National Museum

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  • Address
    Václavské náměstí, Nové Město
  • Phone
    224 497 111
  • Website
  • Transport
    underground rail: Muzeum
    

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Lonely Planet review

Looming above Wenceslas Square is the neo-Renaissance bulk of the National Museum, designed in the 1880s by Josef Schulz as an architectural symbol of the Czech National Revival.

The displays of rocks, fossils and stuffed animals have a rather old-fashioned feel - serried ranks of glass display cabinets arranged on creaking parquet floors - but even if taxidermy isn't your thing it's still worth a visit just to enjoy the marbled splendour of the interior and the views down Wenceslas Square.

The opulent main staircase is an extravaganza of polished limestone and serpentine, lined with paintings of Bohemian castles and medallions of kings and emperors. The domed pantheon, with four huge lunette paintings of (strangely womanless) Czech legend and history by František Ženíšek and Václav Brožík, houses bronze busts and statues of the great and the good of Czech art and science.

The light-coloured areas on the façade of the museum are patched-up bullet holes. In 1968 Warsaw Pact troops apparently mistook the museum for the former National Assembly or the radio station, and raked it with gunfire. It's also here where you'll find a cross-shaped monument set into the pavement, to the left of the fountain in front of the museum, that marks the spot where Jan Palach fell.