such an awesome scenery, 2 seaside cafes and a gift shop definitely a must for morning breakfast on the beach.
The Twin Towers we saw far across the river are called St. Peter and St. Paul's Church, which are both disciples of Jesus, and may have been kept together for remembrance because they martyred at the hands of the Roman tyrant Nero. There are many churches in the world called "St. Peter and St. Paul Church", the appearance of the high castle is very beautiful, I don't know if it is because of the long time, the general body is painted black, only the door is set with colorful glaze, very beautiful, the interior of the church is relatively simple, We went in and turned around a little. The real attraction of the castle was the famous cemetery. The 13th century cemetery became the Czech National Cemetery in 1869, and it buried a large number of Czech celebrities, especially many musicians, painters, writers and artists, making it a place of pilgrimage for art lovers. The cemetery is close to St. Peter and St. Paul's Church. The area is not very large. It is not like the gloomy cemetery in our impression. It is more like a small garden, green trees, quiet and pleasant, especially those slightly crowded tombstones, thousands of shapes, each one is ingenious, with religious stories. There are carved tomb masters, some tombstones are as tall as monuments, some are small and exquisite, the most music-themed tombstones, there are violin-shaped, piano-shaped, some are full of notes, some carved five-line spectrum, at a glance, you know that the master was a musician in his life, Some tombstones are open books, about the owner from the real writing career, ...... is simply an open-air exhibition hall of sculpture art. The masters who have long slept here include musicians Bederikh Smetana (Bedrich Smetana) and Anthony Devosak (Antonin Dvorak), poet Jan Nenuda, and painter Alphonse Musha (Alphonse Mucha). Because of not doing enough homework in advance, Enyaya and I only remembered that there was Dvorak buried in the cemetery, and his ninth symphony, "From the New World", was familiar to everyone, and the gravestone was carved with Dvorak's bust, and the musician's eyebrows were heavy, as if he were thinking. We vaguely thought that the writer Kafka was buried here, and we searched for it, only to know that Kafka and his family, as Jews, were buried in the new Jewish cemetery in the old town, not in the high fort. Unfortunately, we missed the tomb of Smetana. Bedrikh Smetana, founder of Czech classical music and national music, his representative symphony group song "My Motherland" is well known in the Czech Republic, of which the second movement "Voltava River" describes the endless life of the Czech "Mother River" with delicate musical strokes, The musician also wrote a poem for this movement, "The Voltava River has two sources, two streams flowing through the windy forest, one clear, one gentle, two streams merge into a torrent ...... along the St. John Canyon, the Voltava River is flowing down, Shocking the cliffs, making a loud noise, the river rushed to Prague more and more powerful, flowing through the ancient Visegrad (Prague Castle), showing all her magnificent and solemnity in the high castle where the music parents sleep, We can see the Voltava River from the Smetana and Prague at excellent heights and angles. At the foot of the green vines, the red roofs dotted with the light blue sky, the gray blue river, and the magnificent Voltava River, like a warm silk, laid out on the earth of Prague, "showed all her majesty and majesty" as the musicians sang. This is the high castle, the birthplace of Prague, this is Prague, the city of gold at the end of the Voltava, this is the Voltava, the Czech people and the bohemian culture of the endless mother river. For a moment, Prague on the Voltava, we shall meet again in ten days.
such an awesome scenery, 2 seaside cafes and a gift shop definitely a must for morning breakfast on the beach.
The Twin Towers we saw far across the river are called St. Peter and St. Paul's Church, which are both disciples of Jesus, and may have been kept together for remembrance because they martyred at the hands of the Roman tyrant Nero. There are many churches in the world called "St. Peter and St. Paul Church", the appearance of the high castle is very beautiful, I don't know if it is because of the long time, the general body is painted black, only the door is set with colorful glaze, very beautiful, the interior of the church is relatively simple, We went in and turned around a little. The real attraction of the castle was the famous cemetery. The 13th century cemetery became the Czech National Cemetery in 1869, and it buried a large number of Czech celebrities, especially many musicians, painters, writers and artists, making it a place of pilgrimage for art lovers. The cemetery is close to St. Peter and St. Paul's Church. The area is not very large. It is not like the gloomy cemetery in our impression. It is more like a small garden, green trees, quiet and pleasant, especially those slightly crowded tombstones, thousands of shapes, each one is ingenious, with religious stories. There are carved tomb masters, some tombstones are as tall as monuments, some are small and exquisite, the most music-themed tombstones, there are violin-shaped, piano-shaped, some are full of notes, some carved five-line spectrum, at a glance, you know that the master was a musician in his life, Some tombstones are open books, about the owner from the real writing career, ...... is simply an open-air exhibition hall of sculpture art. The masters who have long slept here include musicians Bederikh Smetana (Bedrich Smetana) and Anthony Devosak (Antonin Dvorak), poet Jan Nenuda, and painter Alphonse Musha (Alphonse Mucha). Because of not doing enough homework in advance, Enyaya and I only remembered that there was Dvorak buried in the cemetery, and his ninth symphony, "From the New World", was familiar to everyone, and the gravestone was carved with Dvorak's bust, and the musician's eyebrows were heavy, as if he were thinking. We vaguely thought that the writer Kafka was buried here, and we searched for it, only to know that Kafka and his family, as Jews, were buried in the new Jewish cemetery in the old town, not in the high fort. Unfortunately, we missed the tomb of Smetana. Bedrikh Smetana, founder of Czech classical music and national music, his representative symphony group song "My Motherland" is well known in the Czech Republic, of which the second movement "Voltava River" describes the endless life of the Czech "Mother River" with delicate musical strokes, The musician also wrote a poem for this movement, "The Voltava River has two sources, two streams flowing through the windy forest, one clear, one gentle, two streams merge into a torrent ...... along the St. John Canyon, the Voltava River is flowing down, Shocking the cliffs, making a loud noise, the river rushed to Prague more and more powerful, flowing through the ancient Visegrad (Prague Castle), showing all her magnificent and solemnity in the high castle where the music parents sleep, We can see the Voltava River from the Smetana and Prague at excellent heights and angles. At the foot of the green vines, the red roofs dotted with the light blue sky, the gray blue river, and the magnificent Voltava River, like a warm silk, laid out on the earth of Prague, "showed all her majesty and majesty" as the musicians sang. This is the high castle, the birthplace of Prague, this is Prague, the city of gold at the end of the Voltava, this is the Voltava, the Czech people and the bohemian culture of the endless mother river. For a moment, Prague on the Voltava, we shall meet again in ten days.