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Kampa Island

Coordinates: 50°05′6″N 14°24′30″E / 50.08500°N 14.40833°E / 50.08500; 14.40833
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Čertovka at night. Kampa Island is on the left.

Kampa (also Na Kampě) is an island in the Vltava river in central Prague on the side of Malá Strana. Charles Bridge crosses its northern tip and is connected to the island by the street ulice Na Kampě. It is separated from Malá Strana by a narrow artificial channel to the west called the Devil's Stream (Čertovka), a waterway dug to power water mills (no longer existent). It is supposedly named after a sharp-tongued woman who lived in a local home called the Seven Devils.[1]

The area was named in the 17th century as the campus ("field") by Spanish soldiers who tented here during the Battle of White Mountain.

Museum Kampa

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Kampa is home to Museum Kampa, a modern art gallery showing central European (and in particular Czech) work. The pieces are from the private collection of Meda Mládek, wife of Jan V. Mládek. The museum, which opened in 2003, is housed in Sova's Mills on the eastern bank of the island. Magdalena Jetelova's huge chair sculpture, situated outside the museum above the river, is a prominent landmark visible from across the Vltava.

References

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  1. ^ Levine, Dan. Avant Guide Prague New York: Empire Press Media, 2001.
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50°05′6″N 14°24′30″E / 50.08500°N 14.40833°E / 50.08500; 14.40833