logo
700-Year-Old Prague Cathedral Set To Get 'New Voice' After 95 Years

700-Year-Old Prague Cathedral Set To Get 'New Voice' After 95 Years

NDTV23-07-2025
The installation of a new organ at Prague's St. Vitus Cathedral is nearing completion, giving the 700-year-old biggest temple in the Czech Republic a proper instrument to accompany religious services and concerts.
An international team was working on a three-story scaffolding above the main entrance inside the cathedral on Tuesday to put in place some of the remaining pipes. The work is scheduled to be completed in late August, followed by the voicing and tuning of the pipes through the end of the year.
The public could hear the organ's first sounds on June 15 next year, the feast of St. Vitus, officials said.
The organ contains some 6,000 pipes, ranging in length 7 millimeters (0.28 inches) to 7 meters (23 feet).
The four-manual instrument was build in a workshop of Gerhard Grenzing in El Papiol near Barcelona in Spain. The renowned German organ builder has constructed almost 140 organs and reconstructed more than 90 historical instruments in many countries.
Once completed in Spain, the new organ was disassembled and its parts were gradually transported to Prague on trucks.
The cathedral is linked to the Czech statehood. It's a place where the Czech kings were coronated and buried while the Czech crown jewels are stored inside.
The funeral Mass for Vaclav Havel, the Czech Republic's first president, was celebrated in the cathedral on Dec 23, 2011.
The previous organ was completed in the early 1930s, but turned out to be too small for its monumental space and frequently broke down. There was no interest in fixing the organ during World War II and more than 40 years of communist rule.
Effort to build a new organ started in 2017, with a crowdfunding campaign that collected more than 109 million Czech koruna, or crowns, ($5.2 million), about 98% of the sum needed.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A soldier's journey beyond the battlefield
A soldier's journey beyond the battlefield

Deccan Herald

time3 days ago

  • Deccan Herald

A soldier's journey beyond the battlefield

The year was 2018. We were in the process of launching a new course in Aerospace Management at HAL Management Academy. I urgently needed someone to handle a specific computer task, but the staff was occupied. That was when 59-year-old Anthony Cruz stepped in to help. I was surprised because I had heard that he had been promoted from a cook in the canteen to the role of stores-in-charge. I also learned that Cruz, who had failed Class 8, had begun his career at HAL in the canteen at the age of 18. .He completed the work efficiently. I was amazed by his commitment to self-improvement and asked him what his secret was behind self-actualisation. He said that he had learned discipline and the importance of time from his father, Anthony Manickam, a World War II veteran. What unfolded was the story of one of the many sepoys of the British Indian Army, whose contributions were crucial to the war effort but who were largely forgotten after Manickam was born on June 10, 1923, in Pavitram village in Tamil Nadu. He had only studied up to Class 2 and mostly helped his father with farming. One day, he heard that the Army was conducting a recruitment camp in a nearby village. Out of curiosity, Anthony and his friend went to watch. .'Hindutva' activists booked for accusing Kargil war veteran's kin of being Bangladeshi look at the tall, well-built Anthony was enough to convince the selection officer to seek out his enlistment. Anthony immediately was enrolled on June 10, 1941, at the age of 18, as a sepoy in the Madras Sappers, later renamed the Madras Engineering Group (MEG), headquartered in Bangalore since 1834. .After just six months of training, he was deployed to the Burma Campaign of World War II, where he fought in the British colony of Burma against the invading Japanese forces. It was a brutal war, filled with gunfire and loss, and Anthony witnessed many fellow soldiers fall around independence came the joy of serving one's own nation. When Anthony Cruz brought in his father's medals, I held the Burma Star in my hand, a campaign medal awarded to personnel who served in Burma between 11 December 1941 and 2 September 1945. .The medal, a six-pointed star, bore the Royal Cypher 'GRI VI' (King George VI) on the front, surrounded by the inscription 'The Burma star'. There was also a second six-pointed star bearing The 1939–1945 star and a third medal, The war medal 1939–1945, with a side profile of King George his Indian honours were five medals awarded after Independence. One of them was the Indian Independence Medal, which featured the Ashoka lions with the inscription Indian Independence at the top and 15th August 1947 below. .Manickam was also promoted to the rank of 'Naik'. During his service, he was posted in Bangalore for several years. His eldest daughter was born at Bowring Hospital in 1949. His postings took him across the country, including to Poona, where Anthony Cruz was served in the Indian Army's MEG regiment until 1968. Upon discharge, he struggled to support his family of five children. In Bangalore, he found daily-wage work in a workshop near MEG as a pattern maker in carpentry. A chance visit by a former Army commander helped him secure a job at HAL in 1971. Here, he worked in the security department until his retirement in 1981. He passed away on March 13, 2016, carrying with him the proud memories of having served the Anthony Manickam, an unsung sepoy mostly invisible in the pages of history, served the country with pride and honesty. I saw his legacy live on in his son Anthony Cruz, who, wherever he was posted, canteen, stores, or library, left the place more organised and improved. Anthony Cruz retired from HAL as Senior Chief Supervisor in 2019.

German military helicopter crashes in Saxony, two soldiers killed
German military helicopter crashes in Saxony, two soldiers killed

Hindustan Times

time4 days ago

  • Hindustan Times

German military helicopter crashes in Saxony, two soldiers killed

At least two members of the German air force were killed when their helicopter crashed during a training flight in the east of the country, the defence ministry said Tuesday. The crash happened near the town of Grimma in the eastern state of Saxony. An air force spokeswoman told AFP that the two deceased crew members were "experienced" and said that a third was still being searched for. Defence Minister Boris Pistorius said that the two dead soldiers were members of the air force's Helicopter Wing 64. The helicopter had been hired for training purposes and crashed for as yet unknown reasons into the Mulde river earlier on Tuesday. The EC-135 helicopter went missing in the morning, and local police said that canoeists later spotted parts of the helicopter in the river. More than 100 emergency service members, including police divers, joined the search for the crew. A boom has been deployed in the Mulde River because of kerosene leaking from the helicopter. "The death of the crew members has affected me and the whole of the armed forces deeply. Our thoughts are with their relatives and relatives," Pistorius said. He added that "everything possible" would be done to investigate the circumstances of the crash.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store