Prague ( ; , see also
other
names) is the capital and
largest city of the Czech Republic
. Nicknames for Prague have included "the
mother of cities" (
Praga mater urbium, or "Praha matka
měst" in Czech), "city of a hundred
spires",
or Stověžatá Praha in Czech and "the golden city" or Zlaté město in
Czech.
Situated on the River
Vltava in central
Bohemia, Prague has been the political,
cultural, and economic centre of the Czech state for more than
1100 years. For many decades during the
Gothic and
Renaissance eras, Prague was the permanent seat
of two
Holy Roman Emperors and
thus was also the capital of the
Holy
Roman Empire.
Today, the city proper is home to more than 1.2 million people,
while its
metropolitan area is
estimated to have a population of over 1.9 million.
Since
1992, the extensive historic centre of Prague has been included in
the UNESCO
list of
World Heritage Sites, making the
city one of the most popular tourist
destinations in Europe, receiving more than 4.1 million
international visitors annually, .
Etymology
[[File:Vltava in Prague.jpg|thumb|
Bridges
over
Vltava river, as seen
from the Castle
.]]
The name Prague comes from an old
Slavic root,
praga, which means
“
ford”, referring to the city's origin
at a crossing of the Vltava River. This root is found in other
toponyms in the region. For example,
two riverside districts of Warsaw bear the
name of
Praga as well.
The native name of the city, Praha, is also related to the modern
Czech word
práh, which means “threshold”: A legendary
etymology connects the name of the city with
Libuše, prophetess and a wife of mythical
founder of the
Přemyslid
dynasty. She is said to have ordered "the city to be built
where a man hews a threshold of his house."
Czech "práh", the "threshold", shall be understood here as to be in
the river, rapids or cataract: its edge as a passage to the other
river side.
Contrarily, although there are a few weirs
nowadays, there was not discovered any such geological threshold in
the river under the Prague
Castle
. Thus some derive the name "Phaha" from the
stone of the hill, where the
original castle was built: "na prazě", the original term for
shale rock ( ).
In those days, there
were forests around the Castle
, on the nine
hills of the future city: the Old Town
on the other
river bank as well as the Lesser Town
underneath the Castle
appeared
later.
History

Prague seen from Spot Satellite.
The
history of Prague spans thousands of years, during which time the
city grew from a castle known as Vyšehrad
to the
multicultural capital of a modern European
state, the Czech
Republic
.
Ancient age
The area on which Prague was founded was settled as early as the
Paleolithic age. Around 200 BC the
Celts had a settlement in the south, called
Závist, but later they were replaced
by the
Marcomanni, a
Germanic people and later by the
West Slavic people. According to legends, Prague
was founded by
Libuše and her husband,
Přemysl, founder of the
dynasty of the same name.
Whether this legend is true or not, Prague's
first nucleus was a castle on a hill commanding the left (western)
bank of Vltava: this is known as Prague Castle
, to differentiate from another castle, which was
later, in the latter part of the 9th century , erected on the
opposite right (eastern) bank the Přemyslid fort Vyšehrad
, which is now wrongly considered as the oldest
one.
The city became the seat of the dukes and later kings of Bohemia.
Under emperor
Otto II
the city became a bishopric in 973. Until Prague was elevated to
archbishopric in 1344, it was under the jurisdiction of the
Archbishopric of Mainz.
It was an important seat for trading where merchants from all of
Europe settled, including many
Jews, as recalled
in 965 by the Jewish merchant and traveller
Ibrahim ibn Ya'qub.
The Old New
Synagogue
of 1270
survives.
King
Vladislav II had a
first bridge on the
Vltava built in 1170, the
Judith Bridge, which was destroyed by flood in 1342.
In 1257,
under King Otakar II, Malá Strana
("Lesser Quarter") was founded in Prague on a place
of an older village in the future Hradčany
area: it was
the district of the German people. These had the right to
administrate the law autonomously, pursuant to
Magdeburg rights. The new district was on
the opposite bank of the Staré Město ("Old Town"), which had a
borough status and was defended by a line of walls and
fortifications.
The era of Charles IV
The city flourished during the 14th century reign of the king of
Bohemia and
Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV of the new
Luxembourg dynasty.
He ordered the
building of the New
Town
(Nové Město) adjacent to the Old Town. The
Charles Bridge was erected to connect the new district to Malá
Strana.
Monuments by Charles include the Saint Vitus
Cathedral
, the oldest gothic cathedral in central Europe, which is actually inside the
Castle, and the Charles
University. The latter is the oldest university in
central Europe. Prague was then the third-largest city in Europe.
Under Charles, Prague was, from 1355, the actual capital of the
Holy Roman Empire, and its rank
was elevated to that of archbishopric (1344). It had a
mint, and
German and
Italian merchants, as well as bankers, were
present in the city. The social order, however, became more
turbulent due to the rising power of the
craftsmen's
guild (themselves
often torn by internal fights), and the presence of increasing
number of poor people.
During Easter 1389, members of the Prague clergy announced that
Jews had desecrated the host (Eucharistic wafer) and the clergy
encouraged mobs to pillage, ransack and burn the Jewish quarter.
Nearly the entire Jewish population of Prague (3,000 people)
perished.
During the reign of King
Wenceslas IV (1378–1419),
Jan Hus, a theologian and lector at the
Charles University, preached in Prague. In 1402, he began giving
sermons in the Bethlehem Chapel. Inspired by John Wycliffe, these
sermons focused on reforming the Church.
Having become too
dangerous for the political and religious establishment, Hus was
summoned to the Council of Constance, put on trial for heresy, and
burned in Konstanz
in 1415. Four years later Prague experienced
its First Defenestration (the act of throwing someone out the
window as a political protest - in this case, the city's
councillors out the window of the New Town Hall), when the people
rebelled under the command of the Prague priest
Jan Želivský. Hus' death, coupled
with Czech proto-nationalism and proto-Protestantism, had spurred
the so-called
Hussite Wars. In 1420,
peasant rebels, led by the general
Jan Žižka, along with Hussite troops
from Prague, defeated the
Bohemian King
Sigismund, in the
Battle of Vítkov
Hill.
In the following two centuries, Prague strengthened its role as a
merchant city.
, including the Vladislav Hall of the Prague Castle
.
Habsburg era
In 1526, the Kingdom of Bohemia was handed over to the
House of Habsburg: the fervent Catholicism
of its members was to bring them into conflict in Bohemia, and then
in Prague, where
Protestant ideas were
at the time having increasing success. These problems were not
preeminent under Holy Roman Emperor
Rudolf II, elected King of
Bohemia in 1576, who chose Prague as his home. He lived in the
Prague Castle where his court saw invitations to astrologers and
magicians, but also scientists, musicians, and artists. Rudolf was
an art lover too and Prague became the capital of European culture.
This was a prosperous period for the city: famous people living
there in that age include the astronomers
Tycho Brahe and
Johann Kepler, the painter
Arcimboldo, the alchemists
Edward Kelley and
John
Dee, the poetess
Elizabeth
Jane Weston, and others.
In 1618, the famous Second
Defenestration of Prague provoked
the
Thirty Years' War, a
particularly harsh period for Prague and Bohemia.
Ferdinand II of
Habsburg was deposed, and his place as King of Bohemia taken by
Frederick V, Elector
Palatine; however the Czech army under him was crushed in the
Battle of
White Mountain
(1620) not far from the city. Following this
in 1621 was an execution of 27 Czech lords (involved in the Battle
of White Mountain) in Old Town Square and an exiling of many
others. The city suffered subsequently during the war under Saxon
(1631) and
Swedish
occupation. Prague began a steady decline which reduced the
population from the 60,000 it had had in the years before the war
to 20,000. In the second half of the 17th century Prague's
population began to grow again.
Jews have been in
Prague since the end of the 10th century and, by 1708, they
accounted for about a quarter of Prague’s population.
In 1689, a great fire devastated Prague, but this spurred a
renovation and a rebuilding of the city. In 1713–1714, a major
outbreak of
plague hit Prague one
last time. The economic rise continued through the 18th century,
and the city in 1771 had 80,000 inhabitants. Many of these were
rich merchants who, together with noblemen of German, Spanish and
even Italian origin, enriched the city with a host of palaces,
churches and gardens, creating a
Baroque
style renowned throughout the world. After the
Battle of Prague in 1757 the city
was badly damaged during a Prussian bombardment. In 1784, under
Joseph II, the four municipalities of Malá
Strana, Nové Město, Staré Město and Hradcany were merged into a
single entity. The Jewish district, called Josefov, was included
only in 1850. The
Industrial
Revolution had a strong effect in Prague, as factories could
take advantage of the coal mines and ironworks of the nearby
region. A first suburb, Karlín, was created in 1817, and twenty
years later population exceeded 100,000.
The revolutions that shocked all
Europe around 1848 touched Prague too, but they were fiercely
suppressed. In the following years the Czech nationalist movement
(opposed to another nationalist party, the German one) began its
rise, until it gained the majority in the Town Council in 1861.
Prague had
German-speaking
near-majority in 1848, but by 1880 the German population decreased
to 14% (42,000), and by 1910 to 6.7% (37,000), due to a massive
increase of the city's overall population caused by the influx of
Czechs from the rest of Bohemia and Moravia
and also due to the assimilation of some Germans.
20th century

The Jerusalemer Synagogue, built in
1905 to 1906 by Wilhelm Stiassny, of Bratislava, is the largest
Jewish place of worship in Prague
At the beginning of the 20th century Czech lands were the most
productive part of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire with 80% of
Empire's industrial production and some Czech politics began with
attempts to separate it from Habsburg empire.
The First Republic
World War
I ended with the defeat of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the
creation of Czechoslovakia
. Prague was chosen as its capital and Prague
Castle as the seat of president (
Tomáš Masaryk). At this
time Prague was a true European capital with highly developed
industry. By 1930, the population had risen to 850,000.
Second World War
Hitler ordered the German army to enter
Prague on
15 March 1939
and from Prague Castle proclaimed
Bohemia and Moravia a German
protectorate.For most of its history Prague had been a
multiethnic city with important Czech, German, and (mostly Czech-
and/ or German-speaking) Jewish populations. From 1939, when the
country was occupied by Nazi Germany, and during World War II, most
Jews either fled the city or were killed in
the Holocaust.
In 1942,
Prague was witness to the assassination of one of the most powerful
men in Nazi Germany - Reinhard
Heydrich (during Operation Anthropoid
). Hitler ordered bloody reprisals. At the
end of the war
Prague
suffered several bombing raids by the U.S. Air Force. Over 1000
people were killed and hundreds of buildings, factories and
historical landmarks were destroyed (however the damage was small
compared to the total destruction of many other cities in that
time). Once the outcome of the war was decided and it was known
that Germany would surrender to the allies, Prague
revolted against the Nazi occupants on
5 May 1945 two days before
Germany capitulated, on May 7. Four days later the
Soviet army entered the city. The majority of the
German population either fled or was
expelled in the
aftermath of the war.
Cold War

Mostecká street packed with tourists
in the afternoon.
Prague was a city in the territory of military and political
control of the Soviet Union (see
Iron
Curtain). The 4th Czechoslovakian Writers' Congress held in the
city in 1967 took a strong position against the regime. This
spurred the new secretary of the Communist Party, Alexander Dubček
to proclaim a new deal in his city's and country's life, starting
the short-lived season of the "socialism with a human face". It was
the
Prague Spring, which aimed at the
renovation of institutions in a democratic way. The Soviet Union
and its allies reacted with the invasion of Czechoslovakia and the
capital in August 1968 by tanks, suppressing any attempt at
work.
Era after the Velvet Revolution
In 1989, after the riot police beat back a peaceful student
demonstration, the
Velvet
Revolution crowded the streets of Prague and the Czechoslovak
capital benefited greatly from the new mood.
In 1993, after the
split of Czechoslovakia, Prague became the capital city of the new
Czech
Republic
. In
the late 1990s Prague again became an important cultural centre of
Europe and was notably influenced by
globalization. In 2000
anti-globalization
Protests in Prague (some 15,000 protesters) turned violent
during the IMF and World Bank summits. In 2002 Prague suffered from
widespread floods that damaged
buildings and also its underground transport system.Prague
launched a bid for
the
2016 Summer Olympics, but
failed to make the Candidate city shortlist. Due to low political
support, Prague's officials chose in June 2009 to cancel the city's
planned bid for
2020 Summer
Olympics as well.
Main sights
Since the fall of the
Iron Curtain,
Prague has become one of Europe's (and the world's) most popular
tourist destinations.
It is the sixth most-visited European city
after London
, Paris
, Rome
, Madrid
and Berlin
.
Prague suffered considerably less damage during World War II than
some other major cities in the region, allowing most of its
historic architecture to stay true to form. It contains one of the
world's most pristine and varied collections of architecture, from
Art Nouveau to
Baroque,
Renaissance,
Cubist,
Gothic,
Neo-Classical and ultra-modern. Some popular
sights include:
- Old Town
(Staré Město) with its Old Town
Square
- The
Astronomical
Clock
(Orloj) on Old Town Square
- The picturesque Charles Bridge
(Karlův most)
- The
vaulted gothic Old New
Synagogue
(Staronová synagoga) of 1270.
- New Town
(Nové město) with its busy and historic Wenceslas
Square
- Malá Strana
(Lesser Quarter) with its Infant Jesus of Prague
- Prague Castle
(Pražský hrad - the largest castle in the world)
with its St. Vitus
Cathedral
- Josefov
(the old Jewish quarter) with Old Jewish
Cemetery
and Old New Synagogue
- Jan Žižka equestrian statue
in Vítkov park, Žižkov - Prague 3.
- The
Lennon
Wall

- Vinohrady
, a sightly quarter in the center
- Museum of
Decorative Arts in Prague - huge collections of glass,
furniture, textile, toys, Art Nouveau, Cubism, Art Deco, and so
on.
- The
museum of Heydrich
assassination
in the crypt of the Church of Saints Cyril and
Methodius
- National Museum

- Vyšehrad
castle & cemetery where many famous Czechs are
buried including the composers Antonín Dvořák & Bedřich Smetana.
- Písek Gate
, last preserved city gate of Baroque
fortification
- Petřínská rozhledna
, an observation tower on Petřín hill, which
resembles the Eiffel
Tower
- Anděl
which is probably the busiest part of the city with
a super modern shopping mall and architecture
- Žižkov Television Tower
(Žižkovský vysílač) with observation deck - Prague
3.
- The New Jewish Cemetery in
Olšany, location of Franz Kafka's grave
- Prague 3.
- The Metronome, a giant,
functional metronome that looms over the city
- The
Dancing
House
(Fred and Ginger Building)
- The Mucha Museum, showcasing the Art
Nouveau works of Alfons Mucha
- The
vast cemeteries that are also used for walks by the locals, such as
Olšany
Cemetery

- Places connected to writers living in the city, such as
Franz Kafka (One popular destination is
the Franz Kafka museum, also his grave at the Jewish cemetery near
the metro station želivského)
- The
Prague
Zoo
elected as the 7th best zoo in the world by
Forbes magazine
Geography
Location
On
Vltava river, in the center of the
Bohemian basin.
Topography
Similarly as Rome, the city of Prague is spread over nine hills:
Letná,
Vítkov,
Opyš,
Větrov,
Skalka,
Emauzy,
Vyšehrad,
Karlov and the highest
Petřín.
Climate
Humid Continenal Climate with warm summers and cold/cool
winters.
Culture
Prague is traditionally one of the cultural centres of
Europe, hosting many cultural events.
Significant cultural institutions:
There are hundreds of concert halls, galleries, cinemas and music
clubs in the city. Prague hosts
Music
Festivals including the
Prague Spring
International Music Festival, the
Prague Autumn
International Music Festival and the
Prague International Organ
Festival.
Film festivals include
the
Febiofest, the
One World and Echoes of the
Karlovy Vary
International Film Festival. Prague also hosts the
Prague Writers Festival, the
Summer Shakespeare Festival ,
the
Prague Fringe Festival,
the
World Roma Festival as well
as hundreds of
Vernissages and
fashion shows.
Many
films have been made at the Barrandov Studios
. Hollywood movies set in Prague include
Mission Impossible,
Blade II and
xXx. Other Czech films shot in Prague include
Empties and
The Fifth Horseman is Fear.
Also, the music video to "
Diamonds from Sierra Leone" by
Kanye West was shot in Prague, and
features shots of the Charles Bridge and the Astronomical Clock,
among other famous landmarks. Prague was also the setting for the
film "Dungeons and Dragons" in 2000.
Forbes
Traveler Magazine listed Prague ZOO
among the world's best zoos.
The Prague restaurant
Allegro
received the first
Michelin star in
the whole of post-Communist Eastern Europe.
With the growth of low-cost airlines in Europe, Prague has become a
popular weekend city destination allowing tourists to visit its
many museums and cultural sites as well as try its famous Czech
beers and hearty cuisine.
Prague
sites many buildings by renowned architects, including Adolf Loos (Villa Müller
), Frank O.
Gehry (Dancing House
), or Jean Nouvel
(Golden
Angel
).
Economy
The GDP per capita of Prague is more than double that of the Czech
Republic as a whole, with a per-capita GDP (PPP) of 33,784
(purchasing power standard) in 2004, which is 157.1% of the
European Union average, ranking
Prague among the 12 richest
EU
regions, in Purchasing Power. However, the price level is
significantly lower than in comparable cities.
The city is the site of the European headquarters of many
international companies .
Since the
late 1990s, Prague has become a popular filming location for
international productions and Hollywood
, Bollywood motion pictures. A combination of
architecture, low costs and the existing motion picture
infrastructure have proven attractive to international film
production companies.
Prague's economy is based on various industrial sectors. Prague's
industrial sector is split into aircraft engines, diesel engines,
refined oil products, electronics, chemicals, food, printing,
automobiles etc. Also a significant proportion of research and
development is based in Prague. Approximately one-fifth of all
investment in the Czech Republic takes place in Prague city.
Almost one-half of the national income from tourism is spent in
Prague. The city offers approximately 73,000 beds in accommodation
facilities, most of which were built after 1990, including almost
51,000 beds in hotels and boarding houses capable of satisfying all
categories of visitors.
Colleges and universities
Several universities and colleges are located in the city:
Science, research and hi-tech centers
The region city of Prague is an important centre of research:
- ...and its institutes:
- * Czech Language
Institute (Ústav pro jazyk český) founded in 1946
- * Institute of
Information Theory and Automation (UTIA) founded in 1959
Transport

The "nostalgic tram" no. 91 runs
through the city centre

Barrandov bridge at night, part of the
Municipal Ring Road.
Public transportation
The
public transport infrastructure consists of an integrated transport
system of Prague Metro (its length is
59 km with 57 stations in total), Prague Tram System (including the
"nostalgic tram" no. 91), buses, the Petřín
funicular
to Petřín Hill
, and five ferries: PID, Pražská integrovaná doprava
( ) Prague integrated traffic) All services have a
common ticketing system, and are run by The Prague Public Transit
(Dopravní podnik hl. m. Prahy, a.s.) and
some other companies (
full list). Recently, Prague integrated
transport coordinator (ROPID) has franchised operation of ferries
on the Vltava river, which are also a part of the public transport
system with common fares, taxi.
Cars and trucks
The recent situation on the streets is very unpleasant: the main
traffic stream of cars leads through the centre of the city. The
longest city
Tunnel in Europe with a proposed
length of 5.5 km and with 5 interchanges with the surface is
now being built to relieve congestion in the north-western part of
Prague. The tunnel is called
Tunel
Blanka and it is part of the
Municipal Ring Road. Construction
started in 2007 and the tunnel is scheduled to be completed in
2011/2012. The southern part of the
Prague Ring Road (with a length of almost
17 km) is also under construction with a proposed completion
date of April 2010.
Rail
The city forms the hub of the
Czech railway system, with
services to all parts of the Czech Republic and abroad. There is
also a commuter rail system known as
Esko
Prague which serves the Prague metropolitan area.
Prague
has two international railway stations, Hlavní
nádraží
(formerly called and sometimes still referred to as
Wilsonovo nádraží) and Praha-Holešovice. Intercity services
also stop at the main stations Praha-Smíchov and Masarykovo
nádraží
. In addition to these, there are a
number of smaller suburban stations.In the future rail should play
a greater role in Prague Public Transport System.
Air
Ruzyně
Prague is
served by Ruzyně International Airport
, the biggest airport in the Czech Republic
and one of the busiest in Central and Eastern
Europe. It is the hub of the flag carrier,
Czech Airlines, as well as of the low-cost
airline
Smart Wings operating throughout
Europe.
Other airports
Other
airports in Prague include the city's original airport at the
Kbely
north-east district, which is serviced by the
Czech Air Force, internationally
too: The runway (9-27) at Kbely is 2 km long.
The
airport also houses the Prague Aviation Museum
.
The close
airpport in Letňany
is mainly used for private aviation and aeroclub
aviation.
Another close airport is
Aero
Vodochody aircraft factory's on the north, used for testing
purposes, as well as for aeroclub aviation.
Aeroclub airfields
There are a few aeroclubs around Prague:I.e. the
Točná airfield is located in the south part
of the city, just on the right (east) river bank, and serves mostly
as an aeroclub.
Ships and ferries
Taxis
Taxi services in Prague can be divided into two sectors. There are
major taxicab companies, operating call-for-taxi services
(radio-taxi) or from regulated taxi stands, and independent
drivers, who make pickups on the street. The latter are notorious
for overcharging, targeted mainly at foreign tourists and are
possibly managed by (mob) crime organizations.
Funiculars
Sport
Prague is the site of many sports events, national
stadiums and
teams
Miscellaneous
Prague is also the site of some of the most important offices and
institutions of the Czech Republic.
Prague as a venue
Recent major events held in Prague:
International relations
Twin towns — Sister cities
Prague is involved in a number of official as well as unofficial
partnerships with other major world
cities.
The city of Prague also maintains its own
EU delegation in Brussels
called Prague House.
Partner cities
official:
- Berlin
,
Germany (June 10, 1995)
- Tunis
,
Tunisia
- Brussels
, Belgium (2003)
- Madrid
,
Spain (October 23, 1989)
- Chicago
, Illinois , United
States (1990)
- Frankfurt am Main
, Germany (1990)
- Hamburg
, Germany (1990)
- Teramo
,
Italy (2005)
- Kyoto,
Japan
(1996)
- Moscow
,
Russia
(2000)
- Nuremberg
, Germany (1990)
- Paris
,
France
(1997)
- Phoenix
, Arizona , United
States (1991)
- Trento
,
Italy (2002)
- Saint Petersburg
, Russia
(1992)
- Tirana
,
Albania
- Taipei
,
Taiwan (2001)
- Jasło
,
Poland (2008)
(only with the Prague 10 district)
|
unofficial:
- Baghdad
, Iraq
- Beijing, China

- Birmingham
, England , United
Kingdom
- Bratislava
, Slovakia
- Istanbul
, Turkey
- Budapest
, Hungary
- Copenhagen
, Denmark
- Helsinki
, Finland
- Melaka
, Malaysia
- Jerusalem
, Israel
- Lisbon
, Portugal
- Riga
,
Latvia
- Rome
,
Italy
- Rotterdam
, Netherlands
- Seoul
, South Korea
- Sofia
, Bulgaria
- Shanghai, China

- Vienna
, Austria
- Vilnius
, Lithuania
|
Partner cities in the future:
- Athens
, Greece
- Baku
,
Azerbaijan
- Ljubljana
, Slovenia
- Luxembourg
, Luxembourg
- Porthmadog
, Wales , United Kingdom
- Warsaw
, Poland
- Stockholm
, Sweden
- Turin
, Italy
- Miami
, Florida , United States
|
Historically or culturally related
Architecturally similar
Namesakes
Czech emigration has left a number of namesake cities scattered
over the globe, though more heavily concentrated in the
New World.
See also
Further reading
Guides
Culture and society
- Becker, Edwin et al., ed. Prague 1900: Poetry and
Ectasy. (2000). 224 pp.
- Burton, Richard D. E. Prague: A Cultural and Literary
History. (2003). 268 pp. excerpt and text search
- Cohen, Gary B. The Politics of Ethnic Survival: Germans in
Prague, 1861-1914. (1981). 344 pp.
- Fucíková, Eliska, ed. Rudolf II and Prague: The Court and
the City. (1997). 792 pp.
- Holz, Keith. Modern German Art for Thirties Paris, Prague,
and London: Resistance and Acquiescence in a Democratic Public
Sphere. (2004). 359 pp.
- Iggers, Wilma Abeles. Women of Prague: Ethnic Diversity and
Social Change from the Eighteenth Century to the Present.
(1995). 381 pp. online edition
- Porizka, Lubomir; Hojda, Zdenek; and Pesek, Jirí. The
Palaces of Prague. (1995). 216 pp.
- Sayer, Derek. "The Language of Nationality and the Nationality
of Language: Prague 1780-1920." Past & Present 1996
(153): 164-210. Issn: 0031-2746 Fulltext: in Jstor
- Spector, Scott. Prague Territories: National Conflict and
Cultural Innovation in Kafka's Fin de Siècle. (2000). 331 pp.
online edition
- Svácha, Rostislav. The Architecture of New Prague,
1895-1945. (1995). 573 pp.
- Wittlich, Peter. Prague: Fin de Siècle. (1992). 280
pp.
References
External links