and writers before the First World War. If you

to produce the

continue to the river from here you will soon

aesthetically-

come across the Theatre on the Balustrade,

pleasing artefacts

5 where Václav Havel worked as

he was fond of.

a playwright in the 1960s.

The Italian Chapel 10 on the other side of

However, back along Husova is the Clam-Gallas Palace. 6 Designed by the

6

Karlova is where these artists attended mass. The Church of Saint Clement,

Viennese architect Fischer von Erlach about

11 next door to the chapel, was taken over

1700, the building is one of his most

by the Jesuits from the Dominican order when

important contributions to Prague. On the

they first arrived in Prague. Saint Clement

corner of Karlova and Semináfiská is the

was rebuilt to plans by Dientzenhofer in the

House of the Golden Well; 7 saints were

early 1700s. The Church of the Saviour, 12

placed on its Baroque facade after the

on the other side of the chapel, was founded

outbreak of the plague in the early 1700s.

by the Jesuits in the late 1500s and was

Further down, on the corner of Liliova, is the

designed by two leading Baroque architects

House of the Blue Pike 8 – King Wenceslas

of the time, Anselmo Lurago and Francesco

IV, his court sorcerer and the king's favourite

Caratti. Clerics from this church went on

dog used to visit a pub located in this house

missions to the New World.


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 StrĂĄnka 23

13

18

sites inside the complex. Entrance to the Clementinum, 16 where the Jesuits operated until the order was disbanded in 1773, is next door to Saint Clement. Hidden away behind high walls, the Clementinum is larger in land area than Old Town Square and quite a contrast to the busy winding streets of the Old Town. Upriver, on a pier just past

Following the King's Road In 1556, the Habsburg Emperor Ferdinand called in the newlyformed Jesuit order to Prague to strengthen

the bridge, are Charles's Baths. 17 At the end of the pier is a museum dedicated to BedďŹ ich Smetana, 18 in a neo-Renaissance building that used to be the Old Town Waterworks. When the old baths were the

the Catholic faith in Bohemia and bring the

furthest building on the pier, the story goes

Czechs the counter-reformation principles

that Wenceslas IV, who was held captive at

that would dampen their ongoing Hussite

the Old Town Hall stockade for several

inclinations. The Jesuits were given a large

weeks by rebelling burghers and gentry who

area in the Old Town to build a university,

united against him, asked to be released for

libraries and other educational facilities to

a bath on a hot day. The king, dressed in

compete with the University of Prague (now

townsman's clothes, was escorted to the

Charles University), at that time under the

baths, and once inside the steam of the

influence of moderate Hussite Utraquists.

baths managed to slip away from his

The Clementinum 13 now

captors. He cajoled a washerwoman to tie

houses the National Library, comprising

sheets together and lower him into

several million books, including rare

a rowboat on the river. She obliged and also

medieval manuscripts. A statue 14

rowed him across to the Lesser Quarter,

commemorating the defence of the Old Town

which was loyal to the king, and for this

against a Swedish onslaught in 1648, and

service Wenceslas gave her a small keep as

the Chapel of Mirrors, 15 now used as

well as building her a new bath house.

a concert hall, are just two of the noteworthy


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 24

1

Walk No.7 Crossing

the Bridge Thirty sculptures of saints line

KfiiÏovnické námûstí (Square of the Knights of the Red Cross) is named after

the Charles Bridge; a Calvary 3 near the

a hospice brotherhood – the Church of St.

Old Town side carries gold lettering in

Francis 1 is where their monastery used to

Hebrew: Holy, Holy, Holy God. It was placed

stand – who collected tolls on the Judith

there after a Jew allegedly debased the

Bridge. This bridge ran parallel to the course

Christian faith and had to atone for his

of the present Charles Bridge until high water

trespass by paying for the sign. Nearer the Lesser Quarter

swept it away and flooded the Old Town in 1342. Foundations of the Charles Bridge were

stands St. John of Nepomuk; 4 touching

laid fifteen years later, but this new sandstone

the statue is said to fulfil one's wishes. St.

bridge wasn't completed until 1402.

Nepomuk, confessor to the queen, refused to violate his vow of silence and the

The riverside facade of the

enraged king had the priest tortured and

bridge tower 2 on the Old Town side was severely damaged during Swedish shelling at the end of the

4

thrown off the Charles Bridge into the Vltava, where he drowned. On the left, off the bridge on

Thirty Years' War, but the

the Lesser Quarter side, is a statue of

eastern side of the tower

Brunswick. 5 Legends surrounding

has copies of the original

the knight with a gilded sword are akin to

decorations: The patron

the ones where the Vy‰ehrad warriors will come out to save

saints of Bohemia, Adalbert and Procopius, on

5

the kingdom. Only

top; St. Vitus, the patron of the bridge, in the

he does not have to

centre; Charles IV, seated on the bottom

do much, a flash of

right, and Wenceslas IV on the bottom left.

fancy swordplay in

This Gothic masterpiece was built by Peter

the air – and the

Parléfi, who also supervised the construction

enemies' heads roll.

of the new bridge. Heads of twelve Hussite leaders were hung from the tower for ten years until the invading Protestant Saxons removed them in 1631.


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 25

Crossing the Bridge Instead of going past the

land area is surpassed only by the Prague

Lesser Quarter bridge towers, avoid the

Castle. Access to the Wallenstein Gardens

busy Mostecká and walk down the staircase

is from Letenská. 9

past Brunswick on your left. The charm of

Albrecht von Wallenstein

the Lesser Quarter awaits those who linger

climbed the ladder of power far too quickly

in its side streets and parks. Once you are

and at the bitter end, Wallenstein and his

standing na Kampû (Kampa Square) 6

compatriots, who had been conspiring with

you have two options. You can go

the Swedes to capture the crown of

underneath the bridge or venture onto the

Bohemia, were assassinated by order of

small square in front of you. Both routes

Emperor Ferdinand II. The megalomaniac

join up with the King's Road and the latter

Duke, through a combination of

route you will find on the next page.

Macchiavellian tactics, shrewd business

Most tour groups rush by

dealings and downright treachery,

Vojanovy Sady 7 en route to the bridge or

accumulated a quarter of all the land in

to the castle. The spacious park isn't in

Bohemia. Many of the estates belonged

most guidebooks and you can find some

to aristocrats who were defeated at the

solitude here before negotiating your way up to the castle. In Cihelná Street you will also find a clearing that slopes down to the Vltava. When feeding the swans, watch out for their hungry beaks. After entering Vald‰tejnská Street from Klárov, take note of the early Baroque Wallenstein Palace (Vald‰tejnsk˘ palác) on your left, the most distinguished of the five palaces that line the street. 8 Dozens of houses were levelled to make

Battle of White Mountain and subsequently

way for the ambitious building project.

beheaded on Old Town Square in 1621.

Andrea Spezza and two other Italian

Inside one of the palace halls is a fresco by

architects built the palace, shaping plenty of

Baccio del Bianco immortalising the general

marble, between 1623 and 1629, and its

as Mars, the Roman god of war.


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 26

11

13

Crossing the Bridge From your starting point in

Karmelitská bring with them small sets of silk

Kampa Square you can continue your walk

clothing for the diminutive figure and beseech

by crossing the footbridge on your right or

the miraculous Bambini di Praga for favours. 13

you can take advantage of the great views

When you get to the Lesser

of the Old Town and National Theatre. Until

Quarter Square, enter St. Nicholas from the top

the late 1500s, fields and vineyards covered

of the square. 14 The church is hard to miss,

the entire Kampa Island. 10 As you cross

as its bulk dominates most of the square. Built

the âertovka (Devil's Creek) make a stop at

for the Jesuit Order by the Dientzenhofer family

the millwheel 11 which was operational

between 1703 and 1752, it is, simply put,

until this century.

overwhelming – inside and out. A tale about

In 1169, King Vladislav ceded

the ceiling fresco has it that the painter did not

Kampa and surrounding property to the

want anyone to see his work until he had

Knights of Malta after meeting members of

finished. An impatient Jesuit novice sneaked

the order on crusade in Palestine. The

into the church, hid behind a pillar and watched

Knights were independent of royal, and later,

the painting in progress. The artist, however,

Lesser Quarter town authorities, and their

spotted the Jesuit in a small mirror. When the

fortified compound, called the Jurisdiction of

fresco was unveiled, the novice's brethren

Malta, included what are today Maltese

immediately recognised him portrayed in the

Square and Velkopfievorské námûstí (Grand

work as a poor fisherman and the Jesuit

Prior's Square), where you will find the oldest

became a laughing-stock for all time.

church in the Lesser Quarter, The Church of The Virgin Mary Under the Chain. 12 Hussites, Swedes and fires devastated the quarter, and any place you visit is layered with history. Houses have Romanesque cellars, Gothic walls, Renaissance roofs and Baroque facades. Or a combination of the above. Pilgrims who paid, and still pay, homage to the Infant Jesus at the Church of the Virgin Mary Victorious in

14


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 27

4 1

Walk No.8 Taking the Castle Sitting down in the Malostranská

House of the Two Suns (No. 47), birthplace

kavárna 1 is a good way to get ready for your

and residence of the journalist

ascent to the Prague Castle. This landmark

and writer Jan Neruda (1834 – 91). 6

cafe was frequented by Franz Kafka when he

Neruda's essays, poetry and short stories

lived in the Lesser Quarter and wrote up at the

capture the essence of Prague, especially

castle. Outside its windows, past the tram

the Lesser Town, Jewish Quarter and Old

tracks, is the Renaissance Lesser Quarter

Town. Neruda masterfully describes human

Town Hall, 2 where, in 1575, Bohemian

nature in his Stories from the Lesser Quarter. How did it come about that the

Protestants drafted

Chilean poet and Nobel Prize winner Pablo

a plea for the legalisation

Neruda took his pen name from this Czech

of their religious beliefs.

writer? One story is that he simply admired

The Habsburg Emperor

Jan Neruda's work. Another tells that he

Maximilian II refused to

needed a pseudonym for his literary

sign the document. From

endeavours, saw Neruda's name in

the other cafe windows

a magazine, liked the sound of it and

you will see the Smifiick˘-

adopted it without reading a single line.

Montág Palace, 3 the

If you want to stay on the hill

staging post, some forty-odd years later, for

and later continue sightseeing, keep in mind

a lynching party that left for the castle to meet

– before entering the front gate of the castle

the Imperial Chancellors, sparking off the

– that Walk No. 9 begins near where you are

Thirty Years' War. More on this when you get

standing. 7 If, instead, you enter the castle at

up the hill.

this point, prepare for an onslaught of historical Nerudova Street has a number

fact and legend, not to mention a staggering

of fine Baroque townhouses with richly

variety of architectural styles. A short guide

decorated facades. Makers of string

can barely scratch the surface of what

instruments lived at the House of Three Little

hundreds of books have mined. You can visit

Fiddles (No.12). 4 The Bretfeld Palace (No.

the castle information centre, 8 past the

33) is where Mozart and Casanova attended

ornate Matthias Gate, for more resources.

society balls. 5 Where the road turns and goes directly to the castle, you will find the


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 28

1

Taking the Castle The story of St. Vitus 9 in

The Bohemian Crown Jewels

many ways parallels the development of the

are the most precious possession of St. Vitus

whole citadel and the general course of

and they are securely locked away in the

Czech history.

Royal Treasury – under seven locks and

Built on the site of a rotunda

keys in fact, which are held by different

founded by Prince Wenceslas c. 925 (fifty

Church and governmental institutions. The

years after the hill was settled by the

treasury is in the St. Wenceslas Chapel,

Premyslids), it was transformed into a three-

a Gothic jewel placed by Peter Parléfi on the

aisled Romanesque basilica in 1060.

site of the original rotunda.

In 1344, Charles IV summoned

Perhaps the only chapel in the

Matthias of Arras from the papal court at

cathedral which tops St. Wenceslas is four

Avignon to lay the foundations for the

hundred feet away from the front door. An

present church. Peter Parléfi (builder of the

estimated two tons of silver were used to

Charles Bridge) continued the work from

decorate the tomb of St. John of Nepomuk, at

1352 (three years before Prague became the

the entrance to the chapel of the same name.

crown capital of the Holy Roman Empire) until his death in 1399, when his sons picked up the mammoth project. Hussites severely damaged St. Vitus in 1421. Additional work was done on the church at the turn of the following century and in the 1560s. During the centuries of Habsburg rule, St. Vitus sat pretty much neglected like a dusty museum on a hill. Work picked up again in the mid-19th century with the coming of the National Revival; the last renovations on the church facade were carried out as late as 1929.

9


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 29

12

1

Taking the Castle Indoor jousting tournaments

came from the Premyslid dynasty and later,

were held in the spacious Vladislav Hall of the

when Bohemia achieved the status of

Old Royal Palace. 10 Bohemian Kings

kingdom, virgins from the order – in the

resided in the palace until the 1500s.

ultimate union of secular and clerical power

Afterward, Habsburg kings and emperors

– crowned the wives of Czech kings.

used the western wing of the castle on their

Golden Lane 12 was a double

visits to Prague from Vienna, the centre of the

row of decrepit wooden shacks until the reign

empire. The Palace still housed the offices of

of the Habsburg Empress Maria Theresa,

the Bohemian state until the late 1700s.

who modernised much of the castle in the

The Chancellery adjoining

neo-classical style. Popular belief has it that

Vladislav Hall was the site of the infamous

the lane got its name from alchemists who

second Prague Defenestration in 1618.

worked for Rudolf II. In reality, goldsmiths set

Fenestra in Latin means window; hence, the

up shops here after the great fire in the

Imperial Chancellors were thrown out the

Lesser Quarter in 1541. If you want to find

window. However, they landed in a ditch full

out how to turn lead into gold, visit the

of sewage and escaped unharmed. This

Museum of Alchemy at the Powder Tower. 13

was later attributed to a miracle.

The Golden Lane also inspired writers, Franz

The oldest surviving church in

Kafka rented house No. 22 to work on his

the castle complex is the Basilica of St.

novel The Castle. Jaroslav Seifert, Nobel

George. 11 Although it was rebuilt several

Prize winning poet and one of the first to sign

times, recent restoration preserved many of

the dissident manifesto Charter 77, also drew

its features from the early tenth century.

from the lane's genius loci. Then, in the

The Convent of St. George, founded by

1960s, the houses got their pastel coats.

Prince Boleslav in 973, housed the first Bohemian monastic order. Its first abbesses


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 30

1 4

5

Walk No.9 Visiting

the Outskirts

There are two ways to go on this walk. If you are in the Lesser Quarter, take the funicular 1 from U lanové dráhy

some of which were confiscated during the Napoleonic Wars. Further downhill from the

to the top of Petfiín Hill and backtrack to

Loreto you will discover Nov˘ Svût, 5 a

the Prague Castle. If you are standing by

secluded little neighbourhood that shines

the front castle gate, visit the Paradise

with old world charm. Or continue along

Garden 2 just underneath the castle before

Loretánská, cross a small square and go up

going on the walk.

Pohofielec; take the first left and enter the

Slovene architect Josip Pleãnik, who was invited by the first Czechoslovak

courtyard of the Strahov Monastery. 6 The Premonstratensian

President T.G. Masaryk to remodel the castle

Monastery has the Museum of National

courtyards and interiors, also carried out

Literature and an art gallery which displays

major landscaping around the complex.

work ranging from Gothic art to Romanticism

Paradise Gardens was one of his projects

– accumulated by Premonstratensians over

and it offers a spectacular view of the city.

the centuries. The Theological Hall boasts

Having soaked in a bit of

impressive original woodwork, historical

Paradise, go west on Hradãanské námûstí

globes, and rare manuscripts, including the

– taking note of the Baroque Archbishop's

Strahov New Testament dating to the 800s –

Palace 3 on your right – until you verge off

900s. The Strahov Library has an eight-

onto Loretánská Street and down to the

-hundred-year history; however, a fire in 1258

Loreto Chapel. 4 The chapel, modelled

destroyed many volumes, the Hussite wars

after the original Loreto near Ancona, Italy,

caused additional damage, and pillaging

was founded in 1626 to popularise the

Swedes claimed much of the library as war

Catholic faith after years of Protestant

booty in 1648. The Church of the Assumption

turmoil. The Loreto compound includes the

inside the Strahov compound is one of the

Blessed Virgin's Cottage, stuccoed with

several places where Mozart performed on

figures from the Bible, and a treasury with

the organ during his visits to Prague.

gilded and gem-studded liturgical objects –


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 31

9

1

10

Visiting the Outskirts Any path or street you

Smíchov. If you do end up in Smíchov and

take down to the Lesser Quarter offers

you are a Mozart fan, take a taxi to the

spectacular views of the city. But if you

Mozart Museum at Villa Bertramka. 9

want to see it all, visit the 'Eiffel Tower'

If you want to see more work

observatory 7 on Petfiín. You can take

by the 'President's Architect' Josip Pleãnik,

Strahovská Street to the top of the hill,

cab it to Jifiího z Podûbrad Square; the

which is the easier way to go, but your

square is also on the A line of the Metro.

view will be blocked by the Hunger Wall

Pleãnik's Church of the Sacred Heart 10 is

until you get to the observation tower on

exceptional, inside and out. Its interior

your left.

radically contrasts with its austere outside. Your other option is to take

Vinohrady, the neighbourhood

Vyhlídková cesta (Road with a View), starting

where the church is located, has some

just below the Strahov Monastery and

exemplary Secession and Art Nouveau

continuing through the park (former

tenements. Polská, and especially

vineyards) towards the tower. If you keep to

Krkono‰ská (both streets are at the bottom

the right, go uphill and avoid the Hunger Wall

right of the square with your back to the

(Hladová zeì) 8 you can't miss the tower.

church), contain some beautiful buildings

The Hunger Wall, also called

and they are just a three-minute walk away.

the 'Bread Wall,' which extends across the

If you keep going down Polská, you will

Petfiín Hill from Strahov to where the

shortly reach the top of Wenceslas Square.

Lesser Quarter meets Smíchov, was built

You can also venture to the

by the poor during the reign of Charles IV

other side of Vinohrady, namely near the

as perhaps the first instance of a public

intersection of Máchova and Var‰avská.

works project.

This part of Prague has doubled as period

Once you have had your fill of the panorama, make your way down the hill. Keep to the left if you want to get to the Lesser Quarter, or steer right for

Paris and Vienna for visiting film productions. 11


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Stránka 32

1

14

Visiting the Outskirts The view down PafiíÏská Avenue

The Convent of St. Agnes,

from the giant Metronome 12 at Letná Park

founded by King Wenceslas in 1233 and

is definitely worth the hike up the hill. You are

named after his sister Agnes of Bohemia,

standing at the former site of the colossal

was an important centre of worship and

Stalin Monument, which was removed less

learning in the middle ages. Completed for

than a decade after it was put up.

the Poor Clares shortly after Agnes's death in

If you walk along the park

1292, the compound also became home to

taking in the view of the Old Town panorama

the Franciscans. In the 1300s the convent

you can visit the Technical Museum, 13 one

comprised half a dozen churches and

of the two large brown buildings that will be

a college founded by St. Agnes. In 1420, the

a some ways off on your left. Planes, whole

Hussites, regardless of St. Agnes's own

steam locomotives with wheels taller than

dissenting views against the Church, took

12

a basketball

over the convent and used it as an armoury.

player,

Later, the Dominican order, having lost their

automobiles

holdings to the Jesuits, moved in. The

and historical

convent was abolished during the reign of

bicycles are just

Joseph II in 1782 and the decrepit buildings

part of

became homes to artisans and the poor.

what's on

Major archaeological digs and restoration of

display. Or you

the buildings have taken place in recent

can go back to

decades. The Czech patron St. Agnes was

the Old Town

beatified in 1874 during the National Revival

and visit the

period and canonised a week before the

Convent of St.

Velvet Revolution in 1989. Some say the

Agnes. 14 Take

Czechs had her blessings.

a look around the Na Franti‰ku neighbourhood. Since the houses and alleyways between the Convent and the Gothic Church of St. Castullus (Ha‰tal) 15 were spared from the massive rebuilding at the turn of the century, this is what much of the Old Town used to look like.


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Strรกnka 33

Walk No.10 Shopping for Czech

Arts and Crafts

Artisans produce a huge variety of memorable souvenirs modelled on traditional Czech folk crafts and luxury products. You can find all of the items listed below at shops, art galleries and outdoor markets in the town centre. Shopping districts are highlighted on your map.

Garnet Jewellery The blood red garnet is a semi-precious stone mined in the Czech Republic. Its qualities reputedly give its owner strength, confidence and resolution. The largest documented stone was part of Rudolf II's collection.

Marionettes Czech puppet theatre dates to the 1600s. Early plays were influenced by Shakespeare and Moliere. Other themes used in productions include folk tales and Mozart's operas. The marionettes are sold in speciality shops, but if you want to see them on stage,

visit one of the theatres where puppetry is still a vital form of performing art.


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Strรกnka 34

1

Shopping for Czech Arts and Crafts Bohemian Glassware Designs range from traditional pieces to contemporary work. The one thing this glassware has in common is that it is exquisitely crafted. You can purchase these products in all the mapped shopping districts, but browse around because the selection is immense.

Easter Eggs Originally used in pagan fertility rights where men caned women who in turn gave them the eggs, painted eggs these days make a colourful souvenir. The custom is still practised by children during Easter holidays.


1cast 09.qxd 11.9.2000 9:58 Strรกnka 35

1

Shopping for Czech Arts and Crafts Pottery and Ceramic Art Whether it's historical replicas

Other Unique Gifts Any number of galleries listed in monthly cultural events publications have sales exhibitions where you can buy

of wine goblets or an imitation Chinese tea

paintings, prints, drawings and ceramics.

set, you will find it in a number of speciality

Other gift ideas include prints, engravings

shops around the town centre.

and souvenirs sold on the Charles Bridge

The hand thrown pottery is

and on the Old Castle Stairs.

amazingly inexpensive considering the production process involved.

You can also purchase old prints, maps and books at shops selling used books (antikvariรกt) throughout the town centre. Some of the booksellers specialise in

Wooden Toys Wooden playing blocks are just the beginning. Handmade toys, some with

antique books in the German and Hebrew languages. Check with the sellers, however, about customs formalities before purchase.

peasant motifs, have a long tradition in the Czech crafts.

Several large bookshops in Wenceslas Square and Na Mร stku sell art

Even the communist regime realised their selling potential and the toys became one of the hard currency earners.

and photography books that are relatively inexpensive.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.