Old Jewish Cemetery
The Old Jewish Cemetery holds around 12,000 gravestones packed into a space smaller than a football field, creating Europe's most densely layered burial ground.
About Old Jewish Cemetery
The Old Jewish Cemetery holds around 12,000 gravestones packed into a space smaller than a football field, creating Europe's most densely layered burial ground. Bodies were buried up to twelve layers deep over 350 years, pushing weathered tombstones at odd angles that catch shadows beautifully. You'll walk narrow paths between Hebrew inscriptions dating back to 1439, including graves of famous rabbis like Judah Loew ben Bezalel, creator of the legendary golem.
The visit feels otherworldly as you navigate between tilted stones covered in moss and centuries of wear. Crowds move slowly through the cramped pathways, and the atmosphere stays reverent despite tour groups. The contrast between cramped burial space and ornate synagogues nearby shows how Prague's Jewish community adapted to severe restrictions. Hebrew text covers every surface, with symbolic carvings of hands, grapes, and lions marking different family lineages.
Entry costs 350 CZK for the full Jewish Museum circuit, which includes four synagogues you honestly don't need to see. The cemetery alone justifies the price, but most visitors rush through in 15 minutes when you should spend at least 30. Skip the audio guide and focus on the famous graves marked with small plaques. Morning visits before 10am avoid the worst crowds, and winter visits offer the most atmospheric lighting through bare trees.
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