Welcome. For seven hundred and twenty-one years I have been silent, and today I am finally allowed to speak.
My name is Wenceslaus, the second of my name upon the Bohemian royal throne, the sixth Bohemian king. I died on the twenty-first of June, thirteen hundred and five, at the age of thirty-three, of lung fever and exhaustion — of an illness you call tuberculosis today, which we in our time could not yet even name, let alone cure.
After the death of my father, Ottokar II, others governed the land in my stead for five years, for another fourteen years I ruled as his uncoronated heir, and only for the last eight years of my life did I wear the royal crown. Then came that June, and with it a silence that lasted seven centuries. And I waited with perseverance, which over the course of those long years proved to be the only royal virtue I managed to retain. I speak now only because someone remembered — for without remembrance, the dead have no voice.
In the center of this room lies a sandstone coffin on loan from the Vyšehrad Chapter. It likely holds the remains of one of my distant ancestors — Vratislaus, the first among us to wear a royal crown, or his son Soběslav. No one knows for certain anymore. The name has been lost; the stone remains.
Around the coffin you may see four faces, the protectors of this land. Among them is my namesake. Just as they once were for me, they still remain the patrons of the land for you — and that is precisely why I am able to meet you today above this memorable stone.