We are back from Prague where we spent our 'honey-week' from the 9th of September til the 18th!
We lived in a private home with our own apartment, two rooms, a dining-room, a kitchen, a bathroom and a toilette.
Our nice hostess - mrs Hana Seflova - served us a lovely breakfast every morning!
She was very kind and offered us good service in every way!
We can recommend her if and when you visit Praha (Prague/Prag): Hana's B&B.
Pragues is a fantastic city with a plentitude of culture and history making the nine days far from sufficient in order to discover all the interesting sites.
We display some photos in the next post on the blog (see above).
To say something:
We visited the Prague 'burg' area - Hradcany - with all the medieval buildings, The Royal castle, Stary krlovsky palac; the dome, The S:t Veit Cathedral and the Golden lane where the alchemists worked.
Our nice hostess - mrs Hana Seflova - served us a lovely breakfast every morning!
She was very kind and offered us good service in every way!
We can recommend her if and when you visit Praha (Prague/Prag): Hana's B&B.
Pragues is a fantastic city with a plentitude of culture and history making the nine days far from sufficient in order to discover all the interesting sites.
We display some photos in the next post on the blog (see above).
To say something:
We visited the Prague 'burg' area - Hradcany - with all the medieval buildings, The Royal castle, Stary krlovsky palac; the dome, The S:t Veit Cathedral and the Golden lane where the alchemists worked.
You can also find the Arch bishop Palace here - Arcibiskupsky' palac.
Franz Kafka lived in this area for a while, at the 'alchemists road' . He wrote A country doctor (Ein Landarzt) in house number 22 .
In the Old Town we saw the Minute House where Kafka lived as a young boy, the town hall with the clock and its classical 'performance' every hour, making hundreds of hundres of people stop and gaze at the clock.
-Eiffel tower (60 meters), built by Gustave Eiffel in the 1890's (1893 perhaps),
-the monastery (where we saw a ping-pong table and two tennis courts destroying my picture of monks only praying, making beer, wine and cheese),
-the so called 'Hunger Wall', built by Karl IV to give work and food to the poor in Praha,
-the observatory and
-the rose garden.
We had a marvellous view over the city from here and we strongly recommend a visit.
If you don't want to use your legs there is a funicular.
The ambience at the Kafka museum was terrific, frankly speaking somewhat 'Kafkauesque'.
Finally we bought a card that gave us the possibility to visit all six synagogues in the Jewish Quarters and the exhibitions connected to these synagogues.
We had the chance to see and read about one of Aurore's favourite 'objects' namely the Golem and its creator rabbi Judah Loew!
The history concerning the life of the Jewish community in Praha is very interesting and the exhibitions extremely fine.
Funny enough there was a female employee in one of the synagogues who spoke Swedish!
She told us she had lived in Sweden for only three years during the 1960's but could still speak the language extremely well!
We also saw the National Theatre - a beautiful building - and visited the State Opera House for a performance of Die Fliegende Holländer by Richard Wagner.
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