A thousand years of Czech history played out on one boulevard — coronations, executions, Nazi occupation, Communist rule, a student who set himself on fire and the night in November 1989 when everything changed
Wenceslas Square is not a square. It is a boulevard — 750 metres long, 60 metres wide — running north from the National Museum through the heart of New Town to the Old Town edge at Můstek. It has been the stage for the defining moments of Czech history for a thousand years: the founding of the horse market in 1348, the beginning of the Hussite revolution in 1419, the declaration of Czechoslovak independence in 1918, Nazi tanks in 1939, Soviet tanks in 1968, Jan Palach’s self-immolation in 1969, and on the evening of 17 November 1989 the crowds that gathered here and refused to leave until communism was over. Today it is a commercial boulevard lined with hotels, shops and restaurants. The history is still here. Most visitors walk through it without knowing any of it. This guide fixes that.
The History of Wenceslas Square — A Thousand Years on One Boulevard
To understand Wenceslas Square is to understand Czech history — because the square has been the place where Czech history happened, publicly, in front of crowds, at the moments that mattered most. No other space in the country concentrates this much historical weight in this much physical space.
Wenceslas Square was founded in 1348 by Emperor Charles IV — the same king who built Charles Bridge, founded Charles University and commissioned St. Vitus Cathedral — as a horse market at the centre of his new New Town development. The space was called Koňský trh (Horse Market) for five centuries. Its dimensions — 750 metres long, 60 metres wide — were determined by the practical requirements of trading horses, not by any architectural vision. The width needed to accommodate animals displayed for sale; the length needed to give buyers room to watch horses run. The horse market continued here until the 19th century.
On 30 July 1419, a Hussite priest named Jan Želivský led a procession of followers to the New Town Hall at the top of what is now Wenceslas Square. When the town councillors refused to release Hussite prisoners, the crowd stormed the building and threw the councillors from the windows — the First Defenestration of Prague, an event that triggered the Hussite Wars and reshaped religious life across Central Europe. The New Town Hall still stands at the upper end of the square, now used as a municipal venue. The window from which the councillors were thrown is still there.
During the revolutionary year of 1848 the Horse Market was renamed Václavské náměstí — Wenceslas Square — in honour of the patron saint of Bohemia, whose equestrian statue was planned for the upper end of the boulevard. The renaming was an act of Czech national assertion in a city then dominated by German-speaking culture: St. Wenceslas (Sv. Václav) was the 10th-century Duke of Bohemia who became the symbol of Czech statehood and national identity, murdered by his brother Boleslav and later canonised. His statue, by sculptor Josef Václav Myslbek, was finally installed in 1912 after 60 years of planning.
On 28 October 1918, as the Austro-Hungarian Empire collapsed at the end of the First World War, crowds gathered on Wenceslas Square to hear the proclamation of the independent Czechoslovak Republic. It was the fulfilment of what the 1848 renaming had pointed toward — a Czech state, free from Habsburg rule, in a country that had not been independent since the Battle of White Mountain in 1620. The date is still a national holiday. The square was the natural place for the announcement because it had been the symbolic centre of Czech public life for 70 years by then.
On 15 March 1939, German Wehrmacht troops occupied Prague without resistance and Nazi tanks rolled down Wenceslas Square as crowds of Czechs watched in silence and in tears. Hitler declared the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia from Prague Castle that evening. The occupation lasted until May 1945. During those six years the square functioned as a German military space — renamed Wenzelsplatz, stripped of Czech signage, the site of public demonstrations of Nazi authority. The Gestapo operated from a building on Na Příkopě, directly adjacent to the square’s lower end. The Jewish community of Prague, 80,000 people who had lived in the city for centuries, was systematically murdered during these years. The Pinkas Synagogue in the Jewish Quarter contains their names.
On 21 August 1968, Warsaw Pact forces — led by the Soviet Union — invaded Czechoslovakia to end the Prague Spring, the reform movement led by Communist Party Secretary Alexander Dubček that had attempted to create “socialism with a human face.” Soviet tanks entered Prague overnight and by morning were on Wenceslas Square, where crowds of Czechs confronted them — unarmed, arguing with soldiers, climbing on the tanks, holding Czechoslovak flags. The images of that confrontation became some of the defining photographs of the Cold War. Dubček was removed. The reforms were reversed. The period that followed — called Normalisation — lasted twenty years and suppressed Czech cultural and political life until 1989.
On 16 January 1969, a 20-year-old Charles University philosophy student named Jan Palach walked to the top of Wenceslas Square, in front of the National Museum and the St. Wenceslas statue, poured petrol over himself and set himself alight. He died three days later from his burns. His act was a protest against the Soviet occupation and — more specifically — against the demoralisation and passive acceptance that had settled over Czech society after August 1968. He had hoped it would shock people out of despair into resistance.
Palach’s funeral procession on 25 January drew hundreds of thousands of people through the streets of Prague — the largest public gathering in the city since the Soviet invasion. The Communist authorities, terrified of the response, eventually moved his body from the cemetery and interred it in his home village to prevent his grave becoming a place of pilgrimage. It didn’t work. The small bronze cross in the pavement at the top of Wenceslas Square, below the National Museum steps, marks where he burned. Flowers are placed there every year on the anniversary.
On 17 November 1989, a student demonstration in Prague marking the 50th anniversary of the Nazi closure of Czech universities was violently dispersed by riot police on Národní třída (National Street), two blocks from the lower end of Wenceslas Square. News of the police attack spread within hours. By the following evening, 200,000 people had gathered on Wenceslas Square. By the evening after that, 500,000. They jingled their keys — a gesture meaning “your time is up” — and chanted for the resignation of the Communist government.
On 24 November, Alexander Dubček — the reformist leader crushed by the Soviet invasion in 1968 — appeared on the balcony of the Melantrich building on Wenceslas Square beside Václav Havel, the playwright and dissident who would become the first president of democratic Czechoslovakia. The crowd below had not seen Dubček in public for 21 years. The moment — Havel and Dubček together on that balcony, the square packed from end to end — was the visible turning point of the revolution. By 29 November the Communist Party had relinquished its guaranteed monopoly on power. By the end of December Havel was president.
What to See on Wenceslas Square Today
Walking the square from the National Museum at the top to Můstek at the bottom takes about 15 minutes at a stroll. With stops at the key sites it takes two hours. Here is what to look for.
Communist Prague & Cold War Tours — Going Deeper Than the Square
Wenceslas Square is the most visible site of Communist-era history in Prague, but it is only the beginning. The city’s Cold War history runs deeper — into nuclear bunkers built beneath the streets, into the StB (secret police) files, into the show trials and the labour camps and the specific texture of daily life under a system that lasted 41 years. These tours extend that history beyond the square.
Wenceslas Square Today — What It’s Actually Like
I want to be honest about the contemporary square, because the contrast between its history and its present is significant and worth addressing directly.
Wenceslas Square today is a commercial boulevard. The lower half — from Můstek toward the middle — is lined with fast-food chains, exchange bureaus, souvenir shops, casino entrances and the kind of tourist-facing commerce that accumulates on high-footfall streets in major European cities. It is not a beautiful street in the way that Old Town Square or Malá Strana lanes are beautiful. It is busy, slightly noisy, thoroughly urban.
The upper half — from the St. Wenceslas statue toward the National Museum — is considerably more dignified. The art deco and neo-Baroque hotel facades on both sides of the boulevard are genuinely impressive. The Lucerna Passage, cutting through the block on the left side, is one of Prague’s great Art Nouveau interiors — a covered arcade of shops and the famous Lucerna music bar, with a hanging sculpture by David Černý showing St. Wenceslas riding an upside-down dead horse (a direct parody of the equestrian statue outside). The Grand Hotel Evropa facade — pale yellow and white Art Nouveau, 1905 — is one of the most photographed hotel exteriors in the city.
The square matters not because it is the most beautiful place in Prague but because it is the most historically significant public space in the country. Walking it with the history in mind transforms the experience completely — the Melantrich balcony above the Marks & Spencer, the bullet holes on the National Museum, the small cross in the pavement. These are not marked with large signs. They are there for the people who know to look.
The Lucerna Passage — Don’t Miss It
The Lucerna Passage (Pasáž Lucerna) runs through the block between Wenceslas Square and Štěpánská street — an Art Nouveau covered arcade built between 1907 and 1921 by Václav Havel senior (grandfather of the president). Inside: a glass-roofed courtyard, a cinema, the Lucerna music bar and café, and hanging from the ceiling David Černý’s sculpture of St. Wenceslas on an upside-down dead horse. The sculpture is called Koně (Horse) and is one of Černý’s most effective Prague provocations — a direct inversion of the Myslbek statue outside, commenting on Czech national mythology and political culture simultaneously. The passage itself is worth 30 minutes of anyone’s time regardless of the art.
Hidden Gems Around Wenceslas Square
The streets immediately around the square contain some of Prague’s most interesting and least-visited spaces. Most visitors arrive at the square and leave without exploring a single block in any direction.
Josefská ulice & the Passages
Prague’s New Town is riddled with covered passages (pasáže) — Art Nouveau and Art Deco arcades connecting parallel streets through the interiors of blocks. The Lucerna Passage is the most famous, but Pasáž Světozor, Pasáž Broadway and Palác Koruna all connect streets around Wenceslas Square and are worth wandering through. They contain bookshops, small cafés, vintage clothing, and the specific slightly time-stopped quality of spaces that have been serving the same function since the 1920s.
Národní třída (National Street)
Two blocks from the lower end of Wenceslas Square, Národní třída is where the Velvet Revolution actually began — where riot police attacked the student demonstration on 17 November 1989. A small bronze relief of hands on the wall of the building at Národní 16 marks the spot. The street itself leads to the National Theatre (1883, one of Prague’s finest neo-Renaissance buildings) and the riverfront. A 10-minute walk from Wenceslas Square that most visitors on the tourist circuit never take.
Náměstí Republiky & the Municipal House
Five minutes from the lower end of Wenceslas Square, Náměstí Republiky contains the Municipal House (Obecní dům) — Prague’s finest Art Nouveau building, where Czechoslovak independence was declared on 28 October 1918 in the Mayor’s Salon. The building contains concert halls, restaurants and cafés decorated by Alfons Mucha and other Czech Art Nouveau artists. It is one of the most significant buildings in the city and consistently undervisited because it sits slightly off the main tourist route.
Where to Eat & Drink Around Wenceslas Square
The square itself is heavily tourist-facing — the restaurants directly on the boulevard are generally overpriced and average. The good options are within two to three blocks in either direction.
Where to Stay Near Wenceslas Square
Staying near Wenceslas Square puts you in New Town — 10–15 minutes walk from Old Town Square, excellent metro connections, lower prices than equivalent hotels in the historic centre. The best options in the immediate area:
For the full breakdown of every hotel in Prague across all neighbourhoods and budgets, see our Best Hotels in Prague guide.
Practical Guide to Wenceslas Square
Getting There
Metro is the easiest option — Line A or B to Můstek station (lower end of the square) or Line A or C to Muzeum station (upper end, beside the National Museum). Trams run along both parallel streets (Vodičkova and Jindřišská) but not down the square itself. From Old Town Square it is a 10-minute walk south down Na Příkopě.
Best Time to Visit
The square is worth visiting at multiple times. Mornings (8–10 AM on weekdays) are quietest — the upper half near the statue and National Museum is relatively uncrowded and good for unhurried photography and reading the memorial plaques. Evenings give the most atmosphere — the art deco hotel facades lit from below, the Lucerna Passage in full swing, the lower square busy with Praguers heading out for the evening.
How Long to Allow
A walk through the square with stops at the main sites takes 45–60 minutes. Adding the Lucerna Passage, Národní třída and a coffee at Café Louvre extends it to a comfortable half day. If you are adding the Museum of Communism and one of the Communist history tours, allow a full day — the history here warrants it.
What Not to Do
- Do not exchange currency at the kiosks on the square — the rates are exploitative. Use a bank ATM.
- Do not eat in the restaurants directly on the boulevard — overpriced and tourist-facing. Walk two blocks in either direction.
- Do not skip the Jan Palach memorial cross — it is the most quietly important thing on the square and the easiest to miss.
- Do not walk through without looking up — the Art Nouveau and Art Deco hotel facades on the upper half of the square are the square’s most underappreciated feature.
Luggage Storage
If you are visiting the square between hotel check-out and a later departure, Radical Storage has locations near the square from €5/day — drop your bags and explore without them.
Book Tours & Tickets — Wenceslas Square & Communist Prague
Continue Exploring Prague
- Prague Old Town Square Guide — the other great Prague square, 10 min walk north
- Prague History Complete Guide — the full sweep of Czech history from Přemyslids to 1989
- Jewish Quarter Guide — the Pinkas Synagogue wall connects directly to the Nazi occupation
- 25 Best Things to Do in Prague — where Wenceslas Square fits in the full Prague picture
- Best Restaurants in Prague — where to eat well in and around New Town
- Best Hotels in Prague — full hotel guide including New Town options
- Prague Districts Guide — New Town in context alongside all other neighbourhoods
- Prague Castle Complete Guide — where Hitler declared the Protectorate in March 1939
- Charles Bridge Guide — built by the same Charles IV who founded the square
- 3 Days in Prague Itinerary — how to fit Wenceslas Square into a full Prague visit
Frequently Asked Questions — Wenceslas Square Prague
Ready to Visit Wenceslas Square?
Walk it top to bottom with the history in mind — find the Palach cross, look up at the Melantrich balcony, note the bullet holes on the National Museum. Then the Museum of Communism for context. Then the Cold War bunker if you want to go deeper. The square rewards visitors who arrive knowing what happened here. Almost nobody does.
Book Museum of Communism Book Cold War Tour Book Nuclear Bunker TourThis article contains affiliate links. If you book through them, HelloPrague earns a small commission at no extra cost to you. All recommendations are based on personal experience and honest assessment. Full disclosure here.