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Wenceslas Square

Wenceslas Square (Czech: Václavské náměstí) is an important place in the centre of Prague (Czech Republic). It has been a place where many historical events occurred; it is also a traditional place for demonstrations, celebrations, and similar public gatherings. The square is named after Saint Wenceslas, the patron saint of the Czechs.

Features

Wenceslas Square has a shape of a very long (750 m, total area 45,000 ) rectangle, roughly in northwestsoutheast direction. There is a building of Czech National Museum at its upper (southeast) end. The square is dominated by a mounted statue of Saint Wenceslas, made by Josef Václav Myslbek in 18871924. The Saint Wenceslas is accompanied by other Czech patron saints carved into the ornate statue base: Saint Ludmila, Saint Agnes of Bohemia , Saint Prokop , Saint Adalbert of Prague.

The statue base, designed by architect Alois Dryák, includes an inscription "Svatý Václave, vévodo české země, kníže náš, nedej zahynouti nám ni budoucím" ("Saint Wenceslas, duke of the Czech land, prince of ours, don't let wane us nor the prospectives").

History

Old, medieval name of the square was Koňský trh (Horse market), after common activity. During the Czech national revival movement in 19th century, a more noble name was requested. At this time the statue was built and the square renamed.

On October 28, 1918, Alois Jirásek has read the proclamation of independence of Czechoslovakia in front of the Saint Wenceslas statue.

On January 19, 1969, student Jan Palach set himself on fire in Wenceslas Square to protest the invasion of Czechoslovakia by the Soviet Union in 1968.

On March 28, 1969, the Czechoslovakian national ice hockey team defated the USSR team on the Ice Hockey World Championships (for the second time on the championships). This victory induced great celebrations (because of the Soviet occupation), maybe 150,000 people gathered on the Wenceslas square; it lead to skirmishes with police. A group of agents provocateurs provoked a devastation of a Prague office of the Soviet airline company Aeroflot, situated on the Wenceslas square, which was a pretext for reprisals and the period of so-called normalization.

In year 1989, during Velvet revolution, large demonstrations (with hundreds of thousands of people or more) were held here.



Wenceslas Square is also the name of a theatrical play by Larry Shue; the play is set to Prague.

01-04-2007 01:32:10
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