Lobkowicz Palace
Museum
About Lobkowicz Palace
Lobkowicz Palace stands as the only privately owned building within Prague Castle's walls, housing seven centuries of family treasures that survived Nazi seizure and Communist confiscation. You'll walk through rooms filled with Canaletto cityscapes, Bruegel masterpieces, and original Beethoven manuscripts, including his handwritten notes on the 4th and 5th symphonies. The audio guide, narrated by current owner William Lobkowicz himself, turns each room into a personal story about his family's resilience through European upheavals.
The visit flows chronologically through elegant chambers where you'll hear William's grandfather's tales of hiding art from Nazis and his own childhood memories of exile. Unlike other castle museums with velvet ropes and sterile displays, this feels like touring someone's actual home. The Beethoven room particularly captivates: you can see the composer's angry scribbles and corrections while listening to the very pieces playing softly in the background.
Most guides rave about every room, but honestly, the weapons collection feels like filler compared to the art galleries. Admission costs 350 CZK for adults, which seems steep until you realize you're getting a private family's perspective on Czech history. Skip the gift shop downstairs and head straight to the café terrace for lunch with Prague's best castle views.
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