
Prague's Old Town Square
Prague is a European city with a fascinating past.
When visiting Prague, you really need to participate in one of the tours of the old town in order to acquaint yourself with the layout, history and vibe of the city and of the Czech Republic itself.
We took advantage of one of the free tours that are offered starting at 11:00 each morning from in front of the astronomical clock in the Prague’s Old Town square.

Prague New Tour group
We were lucky enough to join in with the free tour offered by Sandemans New Prague. For information about these tours you should visit http://www.neweuropetours.eu where you can find out much more about these tours, not only in Prague, but in many other European cities as well.
We were lucky enough to have Kate as our guide for this tour. Kate is an Australian who left home to travel the continent in 1991, reached Prague then stayed. Kate has a husband and 3 children, and so good reasons for getting to know Prague very well indeed.
We felt very comfortable having Kate as our guide, because she has the ability to tell some really good stories about Prague’s past whilst managing to maintain the typical Australian trait of sardonic humour that always seems to add to the story telling experience.
The concept of free tours may seem a little strange to many readers, who feel that something offered for free won’t be as good as something that has been paid for. However, the rationale that is used by the people running this and other tours works in two ways:
- As far as the free tour is concerned, the guide is remunerated on a tips only basis. This means that there is a great incentive to make the tour interesting as well as informative, and to ensure that participants stay until the end and don’t simply drift off before the end of the tour.
- Secondly, your guide is also able to persuade participants on the tour into participating on further (paid) tours that specialise in other specific aspects of Prague, such as the tour of Prague Castle, Kutna Hora and the Bone Chapel (to say nothing of the New Prague Beer Challenge that includes 3 free 0.5 litre beers).
Prague has some of the most romantic streets, soaring towers and best priced beers in all of Europe. The free tour allows participants to travel back in time as they wander the streets of this special city, discovering the highs and lows of life in the country now known as the Czech Republic back over the centuries.
The first reported settlers of the Czech Lands were the Celtic Boii tribe who inhabited the region from about 2,400 years ago. Germanic tribes also moved in and in about 600 AD, the Slavs reached the region. The Greater Moravian Empire was established around 830 AD, lasting until the Hungarian invasion of 907 AD.
It was during this time that the Premyslid dynasty was established, marked amongst other things by the establishment of the Prague Castle in about 880 AD, the first stone bridge over the Vitava River and the establishment of the Prague Old Town. The dynasty dies out with the death of King Wenceslas III in 1306 (not to be confused with the “Good King Wenceslas” of Christmas carol fame, who lived some 300 years earlier).
This period of growth was followed by rule from John of Luxembourg and his son Charles during most of the 14th Century. King Charles IV was a great ruler, and during his reign Prague became a centre of culture, and one of the most prosperous cities in Europe.
However, much of this background information is somewhat dry and of interest only to those with a particular interest in the background of this part of Europe.
This is where our guide made the learning process really interesting with her stories and her simplification of the history so that what we remember from the information isn’t the dates and names of past rulers, but their impacts and effects on the people of Prague and the region.
We heard stories about the attempts by Jan Hus to bring protestantism into the Czech Lands (many years ahead of Martin Luther), and how he was eventually burned at the stake as a heretic.
We were told that as a result of this act a group of his followers became more and more upset at the relationship between church and state, and how this resulted shortly thereafter in the First Defenestration Of Prague, in which 7 councillors of the city were thrown to their deaths out of windows in the town hall. As a result of this action, the Hussite wars began, and for 14 years, the country was rocked by a violent religious civil war. Eventually an agreement was reached between the Protestants and the Catholic Church, and the two groups lived peacefully side by side for many years.
However, some 70 years later another upheaval occurred, resulting in the rule of the Habsburgs in the Czech lands. During this rule, the protestants once again found themselves under pressure from the Catholic Church.

Prague Defenestration Re-enactment - courtesy Dacid Cerny
Eventually another protest reached fever pitch and rebels stormed the castle, resulting in the Second Defenestration Of Prague. On this occasion, 2 regents of the Emperor were thrown out of a castle window, landing on a pile of manure, and surviving but perhaps with a substantial loss of dignity. As seems to be the case in Prague, this resulted in the start of another war.
The thirty year war that resulted from this act eventually spread across Europe. This devastated much of Europe, with a reduction in the male population in Germany of almost 50%, combined with the loss of about one third of German villages. In the Czech lands, the result was the expulsion of all German protestants. The period following this war is referred to as the Dark Ages of Prague.
However, the beginning of WW1 saw the end of the Austro Hungarian empire.
Following WW1, the Czech Lands and Slovakia jointly declared the formation of the First Republic of Czechoslovakia.
The year 1938 saw the signing of the Munich Pact by Germany, Britain France and Italy. This resulted in the transfer of the western parts of Czechoslovakia across to Germany. Some 6 months before the outbreak of WW2, Germany seized the western parts, and the nazis invaded the rest of Czechoslovakia and stayed for the next 6 years.
Following the cessation of hostilities in Europe, the allied forces agreed to the “liberation” of Prague and points east by the Soviet Army, whilst the Americans freed the western part of the country. However, the communists took over the whole of the country following a coup d’etat in 1948.
Prague and the rest of the region remained under strict communist control until the Velvet Revolution of 1989.
Following the fall of the Berlin wall, the people of Czechoslovakia eventually managed to oust the communists in 1989. In 1993, it was agreed that Czechoslovakia split into two countries, the (second) Czech Republic and Slovakia. Since that split, the Czech Republic has become a member of the EU and a member of NATO. Prague is of course the capitol of the Czech Republic.
All of this brings up the title of this piece.
Kate infirmed us that her mother in law had died recently aged in her late 90′s.
During her lifetime, Kate’s mother in law had lived in 8 different countries with 8 different names, ways of life, documentation and monetary systems.
However, she never left her family home in Prague or moved during this period!