Czech Republic Prague streets 4k walk: from Vinohrady to New Town ?? HDR ASMR
Hello, friends! In today’s Czech Republic Prague streets 4k walk, we will move through the center of Prague from the Vinohrady district, from Americka Street to the New Town, to Ječná Street.
The New Town ( Nové Město) is a quarter in the city of Prague in the Czech Republic. New Town is the youngest and most prominent of the five independent (from the Middle Ages until 1784) towns that comprise modern Prague’s historic center. New Town was founded in 1348 by Charles IV just outside the city walls to the east and southward of the Old Town and encompassed an area of 7.5 km², about three times the size of the Old Town. The population of Prague in 1378 was well over 40,000, perhaps as much as twice that, making it the 4th most populated city north of the Alps and, by area, the 3rd largest city in Europe. Although New Town can trace its current layout to its construction in the 14th century, only a few churches and administrative buildings hold up. New Town has many secular and educational buildings and especially magnificent gothic and baroque churches. These, nevertheless, are not the main drawing points for tourists. New Town’s most famous landmark is Wenceslas foursquare, originally built as a horse market and now functions as a center of commerce and tourism. In the 15th century, the Novoměstská radnice, or New Town Hall, was the site of the first of the three defenestrations of Prague.
https://goo.gl/maps/gcZqNh9UqiRxBWXE7
Vinohrady (Royal Vineyards) is a cadastral district in Prague. It is so named because it was once covered in vineyards dating from the 14th century. Vinohrady lies in the municipal and administrative districts of Prague 2 (west part), Prague 3 (north-east part) and Prague 10 (southward-east part), minor parts also of Prague 1 (Prague province Opera and Federal Assembly of Czechoslovakia), and Prague 4 (near Nusle).
Between 1788–1867 it was called Viničné Hory (Vineyard Mountains). From 1867 to 1968, it was called Královské Vinohrady (“Royal Vineyards”). In 1875, Královské Vinohrady was divided into two parts, Královské Vinohrady I and Královské Vinohrady II, the part I was renamed to Žižkov and the part II to Královské Vinohrady in 1877. In 1922 Královské Vinohrady was made part of Prague as district XII. In 1949, the west part was conjoined with Prague 2, and the east part remained a separate district, Prague 12. In 1960, when the Prague division was reduced from 16 to 10 administrative districts, the north part of Prague 12 was conjoined with Žižkov into Prague 3, and the southward part was joined to Prague 10. Local patriots say that the existent ground was that Královské Vinohrady was known as a “bourgeois” district and thus politically unreliable for the then-ruling Communist Party of Czechoslovakia.
https://goo.gl/maps/eLpMcGFVb9degz92A
Recorded in 4k 60fps HDR
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10 of June 2022
Czech Republic ASMR