NOTICE: The Main Building of City of Prague Museum is closed from June 15, 2020 untill winter 2024 due to reconstruction.
Take a trip to the City of Prague Museum, and discover what Prague has to offer. You can look forward to a one-hundred-and-fifty-year-old paper model of Prague, or an archaeological collection from the museum's own excavations around the city. And, if you are a fan of historical vedute, i.e. graphic prints capturing various parts of the city, then this is the museum for you!
Built in the late 18th century, the museum's main building lies almost in the very heart of Prague, just a short distance from Old Town. The City of Prague Museum's depository holds a treasure trove of collected items documenting the history of the capital city. Today, its collections boast over one million individual exhibit items from the fields of history, art, and archaeology.
Archaeological artefacts, obtained primarily from the museum's own archaeological surveys, make up the largest museum collection in terms of quantity. Other extensive and marvellous collections include the collections for the applied arts and graphics, of which the most valuable part is made up of vedute, i.e. views of Prague, its districts, city squares, individual streets, important buildings, or the emerging suburban villages outside of the former baroque city fortifications. The collection thus documents the transformations of Prague and its surroundings from the end of the 15th century through the 20th century, in which the largest collection of vedute are from the 19th century. Of the historical collections, one of the richest in terms of quantity is the collection of printed media that amasses primarily flyers, public notices, posters, advertising brochures, holy cards, and other printed materials of various types.
What you will see at the museum
You can look forward to a number of permanent exhibits. Prague in Prehistory is an interesting exhibit, presenting the history of settled areas, some of which are over two thousand years old. Medieval Prague, on the other hand, will teach you about the origins of Prague Castle, Vyšehrad, and the areas surrounding Prague of that time, like the Břevnov Monastery, which once lay far outside the city borders. Another highly popular exhibit is Baroque Prague. Here, you will see a wide range of artistic gems and items documenting the lives of the residents of baroque Prague, all in one place.Archaeological artefacts, obtained primarily from the museum's own archaeological surveys, make up the largest museum collection in terms of quantity. Other extensive and marvellous collections include the collections for the applied arts and graphics, of which the most valuable part is made up of vedute, i.e. views of Prague, its districts, city squares, individual streets, important buildings, or the emerging suburban villages outside of the former baroque city fortifications. The collection thus documents the transformations of Prague and its surroundings from the end of the 15th century through the 20th century, in which the largest collection of vedute are from the 19th century. Of the historical collections, one of the richest in terms of quantity is the collection of printed media that amasses primarily flyers, public notices, posters, advertising brochures, holy cards, and other printed materials of various types.