HISTORIC PRAGUE
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Prague’s first inhabitants arrived during the early Stone Age. The hills
over the Vltava were first settled by members of an unknown tribe. Their descendants
gradually settled the entire area around the Vltava meander, whose shape –
that of the letter P – now seems to symbolize the place’s future
name.
Archeological finds of jewels from the prehistoric era, whose style is similar
to those from the Great Moravian Empire, confirm the existence of a Slavic settlement.
The foundation of the Prague Castle, the building of the Christian church of
the Virgin Mary at its center, and the promotion of the Castle as the chief
seat of the Premyslid dynasty have all given the Prague basin settlements a
new mission. The Prague Castle became the heart of the Czech Principality; the
rise of the Premyslid princes to power, along with an advantageous position
at a crossroads of trading paths over the river, made Prague the most important
place in the entire country.
The metamorphosis of the fragmented agglomeration below the castle into a fortified
and privileged medieval city took three centuries. The “coming of age”
period is historically called the Romanesque era. The importance of the Castle
settlements was to a great extent the work of Prince Boøivoj, the first
known Czech ruler. Prague became a city at the end of the 12th and 13th centuries.
The Old Town of Prague came into existence in 1220 and joined with the Lesser
Town at the end of the 13th century. At the beginning of the 14th century, another
Prague town appeared: Hradcany (the Castle Quarter).
A period of great prosperity and growth came with the rule of Charles IV (1346-78),
who made Prague the greatest center of the European empire. After Rome, it was
the second Christian metropolis in Europe. Charles IV built the stone Chares
Bridge (1357), founded Charles University (1348) and, during the same year,
established Prague’s New Town. After his death, his son Wenceslas IV took
over and Prague becomes one of the most beautiful and splendid towns in the
whole world, fully deserving of its epithet, “Rome of the North”.
Its appearance did not for another 200 years.
It was only during the Jagiellonian era that Prague completed its Gothic evolution.
The rule of the Habsburgs brought to Prague the spirit of the Renaissance, and
Emperor Rudolf II added to its luster by making it the imperial seat of the
Holy Roman Empire. The series of heavy blows which fell on the Czech lands in
the wake of the Protestant Czech estates’ defeat in the Battle of the
White Mountain (1620), did not spare Prague. The Habsburg victory installed
Ferdinand II on the Czech throne and the city became a provincial capital, without
power or importance. Even the first woman on the Czech throne, Empress Maria
Theresa (1740-80) didn’t do much to raise hopes for its revival. The rule
of her son, Josef II, marked the beautiful city by its fervent abolition of
convents, monasteries, and churches, as well as by intense national repression.
Spreading re-catholicization brought with it the construction of new churches,
convents and monasteries in the Baroque style. In the new fashion, a number
of palaces were also built, many of which still help define the appearance of
the city. After 1784, in the tumultuous period following the unification of
Prague’s many municipalities, a new style, that of burgher-like Classicism,
appeared. The Romantic era blew a breath of fresh air into Prague’s gardens
and parks. Mid-19th century brought with it a revival of previous styles, which
left its mark all over Europe, Prague not excepting. The Neo-Renaissance style
symbolized the rebirth of the Czech nation and found most use in the construction
of buildings closely associated with Czech national culture (e.g., the National
Museum, the National Theater, the Rudolfinum.) At the same time, Prague said
farewell to its old fortifications.Around the year 1900, Prague’s population
approached 200,000, and the prevailing style was Art Nouveau; the city then
was among the largest in the Austro-Hungarian monarchy.
On October 28, 1918, Prague became the capital of the newly independent Czechoslovakia.
With the dawn of a new era, new styles also arrived: functionalism and constructivism.
A unique group of Cubist houses can still be seen at the foot of the Vyšehrad
cliff near the river.
The development of the Czech metropolis was halted by World War II and the Nazi
occupation. The country’s new-found freedom was quickly suppressed by
the nascent Communism, which proceeded to inflict on Prague five decades of
“building Socialism”.
At the end of the last century, Prague’s historical center was included
in the prestigious UNESCO List of World Cultural Heritage. The city entered
the new millennium as a self-assured, proud metropolis, blessed with its ancient
heritage as well as new, exciting works of architecture.
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Prague - Czech Republic Just arrived from Prague I would like to recommend taxi service there. We met at arrivals Reviewed by: Katty
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