Kavarna Slavia is, without a doubt, the most famous café in Prague and for a good reason. First opened in 1884, Kavarna Slavia has seen the march of modern Czech history from the twilight of the Austro-Hungarian Empire to the high water mark of the Czech literary movements in the 1920s, to the Nazi takeover in World War II, to both the rise and fall of communism. During the days of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Prague was a city divided between German and Czech speakers; Kavarna Slavia was resolutely a Czech café, and so many Czech bohemians, such as composer Bedrich Smetana or Nobel Prize winning poet Jaroslav Seifert, came to Kavarna Slavia.
Kavarna Slavia is, without a doubt, the most famous café in Prague and for a good reason. First opened in 1884, Kavarna Slavia has seen the march of modern Czech history from the twilight of the Austro-Hungarian Empire to the high water mark of the Czech literary movements in the 1920s, to the Nazi takeover in World War II, to both the rise and fall of communism. During the days of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Prague was a city divided between German and Czech speakers; Kavarna Slavia was resolutely a Czech café, and so many Czech bohemians, such as composer Bedrich Smetana or Nobel Prize winning poet Jaroslav Seifert, came to Kavarna Slavia.
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