
Prague Ghosts, Legends, Medieval Underground and Dungeon Tour
Walking Tour
Duration
1h 15min
The Experience
Prague looks like a fairytale at street level. But the pretty facades of the Old Town hide a darker reality. This Prague walking tour pulls back the curtain on the city’s underground past. You won’t find sanitized stories here. Instead, you'll drop into 12th-century cellars that have barely changed in 800 years. It’s an immersive descent into the physical foundations of the Czech capital. This is a chance to see parts of the city that remained untouched while the world above changed.
The atmosphere is thick. Your guide wears a period costume and carries a lantern. You'll walk the narrow alleys of the Old Town and the Jewish Ghetto (Josefov). The stories are heavy. You’ll hear about the bubonic plague and the 1621 political executions. When you step from the neon lights of the modern street into a stone-arched Gothic cellar, the noise vanishes. Only a heavy silence remains. It’s disorienting.
This isn't for everyone. It's for history buffs and those who want an unvarnished encounter with the violent side of Prague. You’ll need to be fit. The stairs are steep and uneven. The floors are often just dirt or raw stone. It’s a blunt look at medieval survival. You'll leave understanding the blood-soaked legacy of this haunted city. It’s worth every minute if you have the stomach for it.
Experience the Tour


The Subterranean Architecture and Urban Engineering of Medieval Prague
To understand these spaces, look at the Vltava River. In the 1100s, Prague was a floodplain. People built Romanesque stone houses, but the river kept ruining them. Floods were constant and catastrophic. So the city did something radical. They raised the street level by five meters. They packed the streets with earth and masonry debris. They buried the lower half of the city. It was a massive project that took generations.
The original ground floors became basements. People used them for storage cellars or workshops. This wasn't a tunnel system like Paris. It's a patchwork of hidden pockets. Step down today and you’ll see 12th-century vaulting and original stone walls. It’s a 3D snapshot of the Middle Ages. The modern city feels miles away. You can almost feel the weight of the dirt above you.

The Theatre of the Macabre: Jan Mydlář and the 1621 Old Town Executions
Prague’s history turned bloody on June 21, 1621. Emperor Ferdinand II wanted to crush the Protestant rebellion. He executed 27 leaders in Old Town Square. He used a massive scaffold draped in black. It was designed to terrify everyone. Noblemen and knights died that day.
Jan Mydlář was the man in the red hood. He was a university man. He studied medicine before he became an executioner. He beheaded 12 men with four different broadswords. He didn't use a block. He had to be precise. One mistake and the crowd might turn on him. After the killing, he hung twelve heads in iron baskets on the Bridge Tower. They stayed there for nearly twenty years. Mydlář was rich but hated. He was regarded as 'unclean' and lived a life of isolation. He had to sit alone in taverns. His job ruined his own family.

Alchemy, Mysticism, and the Realm of the Golem
Under Emperor Rudolf II, Prague was the capital of European alchemy. He hired John Dee and Edward Kelley. They wanted the Philosopher’s Stone and eternal life. They worked in these deep cellars to keep their experiments secret. The Inquisition was always watching. You’ll see a recreated laboratory that shows the thin line between science and magic. It’s a window into a time when people believed anything was possible with the right potion.
Then there's the Golem. Legend says Rabbi Loew built him from Vltava clay to protect the Jewish Ghetto. He used Kabbalistic rituals to bring the creature to life. It worked too well. The Golem became violent and had to be destroyed. These stories weren't just myths back then. In the dark, silent underground, the medieval survivalist mindset starts to make sense. Science and faith were the same thing as magic.

The Specters of Old Town: Folklore, Plagues, and the Cursed Astronomical Clock
The prague ghosts legends medieval underground and dungeon tour maps the city's dark folklore directly onto its geography. You'll stop at Old Town Square and the 'Executioner’s Pub.' Guides tell you about the bubonic plague. They describe the desperate reality of living through an epidemic. Then come the ghosts. These aren't just jump scares. They're tied to real history.
The Astronomical Clock has the darkest legend. Councilors supposedly blinded its creator, Master Hanuš, so he couldn't build another. He got revenge by throwing himself into the gears. He stopped the clock and cursed anyone who tried to fix it. Today, the clock’s skeleton figure of Death is a constant reminder of the end. You’ll hear about headless knights and political assassinations too. When you finally climb back to the surface, Prague won't look like a fairytale anymore. Your perception of those pretty streets will be permanently changed.

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Frequently Asked Questions
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Experience Starts At

Location Guide
Staré Město (Old Town)
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