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Czech HistoryThe life and legacy of Saint Agnes of Bohemia
This Saturday a special mass will be celebrated in honour of Saint Agnes of
Bohemia, on the 22nd anniversary of her canonization by the Roman Catholic
Church in 1989. In a couple of weeks’ time a large exhibition will open
in the convent of St Agnes in Prague founded by Agnes herself. Those are
just two events in a long series to mark the 800tha birth anniversary of
one of the country’s most revered patron saints. In today’s Czech
History we look at the life and legacy of this extraordinary noblewoman. More
SpecialA tale of two brothers, and the building of a nation
For the occasion of September 28, I’m here at a place that some people
actually call the real centre of the Czech Republic. Not the geographic
centre to be sure, but certainly the focal point for much of the Czech
Republic’s rocky modern-day history. It’s a statue of a man on a horse
(which people call ‘the horse’ when they arrange one of the hundreds of
meetings that take place here each day). But it’s of course the man on
the horse that has overseen everything over the last hundred years from the
declaration of Czechoslovak independence to the various political
demonstrations that gravitate here today. Above me is of course Saint
Václav, or Wenceslas, from which the surrounding square takes its name,
and his likeness has adorned this place for at least three hundred years,
in different incarnations. Legend has it that when worse comes to worst for
the Czech lands he will come un-petrified, and ride away to quash their
enemies – a disconcerting prophesy when one considers the parades of
Nazis and Communists that the statue saw come and go. But even in that,
there is a good point to be made: this symbol of Czech statehood is
indomitable; the legacy of St. Václav rides on through the ages, now for
about the 1,076th year. More
SpecialGood King Wenceslas meets the Beatles on the Feast of Stephen
A good few years ago I used to live in a tiny flat in an old house called
the Mouse Hole, which was just off the ancient street that runs along the
bottom of the park below Prague Castle and the cathedral. In winter I used
to go out to the park to collect kindling to help get my sluggish
coal-fired stove to draw. On one occasion it had been snowing heavily and I
traipsed out through deep drifts. Ever since then I have always had a very
specific picture in my mind of the Victorian carol about the Czech patron
Saint, the tenth century Prince – or King - Wenceslas. I like to imagine
the Good King standing at one of the windows of the castle looking down and
spotting the poor man in the snow – in this case me – struggling with
an armful of branches. More
Current AffairsFilm tribute to St. Václav wins plaudits after 80 years
Tuesday was a state holiday in the Czech Republic, the Day of Czech
Statehood, which marks the feast day of the patron Saint Václav, or
Wenceslas. While it has always been a red-letter day for Czech Roman
Catholics, who commemorate the martyr’s murder in the year 935, it is
only in recent years that the date has gained in political significance.
This year the office of the government marked the occasion with a special
ceremony to return an 80 year old film epic about the holy monarch to the
screen.
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Current AffairsNational Museum opens major new exhibit on St. Wenceslas
The National Museum has opened a major new exhibit on St. Wenceslas, the
patron saint of the Czech lands, who was also one of their earliest and
most important rulers. What is particularly significant about this exhibit
is that it brings together a collection of the most precious manuscripts
and items relating to Saint Wenceslas over the course of roughly 700 years.
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