Misplaced Pages

Stalin Monument (Prague)

Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Stalin's Monument (Prague)) Sculpture in Prague, Czech Republic
Stalin Monument
Czech: Stalinův pomník
The Stalin Monument and pedestal, viewed from the westThe Stalin Monument and pedestal, viewed from the west
ArtistOtakar Švec
Completion dateMay 1, 1955
TypeSculpture
Mediumgranite
SubjectJoseph Stalin
ConditionDemolished November 6, 1962
LocationPrague, Czech Republic
Coordinates50°05′41.38″N 14°24′57.97″E / 50.0948278°N 14.4161028°E / 50.0948278; 14.4161028

Stalin's Monument (Czech: Stalinův pomník) was a 15.5 m (51 ft) granite statue honoring Joseph Stalin in Prague, Czechoslovakia. It was unveiled on 1 May 1955 after more than 5+1⁄2 years of work, and was the world's largest representation of Stalin. The sculpture was demolished in late 1962.

History

Background

The structure was commissioned after the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia seized power in Czechoslovakia in 1948 with Soviet backing. It was designed to showcase Stalinist ideology and was constructed on an elevated site on Letna Hill in Letná Park, overlooking the city centre of Prague.

Construction & Inauguration

The monument overlooking Prague city centre

The monument was located on a huge concrete pedestal on the flattened Letna Hill, which can still be visited in Letná Park. It was the largest group statue in Europe, measuring 15.5 m (51 ft) high and 22 m (72 ft) long. The monument weighed 17 million kilograms, and consumed thirty thousand granite slabs.

Forced labour was used during the monument's construction. In 2021, archaeological excavations in Letná Park uncovered the foundations of a labour camp which housed workers involved in the monument's construction. According to historical documents, the camp consisted of three wooden barracks, each accommodating up to 40 inmates in eight-person rooms, with minimal facilities. The laborers were described as soldiers and individuals deemed politically unreliable by the communist regime.

The monument was officially unveiled on May 1, 1955. It was officially titled "A Monument to Love and Friendship." The sculptor was Otakar Švec, who killed himself a few days before the unveiling.

Demolition

Removal of the monument

Stalin died in March 1953, two years before the unveiling of the monument, and the process of de-Stalinization began shortly after its completion. The monument, therefore, became a liability to the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia. As ordered by the Soviet Union, it was taken down with 800 kilograms (1,800 lb) of explosives. The remains of the statue are stored in chambers beneath the site.

Later use of site

Metronome, a view from the East
Gates to nowhere

In 1990, pirate radio station Radio Stalin operated from a bomb shelter beneath the statue's plinth. The same shelter was also the home of Prague's first rock club in the early 1990s. Since 1991, the marble pedestal has been used as the base of a giant kinetic sculpture of a metronome. In 1996, the pedestal was briefly used as a base for a 35-foot-tall (11 m) statue of Michael Jackson as a promotional stunt for the start of his HIStory World Tour. A billboard promoting Civic Democratic Party leader Václav Klaus was erected on the site during the Czech parliamentary elections of 1998 but was removed soon after due to high winds.

A green plaque below the metronome reads:

Metronome
Letenské sady
The Metronome, the work of sculptor Vratislav Karel Novák [cz], was erected in 1991 atop the massive stone plinth that originally served as the base for the monument to Soviet leader Josef Vissarionovich Stalin. Work began on Prague's Stalin monument towards the end of 1949, and in May 1955, it was finally unveiled. The largest group sculpture in Europe during its existence, the monument had a reinforced-concrete structure faced with 235 granite blocks, weighing 17,000 tonnes and costing 140 million crowns to complete. The gigantic composition, by sculptor Otakar Švec and the architects Jiří [cz] and Vlasta [cz] Štursa, did not tower for long over the medieval centre of Prague: in connection with Soviet criticism of Stalin's "cult of personality," the work was dynamited and removed towards the end of 1962.

The City of Prague has been considering several options for redevelopment of the site for years, including a plan to build an aquarium. The remaining socle is a popular meeting point for skateboarders and other people.

See also

References

  1. "The History of Czechoslovakia: 1948 Czechoslovak Coup d'état". The History of Czechoslovakia: The history behind the self-determined split of the federal state of Czechoslovakia into the Czech Republic and Slovakia. Retrieved 2025-01-01.
  2. ^ Stalin statue site reveals chilling remains of Prague labour camp, The Guardian (28 March 2020)
  3. "Stalin Monument Blown Up but Not Forgotten - Prague Now". prague-now.com/. Retrieved 2025-01-01.
  4. "Stalin Monument Blown Up but Not Forgotten - Prague Now". prague-now.com/. Retrieved 2025-01-01.
  5. "Archaeologists excavate Prague labour camp for "politically unreliable" conscripts who built giant Stalin statue". Radio Prague International. 2021-03-22. Retrieved 2025-01-01.
  6. ^ Asiedu, Dita (3 May 2005). "World's biggest Stalin monument would have turned 50 on May Day". Radio Prague. Retrieved 16 December 2013.
  7. "Joseph Stalin dies | March 5, 1953". HISTORY. Retrieved 2025-01-01.
  8. "An exercise in futility". The Prague Post. 19 December 2007. Archived from the original on 16 December 2013. Retrieved 16 December 2013.
  9. Letná Park (praha7.cz)

External links

Joseph Stalin
History
and politics
Overviews
Chronology
Concepts
Crimes, repressions,
and controversies
Works
De-Stalinization
Criticism and
opposition
Remembrance
Cultural depictions
Family
Stalin's residences
Public art in Prague
Works
Charles Bridge
Categories:
Stalin Monument (Prague) Add topic