The new statue to Empress Maria Theresa in Prague 6 is the center of controversy.
The Town Hall commissioned the statue in 2014 for the price of four million CZK. It is to be unveiled in September and will stand in a new park located between the street Milady Horákové and the bastions of Prague Castle.
“It is elegant, majestic, and it will suit on the Powder Bridge (Prašný Most),” says the sculptor Jan Kovářík.
“It reminds me of a skittle,” wrote a Czech citizen on Facebook. “Disgusting, wasted money, mannequin,” are other negative reactions to the statue. Some people think the opposite: “Beautiful, modern and with a clean design. Unfortunately, Czechs are stuck in the past and will not appreciate it. ”
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Maria Theresa Walburga Amalia Christina
Maria Theresa Walburga Amalia Christina (May 13, 1717 – November 29,1780) was the only female ruler of the Habsburg dominions and the last of the House of Habsburg. She started her 40-year reign when her father, Emperor Charles VI, died in October 1740. As queen of Bohemia, she promulgated institutional, financial, and educational reforms.
She developed the modern centralized state and promoted education, judiciary, and financial reforms encouraged industrial production and introduced registers of inhabitants, real estate, and land. She was the first to start using paper money in Czech territory.
Maria Theresa’s relation to the Czech Lands was far from warm, but rather pragmatic. Before her coronation as the Queen of Bohemia, she wrote in a letter that the Czech crown reminds her of a joker’s cap.
The rule of an empress who liked to present herself as a caring mother of the nation left a bitter after-taste; indeed the Czechs refer to her as ‘macecha Čech’, the stepmother of Bohemia.
Similarly, the Slovak capital Bratislava recently dropped the plan to reinstall a new equestrian statue of Maria Theresa in a place where an old one used to stand between 1897 and 1921, the daily writes.