Sedlec Ossuary "Bone Church"

A church of bones, decorated with 40,000 human skeletons

Category Ossuaries, Catacombs, Crypts, & Cemeteries, Curious Places of Worship

Image of Sedlec Ossuary "Bone Church" located in Kutna Hora, Czech Republic | Skulls and crosbone motifs in actual skulls and crossed bones

Skulls and crosbone motifs in actual skulls and crossed bones

Image of Sedlec Ossuary "Bone Church" located in Kutna Hora, Czech Republic | Skulls and crosbone motifs in actual skulls and crossed bones Image of Sedlec Ossuary "Bone Church" located in Kutna Hora, Czech Republic | heraldry in bones Image of Sedlec Ossuary "Bone Church" located in Kutna Hora, Czech Republic Image of Sedlec Ossuary "Bone Church" located in Kutna Hora, Czech Republic Image of Sedlec Ossuary "Bone Church" located in Kutna Hora, Czech Republic | Coat of arms detail Image of Sedlec Ossuary "Bone Church" located in Kutna Hora, Czech Republic | Exterior Image of Sedlec Ossuary "Bone Church" located in Kutna Hora, Czech Republic | Wall detail Image of Sedlec Ossuary "Bone Church" located in Kutna Hora, Czech Republic | Chandelier
Ossuaries http://atlasobscura.com/category/memento-mori/ossuaries Catacombs, Crypts, & Cemeteries http://atlasobscura.com/category/memento-mori/catacombs-crypts-cemeteries Curious Places of Worship http://atlasobscura.com/category/architectural-oddities/curious-places-of-worship

The 40,000 skeletons within Sedlec Ossuary (aka Kostnice Ossuary Beinhaus) in the Czech Republic welcome you, quite literally, with open arms. Known to most as “The Bone Church,” it displays some of the world’s more macabre art. In addition to a splendid bone chandelier composed from almost every bone in a human body, the ossuary displays two large bone chalices, four baroque bone candelabras, six enormous bone pyramids, two bone monstrances (a vessel used to display the Eucharistic host), a family crest in (you guessed it) bone, and skull candleholders. Festively looping chains of bone are hung throughout like crepe paper at a birthday party.

Sedlec Ossuary has a long history, beginning in the 13th century when the Abbot of the Sedlec Monastery (Abbot Henry) brought a handful of earth back from a journey to the Grave of the Lord in Jerusalem. He scattered this “holy soil” across the Sedlec cemetery, securing its place as one of the most desired burial sites for people all over Bohemia and the surrounding countries. Everyone wanted to be buried in that handful of the Holy Land and more than 30,000 were. But it wasn’t long before there simply wasn’t enough room for everyone to rest in peace, and the bodies were moved to a crypt to make room for the newly dead.

In 1870, a local woodcarver, František Rint was employed for the dark task of artistically arranging the thousands of bones. Rint came up with the Bone Church’s stunning chandelier, as well as the amazing Schwarzenberg coat of arms, which includes a raven pecking at the severed head of a Turk--all made of human bone. Rint was responsible for bleaching all of the bones in the ossuary in order to give the room a uniform look. His artist’s signature is still on the wall today--naturally, in his medium of choice, bone.

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  • Hours Apr-Sept: from 8am to 6pm, Oct & Mar 9am to 12noon and from 1pm to 5pm, Nov-Feb: from 9am to 12noon and from 1pm to 4pm
  • Website http://www.outsideprague.com/kutna_hora/bone_church.html
  • Address Kutna Hora, Czech Republic
  • Cost Adults 50 Czech Koronas (about $2.20 or 1.75 euros), Children 30 CK, Photos additional 30 CK fee.
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1 hour train ride from Prague

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  • A Facebook user October 11, 2011
    Visit this every time I travel from the US to the Czech Republic. It's about 60 km from Praha. Trains leave Hlavní Nádraží to Sedlec all day. Get a morning train to Sedlec, then hop the cross town train closer to the Ossuary. A solid hour is enough to appreciate it in it's entirety. From there, take a cab up to the Cathedral of Santa Barbara (your calves will thank you). Grab lunch on the way back down, and stop through the main square for other minor sights. It's a very fun day-trip if you're spending a week or so in Praha.
  • & Anonymous October 27, 2009
    I was here about a year ago, and words just can not describe. Utterly amazing. I would highly suggest visiting. Plus, the city itself is very nice.
  • RickMorgs& RickMorgs September 22, 2009
    The coat of arms (pun not intended!) looks truly spectacular. The woodcarver certainly had an artistic flair, though macabre. The Sedlec Ossuary reinforces my desire to visit the Czech Republic.<a href="http://www.rick-morgan.com"> Rick</a>
  • & Anonymous June 17, 2009
    Smaller than expected but amazing and worth the trip!
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