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Stone Bell House

Stone Bell House

Take a look at the tall, narrow facade in front of you, built of pale, exposed stone, and see if you can find the small stone bell incorporated into the corner of the building.

This is the House at the Stone Bell. While it looks like a perfect slice of the fourteenth century, what you are seeing is actually a massive architectural resurrection. This building is a survivor, having worn a heavy mask for hundreds of years before its true face was revealed.

To understand why this house matters, we have to go back to the year 1310. At that time, the Prague Castle up on the hill was uninhabitable following a devastating fire. So, when John of Luxembourg and his wife, Elisabeth of Bohemia, arrived in Prague to claim the throne, they needed a place to live that was safe, central, and suitably royal. They likely chose this spot. It is widely believed that their son, the future Holy Roman Emperor Charles IV-the man who would reshape this entire city-was born right here within these walls.

The house gets its name from that stone bell on the corner. It isn't just decoration; it is a nod to a dramatic legend involving John of Luxembourg. The story goes that in 1310, John was trying to take back Prague from rival forces. His army was stuck outside the city walls, unable to breach the fortifications. They needed a signal from spies on the inside to know when the gates would be unguarded. That signal was the ringing of a specific bell from a nearby church. When the bell tolled, John’s forces stormed the gates, and the city was taken. The stone bell was placed here to memorialize that victory.

However, the rugged, Gothic look you see today-with those pointed arches and intricate stone carvings-was completely hidden for centuries. In 1685, the owners decided that Gothic architecture was hopelessly old-fashioned. They wanted a modern, Baroque home, which meant symmetry, smooth plaster, and fancy stucco. But they didn't just cover up the old facade; they attacked it. They hacked off the beautiful Gothic ornaments, the statues, and the pointed archways to create a flat surface for the new walls. They smashed the medieval stone carvings and used the rubble as filler to level out the masonry.

For nearly three hundred years, this was just another Baroque house in the square. It wasn't until the 1960s that researchers realized what was hiding underneath. They found the original Gothic face battered but intact beneath the plaster. This kicked off a massive project called "regotization" between 1975 and 1987. It was essentially a three-dimensional jigsaw puzzle. Workers recovered over twelve thousand stone fragments from the rubble used in the walls. They painstakingly pieced together the window tracery and the arches.

They even found fragments of statues that once adorned the facade, including figures of a King and Queen seated on thrones, which you can actually see remnants of in the ground-floor chapel today. The restoration wasn't without controversy, though. Since the original roof was long gone, the architects had to improvise. They added that concrete gallery at the very top, which definitely wasn't there in the Middle Ages, but it holds the structure together.

Inside, the house was just as clever. It had a sophisticated heating system where warm smoke from a lower room was channeled into a hollow space beneath the floor of a wooden living chamber above, keeping the royals warm without choking them on fumes. It was a palace disguised as a townhome, a piece of French-style architecture dropped into the heart of Bohemia.

Take a moment to admire the stonework that was hidden in the dark for so long. When you are ready, we can make our way to the next stop.

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Das war eine solide Art, Brighton kennenzulernen, ohne sich wie ein Tourist zu fühlen. Die Erzählung hatte Tiefe und Kontext, übertrieb es aber nicht.
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