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ISBN: PB: 9788024640532

University of Chicago Press, Karolinum Press

January 2020

216 pp.

26.6x20.3 cm

141 colour plates, 1 halftone,

PB:
£23,00
QTY:

Categories:

Prague

University Town

Not for sale in the Czech Republic and the Slovak Republic!


Prague has been a center of university education for centuries, and in this book, Josef Petran and Lydia Petranova guide us through the history and architecture of Prague's diverse universities, enlightening us about academic life and the integral role played by the universities in the social and cultural life of the Czech capital city. Prague's rise as the ultimate university town began on April 7, 1348, when Charles IV, King of Bohemia and Holy Roman Emperor, founded the first institution of higher education north of the Alps and east of the Rhine. During the second half of the sixteenth century, Charles University faced competition with the opening of the Jesuit Academy at Klementinum – until the two institutions merged in 1654. In 1718 the world's first civil engineering school, which later became Czech Technical University, opened. At the very end of the nineteenth century, the foundations of the Academy of Fine Arts were laid in Prague, and later it was supplemented by the University of Decorative Arts. In the decades following World War II a growth of interest in higher education raised the number of universities in Prague to a total of nine. "Prague: University Town" explores all of them. Illustrated in color throughout with images that span from the gothic arches of Charles University to the technicist and brutalist structures of the Czech Technical University, this book is both a celebration of universities' architectural beauty and a thorough history of higher education in the home of Central Europe's oldest university.

About the Author

Josef Petran (1930-2017) was a professor of Czech history at Charles University, Prague, and hailed as one of the most important Czech historians of the twentieth and twenty-first century.

Lydia Petranova is a member of the Department of Historical Ethnology at the Czech Academy of Sciences. She also lectures at both Charles University and J. E. Purkyne University.

Ian Finlay Stone is a translator of Czech based in Basel, Switzerland.