So, this morning we woke up and headed out into the castle town. The Prague Castle, Pražský hrad, was the site of the Defenstration of Prague and probably a bunch of less notable things. It was actually not as interesting as the cathedral inside the same walls. It was absolutely stunning. I have to say, I didn’t like Prague as much as other places some times... while the sits were phenomenal, there were just SO many people there all the time. If you weren’t in a horde of tour groups, you were right about you run into one. Lots of fun though—lots of bustle.
The cathedral was actually created a couple of centuries apart, and there’s one huge Gothic window that’s not stained glass, like the rest of the cathedral, but rather an Art Nouveau painted glass window.
In the city walls (you heard me right) there’s a tiny street called the Golden Lane—there there’s a bunch of tiny tiny houses, that have been turned into sort of mini-museums. Basically, you pay to enter the lane, and then you can take a peek into these tiny homes (more like a tenement room), and they’re decked out depending on what kind of profession the person who live there had. There was also an example of a Middle Ages prison, aka torture chamber, that we got to see. Gory. There were all these things that were iron and pointy and painful and were actually used.
Top of the cathedral, plus the teeming tourist masses.
The Art Nouveau painted glass window
Then we headed up the Petrin Hill, where there’s a house of mirrors (fun!) and a tiny replica of the Eiffel Tower. You can go up the tower though, so that’s fun.
There’s so much fun stuff to buy in prague—they make the little stacking dolls, like the Russians, and also the Swarovski components... so every other woman you saw had swarovski earrings, or something to that extent. There’s also a very super delicious baked good called a Trdlo, which is pretty much dough, wrapped around a stick, rolled in sugar, baked, and then rolled in more sugar and cinnamon and delicious. It’s a sort of street stand food or something, and it’s absolutely divine.