"The City of a Hundred Spires" revealed through letters, diaries and memoirs from medieval to modern times Built on the banks of the meandering river Moldau, Prague has for centuries been an inspiration to artists and writers, inhabitants and visitors, many of whom have declared the "hundred-towered" city to be one of the most beautiful in the world, though one with a turbulent history. Jan Kaplan’s selection from letters, diaries, memoirs and anecdotes brilliantly evokes both the city’s exhilarating creative power, so impressively visible in its buildings and art treasures, and the many tragic events played out in its streets through the centuries. Here are eyewitness accounts of the sermons of Jan Hus, Czech forerunner of the German Reformation, the Defenestrations of Prague, beginning in 1419, the premiere night of Mozart’s opera Don Giovanni in 1787, and the invasions and political upheavals of the 20th century. There are personal reflections from Petrarch, John Dee, Goethe, Horatio Nelson, Frederic Chopin, Hans Christian Andersen, George Eliot, Jan Neruda, Thomas Carlyle, Hector Berlioz, Auguste Rodin, Rainer Maria Rilke, Jaroslav Seifert, Karel Capek, Graham Greene, Václav Havel, Franz Kafka, Ladislav Klíma, and more. Together they powerfully conjure up the magic of the enduring city.
Jan Kaplan Book order







- 2005
- 1999
Prague 1900-2000: a hundred years of the city of a hundred towers
- 351 pages
- 13 hours of reading
Kniha "Prague 1900-2000 A" spadá do žánru Ostatní. Autorem je Kaplan Jan. Jedná se o počin nakladatelství "Gallery" z roku 1999. Přejeme příjemné čtení.
- 1997
Praha = Prag = Prague: The turbulent century = das turbulente Jahrhundert = le siècle turbulent
- 360 pages
- 13 hours of reading
- 1995
Prague in the Shadow of the Swastika: A History of the German Occupation 1939 - 1945
- 215 pages
- 8 hours of reading
A richly illustrated album-style history of Prague under Nazi occupation. Ch. 5 (pp. 113-134), "The Prague Jews, " relates to the introduction of anti-Jewish laws and segregation of the Jews in 1939-41, resettlement of Czech Jews, deportations to Theresienstadt and to Poland, and destruction and looting of Jewish communal and private property. Describes, also, the Theresienstadt ghetto, a "show ghetto" aimed to deceive the world concerning the fate of the Jews. States that of 39,395 Jews deported from Prague to Theresienstadt, 31,709 perished. Of the 92,199 Jews who lived in Bohemia and Moravia in 1941, only 14,045 survived. (From the Bibliography of the Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism)