PRAGUE

präg, prāg, Czech Praha, Ger. Prag, city (1993 pop. 1,216,500), capital and largest city of the Czech Republic and former capital of Czechoslovakia, on both banks of the Vltava (Ger. Moldau) River. A road, rail, and air transportation hub, the city also has an inland harbor that is the terminus of shipping on the Vltava river. Prague is a leading European commercial and industrial center and is the Czech Republic's most important industrial city. There are large engineering plants, machine-building and machine tool enterprises, printing and publishing houses, electronics factories, chemical plants, and breweries.

Prague is also the see of a Roman Catholic archbishop, an Eastern Orthodox archbishop, and the archbishop of the Czechoslovak Hussite Church. Educational and cultural facilities in the city include Charles Univ. (founded 1348), one of the oldest and most famous in Europe; a technical university (1707); the Czech Academy of Sciences; the National Gallery; the National Museum; and many other museums and theaters.

Culture and Landmarks

Until World War II, Prague was characterized by the generally peaceful coexistence of Czech, German, and German-Jewish cultures. It was the city of Rilke and Kafka as well as of Smetana, Dvořák, and Čapek. The city's literary, artistic, and musical life, which has a long and distinguished tradition, was very active between the two World Wars.

The old section of Prague, which occupies the center of the city, is an architectural treasure enhanced by the beauty of its location on the hilly banks of the Vltava. Hradčany Castle dominates the city; the seat of the president of the Czech Republic and the former royal residence, it is an imposing and many-winged structure, dating mostly from the reign of Charles IV. Next to it stands the largely Gothic Cathedral of St. Vitus, first built in the 10th cent., which contains the tomb of St. Wenceslaus. The Hradčany quarter also contains many other fine churches and palaces, notably the Romanesque basilica of St. George; the baroque churches of Our Lady of Victory (with the miraculous statuette of the Infant Jesus or Holy Child of Prague), of St. Nicholas, and of Loretto; the magnificent Waldstein Palace, built for the imperial general Wallenstein; and the Czernin Palace.

The Old Town, on the Vltava's east bank, contains the Carolinum, the oldest part of the university; the adjacent Stavovske Theater, where Mozart's Don Giovanni had its first performance; the vast Clementinum Library; the Gothic Old Town Hall (13th cent.; burned in May, 1945); the ancient clock of the seasons; the Gothic Tyn Cathedral (14th cent., formerly the main Hussite church, with the tomb of Tycho Brahe); the Powder Tower (15th cent., the last city gate), and the art nouveau Municipal House (1912). Situated in the adjacent former Jewish quarter is the Old Synagogue (c.1270), Europe's oldest remaining synagogue.

In the heart of modern Prague is Wenceslaus Square, with its statue of St. Wenceslaus. It was the center of Czech resistance to the 1968 Soviet invasion and a rally site for the support of political change in 1989.

History

The earliest settlements, dating from at least the 9th cent., began around the castles standing on top of the Hradčany and Vysehrad hills (on the left and right bank, respectively, of the Vltava) that still dominate Prague's skyline. Already an important trading center by the 10th cent., it achieved real prominence after King Wenceslaus I of Bohemia established (1232) a German settlement there.

Prague grew rapidly in size and prosperity as Bohemia's capital and became under Emperor Charles IV (14th cent.) one of the most splendid cities of Europe. The city's location at the intersection of vital trade routes stimulated its economy, while scholars and students from all over Europe came to its university. From the 14th to the early 17th cent., the emperors of the Holy Roman Empire resided at Prague as well as at Vienna. Rivalry between the Czech and German elements in the city was a major factor in the popular religious reform movement led by John Huss, a professor at the university. Huss, who also condemned the secular power of the Roman Catholic Church, was burned at the stake in 1415; his martyrdom sparked the Hussite Wars. Prague's attempt to follow a moderate course in the wars was frustrated (1424) by an army led by John Žižka.

Hapsburg rule of Prague began in 1526, when the Ottoman Turks were threatening Europe. In the late 16th and early 17th cent., under Emperor Rudolf II, Prague shone as a center of science where the astronomers Tycho Brahe and Johannes Kepler worked. In 1618, when the Protestant Czech nobles felt the liberties of Bohemia threatened by Emperor Matthias, they vented their dissatisfaction by throwing two royal councilors and the secretary of the royal council of Bohemia out of the windows of Hradčany Castle (May 23, 1618). Although none of the victims of the so-called Defenestration of Prague were hurt, the event opened the Thirty Years War. The battle of the White Mountain (1620), fought near Prague, resulted in Bohemia's subjugation to Austrian rule. Until 1860, German was Prague's only official language. The Peace of Prague (1635) failed to end the Thirty Years War, in the last year of which (1648) a section of the city was occupied by the Swedes.

In the War of the Austrian Succession, Prague was occupied by the French (1742) and the Prussians (1744); and in the Seven Years War it was (1757) the scene of a major victory of Frederick II of Prussia. Although it had lost much of its former importance, Prague in the 18th cent. remained a brilliant cultural center. The building activities of Empress Maria Theresa and the great Bohemian nobles gave the city a predominantly baroque and rococo character. The center of the Czech national revival in the 19th cent., Prague played an important part in the Revolution of 1848 until its bombardment and capture by the Austrian field marshal Windischgrätz.

In 1918, Prague became the capital of the newly created Czechoslovak republic. Occupied (1939–45) by the Germans, it suffered hardship in World War II, but little structural damage. Prague was liberated in May, 1945, by Soviet troops after an anti-German rebellion (May 5). In 1968 the "Prague Spring," a brief period of liberal reforms attempted by the government of Alexander Dubček, was ended with the invasion of the Soviet military. With the breakup of Czechoslovakia into the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993, Prague became the capital of the Czech Republic.

Bibliography

See P. Demetz, Prague in Black and Gold (1997).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Prague  - 10322 results

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...works, the cultural historian of Prague in this period would have had to depend...cultural identities that make up the Prague national landscape in our period. 4 Cited in Pavel Eisner, Franz Kafka and Prague (New York, 1950), 92. 5 A brief...
...Rettigova , Magdalena Dobromila: Arnost a Belinka , Prague, 1850. ---- Chudobicky , Prague, 1929. ----- Domaci kucharka aneb pojednani...Secondary Literature Nejedly Zdenek: O literature Prague, 1953. Novak Arne: Literatura ceska 19. stoleti...
Introduction The Status of Prague in Sixteenth- and Early Seventeenth-Century Bohemia The establishment of Prague as the capital of the kingdom of Bohemia...reign of Rudolf II 1576-1612 , who made Prague his imperial residence and capital of...
...might have had as model the Union Bank of Prague. The suburban street in the same novel...received in the low-class parts of Prague. The grotesque magistrate's offices in The Trial recall many Prague offices strangely scattered among old...
...during my stay in Czechoslovakia. Born in Prague in 1934, he spent the war in the concentration...Terezin. After the war, he returned to Prague with the remaining members of his family...in the English language department at Prague Radio . In 1964, Frohlich became what...
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Comment: Letter from Prague by Mark Jarman Dear H, Prague has adopted Franz Kafka as its favorite literary son...Capek remains nearest and dearest to Czech readers, in Prague the modern writer who is most visible is the one who rendered...
The Legacy of Rabbi Judah Loew of Prague. by Byron L. Sherwin In the Bible...doors lead me? To Rabbi Loew, and to Prague. Many years ago, I learned of a legend...Bezalel, der Hohe Rabbi Low, the rabbi of Prague. For while many have been rabbis in Prague...
...and Significance of the Jewish Museum in Prague. by Dirk Rupnow Very clearly, we are...concrete example of the Jewish Museum in Prague tells a story about instrumentalization...It is amazing that the Jewish Museum in Prague, with its particular history, has neither...
Prague in Black. Nazi Rule and Czech Nationalism. by Andrew G. Bonnell Prague in Black. Nazi Rule and Czech Nationalism. By...378, maps, photographs. US$49.95 (hb). Prague in Danger. By Peter Demetz (New York: Farrar...
Prague Report: Literature Remains Alive and Well...center of Bohemia there lies the city of Prague. Obviously this ideal central location...World War there was a fortunate situation in Prague arising out of the coexistence of Czechs...
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Prague in Black and Gold: Scenes from the Life...affection, and a few inspire reverence, but Prague must be unique in prompting both sentiments...earthiness--between, as it were, the Prague of Mozart and the Prague of the Good Soldier...
Prague as a Poem: Vitezslav Nezval and Emil Hakl. by John Taylor Prague with Fingers of Rain by Vitezslav Nezval, translated...do not pass before I have crossed all the bridges of Prague / In my search for no one not a friend not a woman...
Prague Autumn by Peter Hitchens FOR MOST OF US, Prague is an idea before it is a city. Mention of the name calls...plangent and melancholy. So it is, in any case, for me. Prague the city is as mysterious and somber as you might expect...
Prague, Czech Republic Dear Reader, Vitejte v Praha! Welcome to Prague! Michaels emailed instructions had been clear enough: "Meet me at the luggage carousel at the Prague Airport." So here I was, hoping Id recognize Michael...
Prague: The city is the museum. by Dona Z. Meilach...Louvre in Paris and the Prado in Madrid, in Prague, the capital of the Czech Republic, there...you turn, every street that you walk, Prague is a visual art museum. The city is filled...
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Prague Springs a Foodie Revolution; Bridge the Gap: The River Vltava, Top. above, Dining Al Fresco in Prague. Byline: Jonathan Gregson FORTY years have passed since the Prague Spring, when Czechoslovakiaenjoyed a few heady months...
...agencies doubt terrorist Attas meeting in Prague; Czechs say September 11 organizer contacted...Qaeda terrorist met with an Iraqi agent in Prague five months before September 11. The...terrorism and support for al Qaeda. The Prague newspaper Lidove Noviny, quoting a Czech...
Prague seeks cash, not IMF protesters by Bruce I. Konviser PRAGUE - The annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund...begin here Tuesday are all about opportunities. For Prague Mayor Jan Kasl, the three-day gathering of thousands...
Moscow makes amends for crushing Prague Spring by Bruce I. Konviser PRAGUE - Senate Chairman Petr Pithart lowered his chin into...the reforms of what had come to be known as the "Prague Spring." But five years after the signing of a friendship...
Atta met Iraqi agents this year in Prague by Jerry Seper Byline: Jerry Seper The...had with Iraqi intelligence agents in Prague. Authorities said agents working with...under a variety of aliases, including a Prague-based firm called Electric Construction...
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encyclopedia articles on: Prague  - 134 results

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PRAGUE prag, prag, Czech Praha, Ger. Prag...terminus of shipping on the Vltava river. Prague is a leading European commercial and industrial...factories, chemical plants, and breweries. Prague is also the see of a Roman Catholic archbishop...
JEROME OF PRAGUE c.1370 1416, Bohemian religious reformer. During his studies at Prague and at Oxford, Jerome was influenced by the...with the authorities. In 1407 he returned to Prague, where he joined forces with John Huss in advocating...
PRAGUE SPRING see Prague and Czechoslovakia . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
PRAGUE, UNIVERSITY OF see Charles Univ . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
PRAGUE, PEACE OF 1635: see Thirty Years War . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
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