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Discover your additional benefits as a Eurail Pass holder.
Don’t limit yourself to one or two stops in Europe – do it by train and travel as far and wide as your imagination allows.
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Visit to Museum of Music A 17th century baroque monastery building with an impressive central atrium makes a beautiful setting for the new Museum of Music, showcasing an incredible collection of violins, guitars, lutes, trumpets, flutes, harmonicas and more – all set to music of course. |
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Explore Franz Kafka Museum The Franz Kafka Museum focuses on the life and work of Prague’s most famous literary son. Entitled ‘City of K’, it explores the intimate relationship between the writer and the city that shaped him. Outside the museum is the amusing and controversial sculpture, Proudy. |
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Visit Prague Castle Prague Castle is the city’s most popular attraction. It’s the largest ancient castle in the world and has seen four major reconstructions. In the 1920s President Masaryk hired a Slovene architect, Jože Plečnik, to renovate the castle; his changes created some of its most memorable features and made the complex more tourist-friendly. |
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| What to do |
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Pay a visit to Cinema Arthouse Kino Aero is Prague’s best-loved arthouse cinema, with themed programs, retrospectives and unusual films, often in English or with English subtitles. This is the place to catch reruns of classics from Death In Venice to The Life of Bryan. |
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Prague State Opera The impressive neo-rococo home of the Prague State Opera provides a glorious setting for performances of opera and ballet. AN annual Verdi festival takes place here in August and September, and less conventional shows, such as Leoncavallo’s rarely staged version of La Bohème, are also performed here. |
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Swing Jazz at U Malého Glena U Malého Glena (Little Glen’s) is a lively American-owned bar where hard-swinging jazz or blues bands play every night in the cramped stone-vaulted cellar. There are regular jam sessions where amateurs are welcome – it’s a small venue, so get here early if you want a good view of the band. |
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| Where to eat |
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Romance at Da Emanuel Small, elegant Italian-owned Da Emanuel, on a quiet residential street, is one of Dejvice’s true destination restaurants. The main dining room, perched romantically below an arched brick ceiling, holds around a dozen tables, each with a vase of fresh flowers. |
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Gourmet at U Zavoje At U Zavoje, this wood-paneled gourmet complex, set in a beautiful old passageway, includes a wine bar, restaurant, coffee house and delicatessen, all dedicated to fine food and French and Czech wine. Try our favorite dish – artichokes stuffed with tartare of wild salmon and scallops. |
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Bohemian dinner at U Zlaté Hrušky U Zlaté Hrušky (At the Golden Pear) is a cost, wood-paneled gourmet’s corner, serving beautifully prepared Bohemian fish, fowl and game dishes, and is a great way to investigate Czech cuisine. Frequented as much by locals as by tourists. In summer get a table in its leafy garden restaurant across the street. |
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