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The Nazis turned Prague’s film studios into a propaganda mill during World War II, as did the Communists, but today they are thriving as western filmmakers discover Prague (see Film Locations).
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The house where Mozart and his wife stayed while the composer worked on Don Giovanni has been turned into a small museum on his life.
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St Adalbert founded this Benedictine monastery in 993. You can see remains of the Romanesque church, and the 18th-century church of St Margaret.
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This is where Prague’s old statues go when they retire. Among the 700-plus items are the original St Wenceslas from Wenceslas Square.
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The writer Franz Kafka’s memorial is here, as are those of many other Prague Jews who perished in the Holocaust (see The Jews in Prague).
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Plague victims were interred here when the site was still far from the city. Notable residents include Jan Palach, a student who burned himself alive in protest at the 1968 Warsaw-Pact invasion.
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The majority of Prague’s residents still live in these avowedly ugly prefab estates. Have a look around and consider yourself lucky.
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The dam in the Vltava not only helps prevent flooding, it makes a nice swimming and boating reserve.
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Jean-Baptiste Mathey created Count Sternberg’s 17th-century palace when Classical Italian was all the architectural rage. Inside is a collection of 19th-century Czech art.
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Prague’s zoological gardens, dating from 1924, are catching up with western zoos, but still lack some creature comforts. The most popular exhibits are the big cats and gorillas.
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