Sights
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Interior of the Sedlec Ossuary
Since 1961, the historic town centre is protected as an urban monument reservation, the fourth largest in the Czech Republic with an area of 61 ha (150 acres). In 1995, the centre of Kutná Hora, including the Sedlec area, was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site because of its outstanding architecture and its influence on subsequent architectural developments in other Central European city centres.
The most valuable monuments in the town centre, protected as national cultural monuments, are the Church of Saint Barbara and the Italian Court, but the historic town centre also includes more than 300 other cultural monuments. In 2023, the Sedlec area and the Church of Saint Barbara were visited by 290 and 250 thousand people respectively, making them one of the most important tourist destinations of the region and the 2nd and 3rd most visited sacral monuments in the Czech Republic (after Svatá Hora in Příbram).
National cultural monuments[edit]
Church of Saint Barbara and Jesuit College
The Italian Court was built in the Gothic style between 1260 and 1300. It is the oldest monument in Kutná Hora. It was originally a part of the town's fortification system. In 1300, it became the seat of the royal mint, which was in operation until 1727. In the 1380s, another building was added, which served as a royal residence. The Italian Court is a complex of several buildings, the youngest of which were built in 1893–1898, when several dilapidated buildings were demolished and replaced under the leadership of the architect Ludvík Lábler, but the most valuable part of the complex was preserved. Of particular value and international distinction is the Chapel of Saints Wenceslaus and Ladislaus from around 1400.
The Church of Saint Barbara is among the main examples of European Gothic architecture. It was built in 1385–1395, on a site that was originally located outside the town walls, when there was already a chapel dedicated to St. Barbara. The cathedral was to represent the wealth of the town and was to compete with the nearby cathedral in Sedlec, as well as St. Vitus Cathedral in Prague. The construction project was created by Peter Parler and the construction was completed by Johann Parler. Architects and builders Master Hanuš, Matěj Rejsek and Benedikt Rejt participated in further construction stages in the 15th century. The purist reconstruction that took place from the 1880s until 1905 and was carried out by Josef Mocker and Ludvík Lábler is also considered valuable. The church complex includes a free-standing Chapel of Corpus Christi, originally a charnel house. It was also built in the Gothic style at the end of the 14th century.
Other monuments in the historic town centre[edit]
Hrádek – Museum of Silver
Stone Fountain; Church of Saint John of Nepomuk in the background
Next to the Church of Saint Barbara is the Jesuit College, also an important landmark of the town. It was designed by the architect Giovanni Domenico Orsi and the construction of this early Baroque building started in 1666. After Orsi's death in 1676, the construction was continued by Carlo Lurago. Construction continued throughout the 18th century, but was never completed to the planned extent. An important part of the complex is the promenade to the Church of St. Barbara with sculptural decoration by František Baugut.
The so-called Stone House (Czech: Kamenný dům) is a late Gothic burgher house from the 1480s. Since 1902, it houses the Museum of Silver.
Hrádek was originally a wooden fortress from 1312, rebuilt into a small castle in 1400–1420 and then completely rebuilt into a palace at the turn of the 15th and 16th centuries. A Jesuit seminary was established in its premises in 1686. It was used by the Jesuits until the abolishment of the order in 1773. From 1910, it was owned by the Kutná Hora town. Since 1947, it has been used by the Museum of Silver.
A notable technical monument is a dodecagon-shaped stone fountain, situated on today's Rejsek Square. It was probably created by Matěj Rejsek and is sometimes called Rejsek's Fountain. From its construction in 1495 until 1663, it served as a drinking water reservoir. It solved the absence of water sources that were disrupted by mining activities. The late Gothic fountain is unique not only in its dimensions, but also in the material used, which was not common in other fountains in the town.
The plague column in Kutná Hora was created by the Jesuit sculptor František Baugut in 1714–1715. It is a sculturally valuable Baroque work, created as a pieta for those who died during the plague epidemic in 1713. The top of the column is decorated by the statue of the Virgin Mary Immaculate. The pedestal is decorated by statues of saints and miners, typical for Kutná Hora.
Churches[edit]
Church of Saint James the Great
A prominent building is the Church of Saint James the Great, located next to the Italian Court. It was built in the Gothic style in 1300–1370 and modified during the reconstructions at the end of the 19th century and in 1941–1946. It is a monumental church with an 80.5 m (264 ft) high tower.
The Church of Saint John of Nepomuk was built in the Baroque style in 1734–1752, on the site of houses that was destroyed by the 1730 fire. It was built according to the design by František Maxmilián Kaňka, but other important artists of the Baroque era also participated in its creation. Today it serves mainly for cultural purposes.
The Church of Our Lady "Na Náměti" is a late Gothic building with neo-Gothic modifications. The oldest part of the church dates from the beginning of the 14th century. The church was damaged by fires in 1770 and 1823, but the late Gothic style still prevails today.
In 1712, the Ursulines arrived to Kutná Hora. The Ursuline Convent was built in the Baroque style in 1738–1743 according to the design by Kilian Ignaz Dientzenhofer, but only three wings were completed. Next to the convent is the neo-Baroque Church of the Sacred Heart, designed by Friedrich Ohmann and built in 1897–1901. Today, part of the convent is used as a school, part is used by the National Heritage Institute, and part has been returned to the order. The cellars are used commercially as wine cellars.
Sedlec[edit]
Church of the Assumption of Our Lady and Saint John the Baptist
The Sedlec suburb of Kutná Hora is known for the Sedlec Abbey with the Church of the Assumption of Our Lady and Saint John the Baptist. Founded in 1142, the monastery was founded in 1142, but most of the monastery complex was built in the second half of the 13th century. The large complex had an area of 20 ha (49 acres) at its peak and belonged to the largest and wealthiest monasteries of the Czech lands in the Middle Ages. At the turn of the 17th and 18th centuries, the church acquired a unique Baroque-Gothic form according to the design of the architect Jan Santini Aichel.
Near the abbey is the Church of All Saints, known for the Sedlec Ossuary. The ossuary was a cemetery chapel, built at the end of the 14th century and modified in the Baroque style at the beginning of the 18th century by Jan Santini Aichel. It is estimated that the ossuary is decorated with bones of more than 40,000 skeletons that belonged to those who died from plague epidemics and the Hussite Wars. The unique decoration, the main element of which is a chandelier composed of all the large bones of the human body, was created by the carver František Rint. The cemetery around the church was used in the 13th–16th centuries. Today it is an archaeological site where 30 mass graves have been identified.
Malín[edit]
The village of Malín used to be a site of an early medieval gord. The main landmark of Malín is the Church of Saint Stephen. Originally a Romanesque building, it was rebuilt in the Gothic style in the 14th and 15th centuries. In 1710, it was rebuilt into its current Baroque form. Next to the church is a separate wooden bell tower from the end of the 15th century.