Ďáblice Cemetery
| Ďáblice Cemetery | |
|---|---|
Ďáblický hřbitov | |
Gate of the cemetery | |
![]() Interactive map of Ďáblice Cemetery | |
| Details | |
| Established | 1914 |
| Location | |
| Country | Czech Republic |
| Coordinates | 50°8′9″N 14°28′49″E / 50.13583°N 14.48028°E |
| Type | Public |
| Size | Over 29 hectares (72 acres) |
| No. of graves | 20,000 |
Ďáblice Cemetery (Czech: Ďáblický hřbitov) is a graveyard in Prague, Czech Republic. It is located in the Ďáblice municipal district in Prague 8, in the northern part of Prague. It is the second largest cemetery in Prague by area.
History and description

The cemetery was founded in 1912 as Prague's central burial place and built in 1912–1914. It has an area of more than 29 ha (72 acres), making it the second largest cemetery in Prague by area after Olšany Cemetery. The entrance pavilions were designed in the Cubist style by Vlastislav Hofman.[1][2]
Over 20,000 registered graves are located here. In addition to regular graves, there are about 70 mass graves containing bodies of over 14,000 people in total.[citation needed]
The cemetery area is both a valuable architectural monument and a historical monument. There is intention to declare a part of the cemetery a national cultural monument. This initiative is hampered by the objection that, apart from thousands of the victims of Nazism and hundreds of the victims of communism, the mass graves also contain thousands of bodies or body parts of unknown people who died in Prague hospitals and were subsequently used for pathological or academic autopsies.[3][4]
Notable interments
Since 1943, Czech people executed by Nazis or killed while fighting Nazis were buried there.[5] The Ďáblice Cemetery is known as the resting place of the resistance fighters of World War II, and at the same time there is an unmarked grave with several war criminals executed after trials after World War II.[6] Notable people buried at Ďáblice Cemetery include:
- Andrea Absolonová (1976–2004), diver and pornographic actress
- Alfréd Bartoš (1916–1942), army officer and war hero
- Kamil Bednář (1912–1972), poet, translator and writer
- Karel Čurda (1911–1947), army officer and Nazi collaborator
- Kurt Daluege (1897–1946), German Nazi war criminal
- Karl Hermann Frank (1898–1946), German Nazi war criminal
- Jozef Gabčík (1912–1942), Slovak soldier and war hero
- Gerhard Gentzen (1909–1945), German mathematician
- Jan Kubiš (1913–1942), soldier and war hero
- Václav Morávek (1904–1942), army officer and war hero
- Adolf Opálka (1915–1942), army officer and war hero
- Josef Valčík (1914–1942), army officer and war hero
References
- ^ "Ďáblický hřbitov" (in Czech). Hřbitovy a pohřební služby hlavního města Prahy. Retrieved 19 November 2025.
- ^ "Putování po hrobech slavných matematiků, fyziků, astronomů XIX: Ďáblický hřbitov". matfyz.cz (in Czech). 22 August 2017. Retrieved 19 November 2025.
- ^ "Pohřebiště v Ďáblicích by mělo být prohlášeno národní památkou". Týden (in Czech). 10 December 2014. Retrieved 29 December 2016.
- ^ "Masové hroby politických vězňů a příslušníků II. a III. odboje". Minulost.cz (in Czech). 19 January 2016. Retrieved 29 December 2016.
- ^ "Experts find wartime paratroopers' grave". praguemonitor.com. 4 October 2007. Archived from the original on 26 October 2007. Retrieved 27 March 2018.
- ^ Gazdík, Jan (3 October 2007). "Parašutisté leží v hrobě v Ďáblicích, potvrdili experti". iDNES.cz (in Czech). Retrieved 19 November 2025.
External links
Media related to Ďáblice Cemetery at Wikimedia Commons
