Church of Our Lady before Tyn, Prague, Czech Republic

The Church of Our Lady before Tyn was built between the mid 14th century, in the reign of Charles IV, and the early 16th century, although its origins are from an earlier date, as there used to be a Romanesque church from the 11th century on the site. 
In the Hussite times, Tyn church was the most important church in the city. After 1620 the country was re-Catholicized and the golden chalice of the Utraquists adorning the facade was ripped off and melted. (Utraquists were a moderate fraction of the Hussites who maintained that both the bread and the wine should be administered to people, while Catholics defended that only priests could partake in the wine).
At the end of the 17th century, due to a fire, the interior was remodelled, in the Baroque style.

The two towers, suggestively called Adam and Eve, are about 80m tall but not symmetrical. Adam is larger than Eve, representing the strong side of the family, a characteristic of the Gothic architecture of the period in which the church was built. The organ in Tyn church dates from 1673 and is the oldest in Prague. The Tyn church is also where the tomb of astronomer Tycho Brahe is located.



Opening hours:Tue. to Sat. 10-13//15-17; Sun. 10-12

Entrance free (donation expected)
How to go: The church is in the city centre.



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