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Accommodation near St. Vitus Cathedral Prague 1

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Davids Apartments Stepanska Praha - Apartment

Davids Apartments Stepanska

Prague center → New Town, Prague 1 • 1.4 mi ( 2.2 km ) from St. Vitus Cathedral

Prague Apartments Davids Stepanska are situated in an ideal place for those who want to know the beauty of evening Prague centre. The building of apartments is situated directly opposite the Hotel Radisson SAS - Alcron, 50 m from the Lucerna Palace and "Václavské náměstí" square, which is the centre of Prague nightlife. Here you can find new, very nice equipment which fully satisfies even the requirements of the most demanding clients.

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Guesthouse Alabastr Praha

Guesthouse Alabastr

Prague centre → New Town, Prague 1 • 1.4 mi ( 2.2 km ) from St. Vitus Cathedral

Guesthouse Alabastr Praha, from category peaceful and pleasant cheap accommodation found in the centre of Prague (New Town), five minutes walk from Wenseslas Square - metro station Můstek or trollybus stop. Pension Alabastr offers accommodation in 21 tastefully and comfortably designed rooms, equipped with a kitchen and bathroom with shower and toilet.

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Sheraton Prague Charles Square Hotel Praha

Sheraton Prague Charles Square Hotel

Prague centre → New Town, Prague 1 • 1.4 mi ( 2.2 km ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
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Apartments house Amandment Praha

Apartments house Amandment

Prague close to center → Holešovice, Prague 7 • 1.4 mi ( 2.2 km ) from St. Vitus Cathedral

Prague Apartments house Amandment, from the category tourist 3 star Prague hotels, offers its clients cheap Prague accommodation near city centre and the largest Prague park Stromovka. Wenceslas Square, the main Prague boulevard with many shops, restaurants and open air markets is close by and all important sights of the city can be easily reached by walking.

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BW Hotel Meteor Plaza Praha

BW Hotel Meteor Plaza

Prague centre → New Town, Prague 1 • 1.4 mi ( 2.2 km ) from St. Vitus Cathedral

Hotel BW Meteor Plaza, from caetgory 4 star Prague hotels, is situated directly in the center of Prague near Powder Gate and The Municipal House at the beginning of the famous Royal Road - the pedestrian road leading through the Old Town, Charles Bridge and Lesser Town to the Castle. You can reach Wenceslas Square, The Old Town Square or other places of interest on foot within several minutes. Hotel Meteor Plaza offers romantic accommodation in Prague in 73 rooms.

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ANDĚL Apartments Praha

ANDĚL Apartments Praha

Prague → Anděl, Prague 5 • 1.4 mi ( 2.2 km ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
Cozy guest-house near the city center. 10 minutes to the center, because we are situated directly at the underground station "B" Anděl and busy tram stop. We offer comfortable accommodation in completely equipped apartments of studio type. Attic apartments are air-conditioned. In each apartment free internet connection.
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Hotel Wilhelm Praha

Hotel Wilhelm

Prague out of center → Břevnov, Prague 6 • 1.4 mi ( 2.2 km ) from St. Vitus Cathedral

Prague Hotel Wilhelm is 3-start hotel situated in a quiet residential quarter of Prague - Brevnov, within walking distance of Prague Castle (Prazsky Hrad) about 15 minutes and 20 minutes from the Prague centre by tram. Hotel Wilhelm offers Prague accommodation in 25 double rooms ( extra beds available ) equipped with shower, toilet, telephone and satelite TV. Hotel Wilhelm restaurant serves breakfast (swedish buffet), lunch and dinner on request. Parking in front of the hotel. Own parking place in front of hotel Wilhelm.

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Hotel Rokoko Praha

Hotel Rokoko

Prague center → New Town, Prague 1 • 1.4 mi ( 2.2 km ) from St. Vitus Cathedral

Prague Hotel Rokoko, from the category newly reconstructed 4 star Prague Hotels, is situated in the very centre of Prague – on Wenceslas Square (Vaclavske namesti Praha) – offers its guests an unrivalled combination of an attractive location and luxury Prague accommodation. This Prague hotel will be especially popular with those who like to be where the action is and to soak in the atmosphere of the old town.

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MOODs Boutique Hotel Praha - Double room Deluxe

MOODs Boutique Hotel

Prague center → New Town, Prague 1 • 1.4 mi ( 2.2 km ) from St. Vitus Cathedral

Prague stylish boutique hotel MOODs is 4 star hotel in Prague, is quietly located in the Prague centre, Klimentska street, near riverbank Vltava. The Náměstí Republiky metro station is 400 metres and the Dlouha Trida tram stop is 300 metres away from the MOODs boutique hotel.

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Hotel Century Old Town Prague Praha

Hotel Century Old Town Prague

Prague center → New Town, Prague 1 • 1.4 mi ( 2.2 km ) from St. Vitus Cathedral

Hotel Century Old Town Prague, from category 4 star Prague hotels, is located in the heart of the city just 10 min walk from the Old Town Square and Wenceslas Square. Neo baroque 19th century building with 174 airconditioned rooms. The Jewish Quarter is one kilometre away and Charles Bridge is 1.5 kilometres from the hotel. Prague Ruzyne Airport is 16 kilometres away, with an approximate driving time of 20 minutes. 

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Hotel Clement Praha

Hotel Clement

Prague center → New Town, Prague 1 • 1.4 mi ( 2.2 km ) from St. Vitus Cathedral

4star Hotel Clement is situated in the historical heart of Prague. Only a few steps away from the Vltava River within a walking distance of all metropolitan tourist sites and outstanding points of architecture and cultural life - Old Town Square and Wenceslas Square can be reached in a short walk.

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Hotel Majestic Plaza Praha

Hotel Majestic Plaza

Prague center → New Town, Prague 2 • 1.4 mi ( 2.2 km ) from St. Vitus Cathedral

BW Premier Hotel Majestic Plaza, from category 4 star Prague hotels, is located in one of the most attractive localities in the city centre of "Golden Prague", just few steps from the famous Wenceslas Square (Vaclavske namesti). Hotel provides Prague accommodation in 181 unique rooms.

 

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First page 22 / 59 Last page

St. Vitus Cathedral

St. Vitus CathedralSt. Vitus Cathedral

The Metropolitan Cathedral of Saints Vitus, Wenceslaus and Adalbert (Czech: metropolitní katedrála svatého Víta, Václava a Vojtěcha) is a Roman Catholic metropolitan cathedral in Prague, the seat of the Archbishop of Prague. Up to 1997, the cathedral was dedicated only to Saint Vitus, and is still commonly named only as St. Vitus Cathedral.

This cathedral is an excellent example of Gothic architecture and is the biggest and most important church in the country. Located within Prague Castle and containing the tombs of many Bohemian kings and Holy Roman Emperors, the cathedral is under the ownership of the Czech government as part of the Prague Castle complex. Cathedral dimensions are 124 × 60 meters, the main tower is 96.5 meters high, front towers 82 m, arch height 33.2 m.

Origins

The current cathedral is the third of a series of religious buildings at the site, all dedicated to St. Vitus. The first church was an early Romanesque rotunda founded by Wenceslaus I, Duke of Bohemia in 930. This patron saint was chosen because Wenceslaus had acquired a holy relic – the arm of St. Vitus – from Emperor Henry I. It is also possible that Wenceslaus, wanting to convert his subjects to Christianity more easily, chose a saint whose name (Svatý Vít in Czech) sounds very much like the name of Slavic solar deity Svantevit. Two religious populations, the increasing Christian and decreasing pagan community, lived simultaneously in Prague castle at least until the 11th century.

In the year 1060, as the bishopric of Prague was founded, prince Spytihněv II embarked on building a more spacious church, as it became clear the existing rotunda was too small to accommodate the faithful. A much larger and more representative romanesque basilica was built in its spot. Though still not completely reconstructed, most experts agree it was a triple-aisled basilica with two choirs and a pair of towers connected to the western transept. The design of the cathedral nods to Romanesque architecture of the Holy Roman Empire, most notably to the abbey church in Hildesheim and the Speyer Cathedral. The southern apse of the rotunda was incorporated into the eastern transept of the new church because it housed the tomb of St. Wenceslaus, who had by now become the patron saint of the Czech princes. A bishop's mansion was also built south of the new church, and was considerably enlarged and extended in the mid 12th-century.

The Gothic Cathedral

The present-day Gothic Cathedral was founded on 21 November 1344, when the Prague bishopric was raised to an archbishopric. Its patrons were the chapter of cathedral (led by a Dean), the Archbishop Arnost of Pardubice, and, above all, Charles IV, King of Bohemia and a soon-to-be Holy Roman Emperor, who intended the new cathedral to be a coronation church, family crypt, treasury for the most precious relics of the kingdom, and the last resting place cum pilgrimage site of patron saint Wenceslaus. The first master builder was a Frenchman Matthias of Arras, summoned from the papal palace in Avignon. Matthias designed the overall layout of the building as, basically, an import of French Gothic: a triple-naved basilica with flying buttresses, short transept, five-bayed choir and decagon apse with ambulatory and radiating chapels. However, he lived to build only the easternmost parts of the choir: the arcades and the ambulatory. The slender verticality of Late French Gothic and clear, almost rigid respect of proportions distinguish his work today.

After Matthias' death in 1352, a new master builder took over the cathedral workshop. This was Peter Parler, at that time only 23 years old and son of the architect of the Heilig-Kreuz-Münster in Schwäbisch Gmünd. Parler at first only worked according to the plans left by his predecessor, building the sacristy on the north side of the choir and the chapel on the south. Once he finished all that Matthias left unfinished, he continued according to his own ideas. Parler's bold and innovative design brought in a unique new synthesis of Gothic elements in architecture. This is best exemplified in the vaults he designed for the choir. The so-called Parler's vaults or net-vaults have double (not single, as in classic High Gothic groin vaults) diagonal ribs that span the width of the choir-bay. The crossing pairs of ribs create a net-like construction (hence the name), which considerably strengthens the vault. They also give a lively ornamentation to the ceiling, as the interlocking vaulted bays create a dynamic zigzag pattern down the length of the cathedral.

While Matthias of Arras was schooled as a geometer, thus putting an emphasis on rigid systems of proportions and clear, mathematical compositions in his design, Parler was trained as a sculptor and woodcarver. He treated architecture as a sculpture, almost as if playing with structural forms in stone. Aside from his rather bold vaults, the peculiarities of his work can also be seen in the design of pillars (with classic, bell-shaped columns which were almost forgotten by High Gothic), the ingenious dome vault of new St Wenceslaus chapel, the undulating clerestory walls, the original window tracery (no two of his windows are the same, the ornamentation is always different) and the blind tracery panels of the buttresses. Architectural sculpture was given a considerable role while Parler was in charge of construction, as can be seen in the corbels, the passageway lintels, and, particularly, in the busts on the triforium, which depict faces of the royal family, saints, Prague bishops, and the two master builders, including Parler himself.

Work on the cathedral, however, proceeded rather slowly, because in the meantime the Emperor commissioned Parler with many other projects, such as the construction of the new Charles Bridge in Prague and many churches throughout the Czech realm. By 1397, when Peter Parler died, only the choir and parts of the transept were finished.

After Peter Parler's death in 1399 his sons, Wenzel Parler and particularly Johannes Parler, continued his work; they in turn were succeeded by a certain Master Petrilk, who by all accounts was also a member of Parler's workshop. Under these three masters, the transept and the great tower on its south side were finished. So was the gable which connects the tower with the south transept. Nicknamed 'Golden Gate' (likely because of the golden mosaic of Last Judgment depicted on it), it is through this portal that the kings entered the cathedral for coronation ceremonies.

The entire building process came to a halt with the beginning of Hussite War in the first half of 15th century. The war brought an end to the workshop that operated steadily over for almost a century, and the furnishings of cathedral, dozens of pictures and sculptures, suffered heavily from the ravages of Hussite iconoclasm. As if this was not enough, a great fire in 1541 considerably damaged the cathedral.

St. Wenceslas Chapel

Perhaps the most outstanding place in the cathedral is the Chapel of St. Wenceslas, where the relics of the saint are kept. The room was built by Peter Parler between 1344 and 1364 and has a ribbed vault. The lower part of the walls are wonderfully decorated with over 1300 semi-precious stones and paintings about the Passion of Christ dating from the original decoration of the chapel in 1372–1373. The upper part of the walls have paintings about the life of St Wenceslas, created by the Master of the Litoměřice Altarpiece between 1506 and 1509. In the middle of the wall there is a Gothic statue of St. Wenceslas created by Jindrich Parler (Peter's nephew) in 1373. The Chapel is not open to the public, but it can be viewed from the doorways. A small door with seven locks, in the south-western corner of the chapel, leads to the Crown Chamber containing the Czech Crown Jewels, which are displayed to the public only once every (circa) eight years.

Renaissance and Baroque

Through most of the following centuries, the cathedral stood only half-finished. It was built up to the great tower and a transept, which was closed by a provisional wall. In the place of a three-aisled nave-to-be-built, a timber-roofed construction stood, and services were held separately there from the interior of the choir. Several attempts to continue the work on cathedral were mostly unsuccessful. In the latter half of 15th century, king Vladislav Jagiellon commissioned the great Renaissance-Gothic architect Benedict Ried to continue the work on the cathedral, but almost as soon as the work began, it was cut short because of lack of funds. Later attempts to finish the cathedral only brought some Renaissance and Baroque elements into the Gothic building, most notably the obviously different Baroque spire of the south tower and the great organ in the northern wing of transept.

Completion in 19th and 20th century

In 1844 Vácslav Pešina, an energetic St Vitus canon, together with Neo-Gothic architect Josef Kranner presented a program for renovation and completion of the great cathedral at the gathering of German architects in Prague. The same year a society under the full name "Union for Completion of the Cathedral of St Vitus in Prague" was formed, whose aim was to repair, complete and get rid of "everything mutilated and stylistically inimical". Josef Kranner was heading what was mostly repair work from 1861 to 1866, getting rid of Baroque decorations deemed unnecessary and restoring the interior. In 1870 the foundations of the new nave were finally laid, and in 1873, after Kramer's death, architect Josef Mocker took over the reconstruction. It was he who designed the west facade in a typical classic Gothic manner with two towers, and the same design was adopted, after his death, by the third and final architect of restoration, Kamil Hilbert.

In the 1920s the sculptor Vojtěch Sucharda worked on the facade, and the famous Czech Art Nouveau painter Alfons Mucha decorated the new windows in the north part of nave. The Rose Window was designed by Frantisek Kysela in 1925-7. This Rose Window above the portal depicts scenes from the biblical story of creation. By the time of St Wenceslas jubilee in 1929, the St Vitus cathedral was finally finished, nearly 600 years after it was begun. Despite the fact that entire western half of Cathedral is a Neo-Gothic addition, much of the design and elements developed by Peter Parler were used in the restoration, giving the Cathedral as a whole a harmonious, unified look.

Newest history

In 1997, with 1000th anniversary of Saint Voitechus death, the patrocinium (dedication) of the church was reextended to Saint Wenceslaus and Saint Voitechus (abroad known under his confirmation as Adalbert). The previous Romanesque basilica had this triple patrocinium to the main Bohemian patrons since 1038 when relics of Saint Voitechus were placed here.

In 1954, a government decree entrusted the whole Prague Castle into ownership of "all Czechoslovak people" and into administration of the President's Office. Past the Velvet Revolution, since 1992, several petitions by church subjects were filed requiring to find which subject is really the owner. After 14 years, in June 2006, The City Court in Prague decided that the 1954 decree didn't change the ownership of the cathedral and the owner is the Metropolitan Chapter at Saint Vitus. In September 2006, the Predident's Office had passed the administration to the Metropolitan Chapter. However, in February 2007, the Supreme Court in Prague cancelled the decision of the City Court and returned the case to the common court. In September 2007, the District Court of Praha 7 decided that the cathedral is owned by the Czech Republic, this decision was confirmed by the City Court in Prague and the Constitutional Court rejected the appeal of the Metropolitan Chapter. The Metropolitan Chapter wanted to fill a complaint to the European Court for Human Rights. However, the interior equipment of the cathedral is unquestionably owned by the church subject.

In May 2010, the new Prague Archbishop Dominik Duka and the state predident Václav Klaus together declared that they don't want continue with court conflicts. They constituted that the 7 persons who are traditionally holder of the keys of the Saint Wenceslaus Chamber with the Bohemian Crown Jevels become also a board to coordinate and organize administration and use of the cathedral. However, controversy about ownership of some related canonry houses continues.

t:source: http://cs.wikipedia.org/wiki/Katedrála_svatého_Víta,_Václava_a_Vojtěcha

Landmarks near St. Vitus Cathedral

  • Věž Katedrály sv. Víta
    60 yd ( 50 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Prague Castle
    90 yd ( 80 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Pražský hrad
    200 yd ( 180 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Schwarzenberg Palace
    290 yd ( 270 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Nerudova ulice
    320 yd ( 290 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Public transport station Nerudova
    330 yd ( 300 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Public transport station Pražský hrad
    340 yd ( 310 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Sloup Nejsvětější Trojice
    340 yd ( 310 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Divadlo Inspirace
    340 yd ( 310 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Toskánský palác
    400 yd ( 360 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Golden Lane
    400 yd ( 360 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Palácové zahrady
    400 yd ( 360 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Church of Saint Nicholas
    410 yd ( 370 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Public transport station Šporkova
    410 yd ( 370 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Akademie múzických umění v Praze
    410 yd ( 370 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Pedagogické muzeum
    410 yd ( 380 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Wallenstein Palace
    430 yd ( 390 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Malostranské náměstí
    450 yd ( 410 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Public transport station Malostranské náměstí
    470 yd ( 430 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral
  • Malostranská beseda
    470 yd ( 430 m ) from St. Vitus Cathedral

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