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Muzeum Antonina Dvoraka vs Narodni Muzeum

Both Dvorak Museum and National Museum are praised by professional travelers. Overall, National Museum scores slightly better than Dvorak Museum. National Museum scores 84 with recommendations from 5 publications such as Lonely Planet, Frommer's and Michelin Guide.

Muzeum Antonina Dvoraka
Muzeum Antonina Dvoraka
8 / 10
Ke Karlovu 20, Praha 2, Nové Mesto, Prague, Czech Republic
From $0 /night
Fodor's Fodor's
"The stately baroque red-and-yellow villa housing this museum displays the 19th-century Czech composer's scores, photographs, viola, piano, and other memorabilia." Full review
Frommer's Frommer's
"The country's best-known 19th-century Czech composer, Antonín Dvorák, lived here during his golden years." Full review
Time Out Time Out
"Hidden away behind wrought-iron gates, the Dvořák Society's well-organised tribute to the most famous Czech composer is housed in an elegant early 18th-century Baroque summer palace." Full review
Michelin Guide Michelin Guide
1 Star
"Since 1932, this has been a museum celebrating the life of one of the great characters in Czech music: Antonin Dvorak (1841-1904)." Full review
Lonely Planet Lonely Planet
Top Choice
"The most striking building in the drab neighbourhood south of Ječná is the energetically baroque Vila Amerika, a 1720s, French-style summer house." Full review
Narodni Muzeum
Narodni Muzeum
8 / 10
Vaclavske Namesti 68, Praha 1, New Town (Nove Mesto), Prague, Czech Republic
From $0 /night
Fodor's Fodor's
"Housed in a grandiose neo-Renaissance structure at the top of Wenceslas Square, the National Museum was built between 1885 to 1890 as a symbol of the Czech national revival." Full review
Frommer's Frommer's
"The National Museum, dominating upper Wenceslas Square (Václavské námestí), looks so much like an important government building that it even fooled the Soviet soldiers." Full review
Lonely Planet Lonely Planet
Top Choice
"Looming above Wenceslas Square is the neo-Renaissance bulk of the National Museum, designed in the 1880s by Josef Schulz as an architectural symbol of the Czech National Revival." Full review
Time Out Time Out
"Built between 1885 and 1890, this neo-Renaissance palace is covered in decades of grime and the street graffiti that has become common in Prague since the Velvet Revolution." Full review
Michelin Guide Michelin Guide
1 Star
"The Museum's imposing 104-metre-long facade stands opposite Wenceslas Square." Full review