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The Pleasures of Prague Old Town Square Will Enrich You.

By: malcolm Ivinson

The pleasures of the old town square Prague make this city a very popular place indeed.

How popular can be seen about mid-day when you are fighting the swarms of people listening to the trumpet player on top of the clock tower on the hour.

The status Prague has for being a popular venue for stag as well as hen parties is right. And you do spot groups of young men and women around town. But very seldom is any hassle triggered. They are more often than not just experiencing a good time. There is also a first-class police attendance.

Prague can be broken down into three foremost areas - the castle, the old town and the new town. Each one deserves an article of its own. The city is easy to walk around as a result getting to each one is not a problem. If you are staying outside the main visitor vicinity then the tram system will be brilliant for you.

The city is in fact a wonderful open-air museum, which is best explored on foot together with a good quality travel guide.

Here I am going to share a few thoughts on Prague Old Town in addition to its square.

The Old Town is dominated by the square, which has a history going back to the late 12th century. It has always been the focal market place for the city and is dominated by The Church of Our Lady of Tưn and the Town Hall.

The square is bordered with pastel-coloured buildings of Romanesque or Gothic source that are adorned with quaint signs.

In the square you will hit upon the popular tourist attraction of the Astronomical Clock that dates from fourteen hundred and ten. Here you can see figures of the 12 apostles who come into sight every hour on the hour from 9am to 9pm in two side doorways on the wall of the clock tower. A skeleton rings a bell, the clock chimes, a live trumpet sounds a call and thousands of people witness this every single day. It all ends every hour with the tourist clapping the full proceedure. You must see it and join in the clapping.

You can also go up the clock tower to find tremendous vistas over the square and medieval Prague over the river and up to the castle and Saint Vitus Cathedral. The climb up the steps will help work off any over eating or drinking you might have done and there are lifts for any who find the steps a little too much. If you go up the clock tower on the hour you will get a close-up of the trumpeter. You will also be able to glance down on the huge crowds all clapping the clock.

The centrepiece of the square is the Jan Hus figure, which was erected on 6 July 1915 to mark the five hundredth anniversary of the reformer's death. Born in 1371 A.D and burned at the stake on 6 July 1415 he was the initiator of what is at the moment the Moravian Church.

I like the fact that all the squares and little streets around the square are still cobbled and in spite of the crowds Prague has maintained its charm. You can just ramble around and see the lot within a small distance from the old town square. It is a fantastic city for short breaks and weekend getaways.

Small cobbled alleyways direct you up to the celebrated Wenceslas Square and the National Museum. It is also in this quarter that the daily market now is.

In a good number of the churches around the old town square concert events are performed almost each night and they last just about an hour. Subsequent to your live concert you may well eat in one of the many restaurants around the square or in the smaller squares of the main one.

If you would like to save a bit of money whenever possible eat or have coffees away from main old town square. This goes for buying your drinking water too. Water from a small store in the alleyways can be a third less expensive than on the square.

Prague is extremely busy and to a certain extent costly but most capital cities are.

I would recommend a visit.

Article Source: http://sports-articles.net

I visited the old town square Prague in July2010.

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