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World Wars, Communism and Liberation: Audio Tour of Prague

By VoiceMap Audio Tours
Free cancellation available
Price is NZ$17 per adult

Features

  • Free cancellation available
  • 2h
  • Mobile voucher
  • Instant confirmation

Overview

The 1900s in Prague were defined by extraordinary upheaval: Nazi occupation, Soviet tanks, and a peaceful revolution that brought it all to an end. On this self-guided audio tour, you’ll find out how totalitarianism, resistance, and an unlikely transformation shaped one of Europe’s most architecturally rich capitals. The tour begins at Republic Square, where the Art Nouveau Municipal House marks the spot where Czechoslovakia declared independence in 1918. You’ll walk through Celetná Street into the Old Town Square, passing buildings that survived war and communist neglect. You’ll find out how the city’s famous café culture was deliberately suppressed. I’ll tell you the storey of František Stadler, whose fashion store was one of many private enterprises that was confiscated – first after the Nazi takeover, and later by the communist government. The tour ends at the statue of Saint Wenceslas, where playwright-turned-president Václav Havel addressed 200,000 people in the square.

Activity location

  • Pamětní deska (na domě U Hybernů)
    • 3/4 Náměstí Republiky
    • 110 00, Praha 1, Hlavní město Praha, Czechia

Meeting/Redemption Point

  • Pamětní deska (na domě U Hybernů)
    • 3/4 Náměstí Republiky
    • 110 00, Praha 1, Hlavní město Praha, Czechia

Check availability

World Wars Communism and Liberation Audio Tour of Prague in English

  • Activity duration is 2 hours2h
    2h
  • Opening hours: Fri 12:00 am-11:59 pm
  • English
Language options: English
Price details
NZ$17.13 x 1 AdultNZ$17.13
Total
Price is NZ$17.13

What's included, what's not

  • What's includedWhat's included
    Lifetime access to this tour in English before your booking date and after it
  • What's includedWhat's included
    Offline access to audio, maps, and geodata
  • What's includedWhat's included
    Flexibility to explore at your own pace with a self-guided GPS tour
  • What's includedWhat's included
    App for Android and iOS
  • What's includedWhat's included
    Directions to the starting point so that when you’re in the right place, the tour will start
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Smartphone and headphones
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Transport
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Food and drink
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Personal expenses for admission fees not included during the tour

Know before you book

  • Service animals allowed
  • Public transport options are available nearby
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels

Activity itinerary

Municipal house (Pass by)

Stand before one of Prague's most celebrated Art Nouveau buildings, its mosaic-covered facade and grand dome announcing the ambitions of a city on the verge of independence. Step closer to explore the ornate details that made this the chosen stage for Czechoslovakia's declaration of independence in 1918.

House of the Black Madonna (Pass by)

Marvel at this striking Cubist building rising unexpectedly from the medieval streetscape of Celetná Street, its angular geometry a bold statement from a city that embraced modernism even as it fought to preserve its past. Pause here to consider the conservation battle that was lost — and what Prague's streets might have looked like if it had been won.

Old Town Square (Pass by)

Walk into one of Europe's most storied public spaces, ringed by Gothic churches, Baroque palaces, and the famous Astronomical Clock that has marked the hours since 1410. Look beyond the beauty to find the layers beneath — this square has witnessed executions, Nazi rallies, and the euphoria of liberation.

Café Louvre (Pass by)

Pass the elegant facade of one of Prague's oldest surviving coffeehouses, a place where Einstein, Kafka, and the city's intellectual circle once gathered to argue and create. Learn how the communist regime deliberately shuttered spaces like this, cutting off a centuries-old tradition of free thought and civic conversation.

Velvet Revolution Memorial (Pass by)

Stop at the quiet but powerful memorial on Národní Street, where a cluster of bronze hands reaching upward marks the spot where a student march in November 1989 met police batons — and changed the course of history. Run your fingers across the relief and consider how quickly a single night of protest became a revolution.

Franz Kafka - Rotating Head by David Cerny (Pass by)

Watch as forty-two polished stainless steel layers shift and spin to form — and dissolve — the face of Prague's most famous literary son. Černý's monumental kinetic sculpture captures something essential about Kafka himself: an identity constantly in motion, never quite resolving into something fixed.

Lucerna Palace (Pass by)

Stroll through the grand arcaded interior of this early 20th-century entertainment complex, built by entrepreneur Václav Havel Sr. — grandfather of the playwright who would one day become president. Notice Černý's absurdist sculpture of a horse hanging upside down from the ceiling, a sardonic nod to the equestrian statue of Saint Wenceslas visible just up the square.

Jalta Boutique Hotel (Pass by)

Admire the clean lines of this Socialist Realist building on Wenceslas Square, completed in 1958 as a showcase of communist prestige — and concealing a remarkable secret beneath it. Descend, if you choose, into the Cold War nuclear bunker built to shelter Party officials, now open as a museum and one of Prague's most unexpected attractions.

Wenceslas Square (Vaclavske namEsti) (Pass by)

Arrive at the broad, sloping boulevard that has served as Prague's stage for its most defining moments — Nazi occupation, Soviet invasion, and the Velvet Revolution. Look up towards the National Museum and the statue of Saint Wenceslas, where Václav Havel addressed 200,000 people as a dictatorship ended and a new chapter began.

National Museum (Pass by)

Approach the neoclassical grandeur of this 19th-century landmark anchoring the top of Wenceslas Square, its facade still bearing faint scars from Soviet tank fire in 1968. Seek out the small cross near its base marking the spot where student Jan Palach set himself alight in January 1969 — a solitary, shattering act of protest against occupation that Prague has never forgotten.

Location

Activity location

  • LOB_ACTIVITIESLOB_ACTIVITIES
    Pamětní deska (na domě U Hybernů)
    • 3/4 Náměstí Republiky
    • 110 00, Praha 1, Hlavní město Praha, Czechia

Meeting/Redemption Point

  • PEOPLEPEOPLE
    Pamětní deska (na domě U Hybernů)
    • 3/4 Náměstí Republiky
    • 110 00, Praha 1, Hlavní město Praha, Czechia

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