Prague: Cemetery
Places and attractions in the Cemetery category
Categories
- Museum
- Church
- Historical place
- Monuments and statues
- History museum
- Specialty museum
- Concerts and shows
- Gothic architecture
- Theater
- Baroque architecture
- Shopping
- Neighbourhood
- Architecture
- Art gallery
- Park
- Art museum
- Art Nouveau architecture
- Bridge
- Forts and castles
- Square
- Nightlife
- Palace
- Gothic Revival architecture
- Tower
- Sacred and religious sites
- Music venue
- Shopping centre
- Synagogue
- Memorial
- Cemetery
- Library
- Monastery
- Sport
- Sport venue
- Arenas and stadiums
- Area
- View point
- Music and shows
- Concert hall
- Vernacular architecture
- Football
- Street
- Science museum
- Dancing
- Universities and schools
- Franz Kafka
- Romanesque architecture
- Amusement park
- Neo-renaissance architecture
- Village
- Skyscraper
- Fountain
- Restaurant
Old Jewish Cemetery
15th-century graveyard with many layers Nestled within the heart of Prague, the Old Jewish Cemetery offers a solemn yet profound window into the history of the city's Jewish community. This hallowed ground, one of the largest of its kind in Europe, has served as the final resting place for generations of...
Olšany Cemetery
Olšany Cemeteries is the largest graveyard in Prague, Czech Republic, once laid out for as many as two million burials. The graveyard is particularly noted for its many remarkable art nouveau monuments.
Vyšehrad cemetery
Burial ground known for the Slavin tomb Established in 1869 on the grounds of Vyšehrad Castle in Prague, Czech Republic, the Vyšehrad Cemetery is the final resting place of many composers, artists, sculptors, writers, and those from the world of science and politics.
Vinohrady Cemetery
Vinohrady Cemetery is a large cemetery in Vinohrady in Prague 10 which contains Strašnice Crematorium. It is the second largest cemetery in Prague and is registered in the state list of cultural monuments.
New Jewish Cemetery
The New Jewish Cemetery in Žižkov, Prague, Czech Republic, was established in 1890 to relieve the space problem at the Old Jewish cemetery in Žižkov, where the Žižkov Television Tower now stands.
Evangelical Cemetery
Evangelical Cemetery is a former cemetery that was used mainly by German Protestants in Prague from 1795 to the end of the Second World War.
Ďáblice cemetery
Ďáblice cemetery is a graveyard in Ďáblice municipal district, Prague. The entrance pavilions were designed by Vlastislav Hofman. The cemetery was opened in 1914 and over 20,000 registered graves are located here. As well as single and family graves there are about 70 mass graves containing bodies of over 14,000 people in total.