Prague 4k walk HDR - Petřín hill - Legion Bridge - Vltava - Czech Republic 🇨🇿 ASMR

Описание к видео Prague 4k walk HDR - Petřín hill - Legion Bridge - Vltava - Czech Republic 🇨🇿 ASMR

In this video, there will be a walk around Prague from Petřín Hill to the Legion Bridge, from where you will have the best view of Prague Castle and Charles Bridge!

Sometimes I'm forced to embed music in videos because YouTube makes copyright claims for music from streets.

The Legion Bridge is the seventh bridge in Prague on Vltava. It stands on the site of the original chain bridge named after Emperor Francis I. It joins Shooter's Island and the Lesser Quarter. On the initiative of the entrepreneur Vojtěch Lanna, it was built between 1898 - 1901 by the architect and engineer Anthony Balšánek and Jiri Soukup. In 1901 it was opened in the presence of Emperor Franz Joseph I, after whom it was carrying its first name. After World War I, it was given today's name – the Legion Bridge. During World War II, the occupation was renamed again, this time after Bedřich Smetana, in 1960 to the Velvet Revolution, was called the First of May Bridge. The bridge was built in the architectural style of neo Art Nouveau. Its art decoration, such as stone and bronze handrail lighting lampposts, underwent repairs in the years 1981 - 1983 on the occasion of the reconstruction of the National Theatre. On both sides of the bridge, two towers were located to collect tolls in the past. The bridge is 343 meters long and 16 meters wide. It is divided into 8 flat elliptical and 1 round arches. It is built of granite blocks.


Petřín is a hill in the center of Prague, Czech Republic. It rises 327 m above sea level and some 130 m above the left bank of the Vltava River. The hill, almost entirely covered with parks, is a favorite recreational area for the inhabitants of Prague. The hill (in German known as Laurenziberg) is featured prominently in Franz Kafka's early short story "Description of a Struggle" and briefly in Milan Kundera's novel The Unbearable Lightness of Being. The chronicler Cosmas describes Petřín as a very rocky place, the hill is allegedly called Petřín because of the large number of rocks (Latin: petra).[3] Since ancient times, stones were dug and were used to construct buildings in Prague. The medieval defense wall, the Hunger Wall, was built on Petřín Hill during 1360 - 1362, by order of Czech King Charles IV. The Petřín Lookout Tower, which strongly resembles the Eiffel Tower, was built atop a hill in 1891. Other sights include the Rose Garden, Mirror Maze, Cathedral of Saint Lawrence, and St. Michael Church. The hill's summit is linked to Prague's Malá Strana district by the Petřín funicular, a funicular railway first operated in 1891.


Recorded in 4k 60fps HDR

Perception Philosophy
16 of January 2022
Czech Republic

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