The museum was officially founded on 3 October 1881, when the City Council approved the Statutes of the Permanent Committee of the Museum of Prague, whose main task was to establish a new museum, create a systematic collection and find a suitable building to house the collections and exhibitions. The main reason for establishing the museum was to prevent the sale and export of antiques abroad and to collect and present to the public exhibits related to the history of Prague and the life of its people. The first meeting of the Committee took place in the Mayor’s Hall of the Old Town Hall on 23 November 1881 and was attended by many important figures in the cultural and political life of the time. The Committee was chaired by Member of the Prague Assembly
Robert Nittinger and further included
Emanuel Štěpán Berger (lawyer and collector of antiques);
Josef Stanislav Doubek (architect and alderman);
Vojta Náprstek (entrepreneur and founder of the industrial museum);
Bohuslav Schnirch (sculptor);
Hugo Toman (lawyer and art collector);
Miroslav Tyrš (aesthetician, art historian and co-founder of the Prague Sokol association);
Bedřich Wachsmann (painter and architect);
František Ženíšek (painter); and
Antonín Baum (architect), who was shortly thereafter replaced by
Antonín Wiehl (also an architect). In 1882 the Prague City Council donated to the Museum Committee a small café pavilion built in 1876 on the site of the original city walls near the
St Christopher’s Bastion. In the first half of 1883, the Committee and the newly appointed museum keeper (administrator) installed the first exhibitions, which were opened to the public on 12 May. The oldest museum building was demolished in 1974 to make way for the main arterial road. The museum’s keeper,
Břetislav Jelínek (1843–1926), an amateur archaeologist and collector of antiques, later became the museum’s first director and served in this capacity until 1913. He was succeeded by the art historian
František Xaver Harlas and later Antonín Novotný, the author of the well-known and popular “pocket encyclopaedias” of Prague. During World War I, the museum was briefly managed by
Václav Vilém Štech. In addition to the aforementioned founding personalities, many other historians, art historians, archaeologists, architects, as well as other men of culture among lawyers and politicians had made significant contributions to the museum and its collections in the service of the Committee until 1939, including
František Ekrt (priest and historiographer),
Josef Fanta (architect),
Josef Václav Frič (lawyer, writer and journalist),
Karel Guth (archaeologist and art historian),
Karel Chudoba (politician and collector),
Josef Koula (architect),
Jan Kapras (historian),
Vincenc Kramář (art historian),
Rudolf Kříženecký (architect and designer),
Antonín Matějček (art historian),
Josef Mauder (sculptor),
Josef Václav Novák (industrialist, collector and art patron),
Václav Novotný (historian and professor),
Antonín Podlaha (priest, theologian and collector),
Albín Stocký (archaeologist),
Eduard Šittler (priest and historian),
Renáta Tyršová (art historian),
Karel Urbánek (historian),
Václav Vojtíšek (Prague archivist and professor),
Zikmund Winter (historian and writer),
Zděněk Wirth (art historian and conservationist), and
Karel Židlický (chairman of the Club for Old Prague). == Main building ==