📜 Historic fortress and museum in Mladá Boleslav, showcasing regional history from medieval to modern times.
🔍 Explore interactive exhibitions, discover ancient hillfort origins, and enjoy engaging programs for all ages.
🏰 Discover the castle's rich past, from a 10th-century hillfort to a modern museum.
🖼️ Immerse yourself in interactive exhibitions on regional life, art, and history.
👨👩👧👦 Engaging elements and special programs make it suitable for children aged 5+.
🏆 Recognized for its projects, including the award-winning "Letecké muzeum Metoděje Vlacha".
💰 Standard entry: 80 CZK.
💸 Discounted entry: 50 CZK.
👨👩👧👦 Family entry: 200 CZK.
🎟️ Special guided tours are 50 CZK for adults and 30 CZK for children, including free museum entry.
🗓️ Tuesday - Friday: 09:00 - 17:00
🗓️ Saturday - Sunday: 09:00 - 12:00, 12:30 - 17:00
🚫 Closed on Mondays.
🏛️ Operated by Muzeum Mladoboleslavska.
🎨 Castle, Landscape and People: A new, modern exhibition exploring the history of the castle and its promontory, utilizing audiovisual technologies, interactive 3D models, and videomapping. It covers the castle's roles as an administrative center, noble residence, military barracks, and even a WWII internment facility.
🏡 Countryside in the Course of Time: Discover rural life in the 19th and early 20th centuries, featuring traditional crafts like shoemaking, tailoring, and unique rush weaving.
🗿 Baroque Workshop of the Jelínek Family: Learn about the renowned sculptural atelier from nearby Kosmonosy, active from the 17th to 19th centuries.
👧 Enyky benyky kliky bé... - being a child 150 years ago: An exhibition focusing on childhood in the past.
🎲 Enjoy a unique museum playroom and engaging activities.
🧩 Participate in the "Muzeion" museum game and "Malý muzejník" program.
🎈 Look out for special events like marble tournaments on the courtyard during summer.
📍 Stands on a promontory above the Klenice and Jizera rivers.
🛡️ Origins trace back to a prehistoric fortified settlement from the 10th-11th centuries.
🏗️ Current stone castle built after 1320 by the Lords of Michalovice, with Gothic and Renaissance modifications.
🔄 Served various roles: administrative center, aristocratic residence, barracks, WWII internment facility, and textile storage before becoming a museum in 1972.