Location Image

Church of Saint Michael the Archangel in Prague

Church of Saint Michael the Archangel (Czech: Kostel svatého Michaela archanděla) is a church situated in Prague, Czech Republic. It was built in Romanesque and Gothic style and later rebuilt in Baroque style. The priest and church reformer Jan Hus celebrated masses in the church. The church and adjacent monastery were disestablished during the reforms of the Emperor Joseph II in the 18th century. Later, the buildings served as a warehouse. In the crypt, there are buried rectors of the Prague's University.

1. History

The Church of St. Michael (Czech: kostel svatého Michaela) in Opatovice – V Jirachářích, originally a Romanesque structure, is older than the New Town (Nové Město) itself, which started to evolve in the place of the fields and meadows, settlements and villages in 1348. It was founded at the same time as the settlement of Opatovice and a rectory stood at the site during the reign of John of Bohemia. It belonged to the Hussites during the Hussite Wars (1419), became the property of the Lutherans a hundred years later (1524), and then the Catholics after the Battle of White Mountain (1621). It was then bought by the German Lutheran Church in 1790 after being abandoned. The German choir had a picture of Martin Luther created for the side window of the church in 1915. After the Second World War, the confiscated church was passed to the Prague choir of the Slovak Evangelical Church. The Gothic structure of the church dates back to the last 25 years of the 14th century. It was expanded and added to on a number of occasions, with its final re-Gothicisation dating back to 1914–1915 under the leadership of builder Štěpán Koloschek. An oblong nave was created with a flat ceiling and a prismatic tower to the west. The irregular presbytery is distinctive for its ornate vaulting. The asymmetric three-naved structure is externally unified by an orbiting, Baroque, main cornice. The Baroque extension of a staircase to the gallery sits next to the southern Gothic nave. The structure comes to a peak with its slender prismatic tower, which has Gothic core. The portal from the north is fitted with a fanlight, whose tracery was made up of a number of stylized nuns. The late-Rococo main altar (around 1770) remains the Gothic fittings. This was originally dedicated to St. Michael.

1. References

"Brief Tour of Saint Michael's in Prague". wmltblog.org. Retrieved 2017-09-09.

Lieux à Proximité Voir Menu
Location Image
24 m

Maison Ochs

La maison Ochs à Prague est située sur la place de la Vieille-Ville. Elle doit son nom au propriétaire qui y vécut au XVe siècle. De style baroque, elle est caractérisée dans une niche de la façade par une statue de saint Antoine de Padoue datant de la fin du XVIIIe siècle.
Location Image
46 m

Maison à la Minute

La maison "à la Minute" (Dům U Minuty) est la maison no 3 située sur la place de la Vieille-Ville à Prague, entre l'ancien hôtel de ville et la Maison de la Corne d'Or (Dům U Zlatého rohu). Célèbre pour sa décoration de sgraffites, elle est protégée en tant que monument culturel.
Location Image
51 m

Sex Machines Museum

Le Sex Machines Museum est un musée de l'érotisme situé dans la ville de Prague, en République tchèque.
Location Image
63 m

Malé náměstí (Petite Place)

Malé náměstí (en français, Petite Place) est une place historique, située au cœur de la Vieille Ville de Prague, en Tchéquie. Elle se trouve à quelques mètres de la Place de la Vieille-Ville.
71 m

Championnats du monde de slalom (canoë-kayak) 2013

Les 35e Championnats du monde de slalom en canoë-kayak, organisés par la Fédération internationale de canoë, se sont déroulés du 11 au 15 septembre 2013 à Prague, en République tchèque. C'est la seconde fois que la ville accueille cette compétition, après les championnats de 2006.