After World War II the renewal of the Monument commenced. Works also began on the new building, to be used as a tribute to the resistance against Nazism. However, the events of February 1948 led to the monument being used in new ways. Vigorous oppression of the
legionary tradition commenced in 1950, and following a decision of the Central Committee of the
Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, the Monument of Liberation was converted into a proletariat pantheon, thus changing its ideological function.
The Gottwald Mausoleum In 1953 the Central Committee decided to establish a mausoleum for
Klement Gottwald in the Monument, which remained there until 1962. The original layout had placed a
sarcophagus in the Main Hall, which was intended for the burial of President T. G. Masaryk. Masaryk eventually rejected the plan to be buried there, and so did his family after his death. In 1953, this area was rebuilt into the Klement Gottwald Mausoleum. The Minister of National Defence and Gottwald's son-in-law
Alexej Čepička was in charge of preparatory works for the conversion. The examples came from
Lenin's Mausoleum in
Moscow and the
Georgi Dimitrov Mausoleum in
Sofia. The Mausoleum included technical facilities for embalming Gottwald's body. The construction work also involved the son of the Monument's key architect, Jan Zázvorka Jr., a film architect. The technical facilities for the Klement Gottwald Mausoleum were built in the underground premises of the Monument. The construction of the underground premises was completed in October 1953. Klement Gottwald's body was exhibited in the centre of the Mausoleum in a glazed sarcophagus. The lid had built-in lights with small mirrors. The body was moved in and out of the underground laboratory by a vibration-free telescopic device. The embalmed body was dressed in the blue general's uniform of the Head Commander of Czechoslovak armies. In 1958 it was changed to civilian attire. The Klement Gottwald Mausoleum and its original design lasted until Klement Gottwald's body was
cremated in 1962 when the technical facilities for embalming were removed. The only elements of the original design preserved until today are the control room and the ground plan for the laboratory.
Urn burials until 1990 , grave of Czech Communist politicians whose urns had originally been kept at the National Monument at Vítkov After Gottwald's body was
cremated in 1962, the funerary urn containing his ashes was returned to the National Monument and placed in the sarcophagus. His ashes remained in the National Monument until the
Velvet Revolution. Other prominent members of the
Communist Party of Czechoslovakia whose urns were displayed alongside Gottwald's in the National Monument were
Gusta Fučiková,
Marta Gottwaldová,
Josef Haken,
Jan Harus,
Josef Hlavicka,
Čeněk Hruška,
Jiří František Chaloupecký,
Antonín Janoušek,
Josef Juran,
Augustin Kliment,
Václav Kopecký,
Marie Majerová,
Stefan Major,
Václav Nosek,
Bohuslav Novotný,
Julie Prokopová,
Antonín Sochor,
Rudolf Strechaj,
Josef Tesla,
Rudolf Vetiska,
Jan Vodička,
Bohuslav Vrbenský and
Antonín Zmrhal. In 1990, all these urns were removed and buried in a community grave at
Olšany Cemetery.{{cite web|url=http://m.radio.cz/en/section/panorama/exhibition-at-vitkov-memorial-highlights-the-klement-gottwald-personality-cult|title=Radio Prague: Exhibition at Vitkov Memorial highlights the Klement Gottwald personality cult ==References==