The following is alist of bishops and archbishops of Prague. Thebishopric of Prague was established in 973, and elevated to anarchbishopric on 30 April 1344. The currentRoman Catholic Archdiocese of Prague is the continual successor of the bishopric established in 973 (with a 140-yearsede vacante in theHussite era). In addition, the city also has anEastern Orthodox archeparchy (archbishopric),Greek Catholicexarchate and the Prague diocese andpatriarchate of theCzechoslovak Hussite Church seat in Prague.


The names are given inCzech, with English or otherwise as suitable.
| Succession | Name | Dates of bishopric |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | Dětmar (Thietmar, Dietmar) | 973–982 |
| 2. | St. Adalbert of Prague | 982–996 |
| Kristian (Strachkvas) | 996(died during consecration) | |
| 3. | Thiddag (Deodadus) | 998–1017 |
| 4. | Ekkhard (Ekkehard, Ekhard, Helicardus) | 1017–1023 |
| 5. | Hyza (Hyzo, Hizzo, Izzo) | 1023–1030 |
| 6. | Šebíř (Severus) | 1030–1067 |
| 7. | Jaromír (Gebhart, Gebehard) | 1068–1089 |
| 8. | Kosmas | 1090–1098 |
| 9. | Heřman | 1099–1122 |
| 10. | Menhart (Meinhard) | 1122–1134 |
| 11. | Jan I | 1134–1139 |
| Silvestr | 1139–1140(abdicated) | |
| 12. | Ota (Otto) | 1140–1148 |
| 13. | Daniel I | 1148–1167 |
| Gotpold (Goltpold, Gothard, Hotart) | 1168(died before installation) | |
| 14. | Bedřich of Puttendorf | 1168–1179 |
| 15. | Valentin (Veliš) | 1179–1182 |
| 16. | Henry Bretislaus | 1182–1197 |
| 17. | Daniel II (Milík of Talmberk) | 1197–1214 |
| 18. | Ondřej | 1214–1224 |
| 19. | Pelhřim (Peregrin) of Vartenberk | 1224–1225 |
| 20. | Budilov (Budivoj, Budislav) | 1225–1226 |
| 21. | Jan II | 1226–1236 |
| 22. | Bernhard (Buchard)Kaplíř of Sulevice | 1236–1240 |
| 23. | Mikuláš of Reisenburk | 1240–1258 |
| 24. | Jan III of Dražice | 1258–1278 |
| 25. | Tobiáš of Bechyně | 1278–1296 |
| 26. | Řehoř Zajíc of Valdek | 1296–1301 |
| 27. | John IV of Dražice | 1301–1343 |
| 28. | Arnošt of Pardubice | 1343–1344 |
| Succession | Name | Dates of archbishopric |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | Arnošt of Pardubice | 1344–1364 |
| 2. | Jan Očko of Vlašim | 1364–1379 |
| 3. | Jan of Jenštejn | 1379–1396 |
| 4. | Olbram (Volfram) of Škvorec | 1369–1402 |
| Mikuláš Puchník of Černice | 1402(died before consecration) | |
| 5. | Zbyněk Zajíc of Hazmburk | 1403–1411 |
| 6. | Sigismund Albicus | 1411–1412 |
| 7. | Conrad of Vechta | 1413–1421 |
| sede vacante | 1421–1561 | |
| 8. | Antonín Brus of Mohelnice | 1561–1580 |
| 9. | Martin Medek of Mohelnice | 1581–1590 |
| 10. | Zbyněk Berka of Dubá | 1592–1606 |
| 11. | Karel Graf von Lamberk | 1607–1612 |
| 12. | Johann Lohel | 1612–1622 |
| 13. | Ernst Adalbert von Harrach | 1623–1667 |
| Johann Wilhelm Graf von Liebstein von Kolovrat | 1667–1668(died before consecration) | |
| 14. | Matouš Ferdinand Sobek (Zoubek) of Bílenberk | 1669–1675 |
| 15. | Jan Bedřich Graf von Waldstein | 1675–1694 |
| 16. | Jan Josef Graf von Breuner | 1695–1710 |
| 17. | Ferdinand Graf von Khünburg | 1713–1731 |
| 18. | Daniel Josef Mayer of Mayer | 1732–1733 |
| Jan Adam Vratislav of Mitrovice | 1733(died before confirmation) | |
| 19. | Johann Moriz Gustav Graf von Manderscheid–Blankenheim | 1733–1763 |
| 20. | Antonín Petr hrabě Příchovský of Příchovice | 1764–1793 |
| 21. | Wilhelm Florentin Fürst von Salm | 1793–1810 |
| 22. | Václav Leopold Chlumčanský of Přestavlky and Chlumčany | 1815–1830 |
| 23. | Alois Josef Krakovský z Kolovrat | 1831–1833 |
| 24. | Andrzej Alojzy Ankwicz | 1834–1838 |
| 25. | Alois Josef, Freiherr von Schrenk | 1838–1849 |
| 26. | Friedrich Johannes Jacob Celestin von Schwarzenberg | 1849–1885 |
| 27. | Franziskus von Paula Graf von Schönborn | 1885–1899 |
| 28. | Lev Skrbenský z Hříště | 1899–1916 |
| 29. | Pavel Huyn | 1916–1919 |
| 30. | František Kordač | 1919–1931 |
| 31. | Karel Kašpar | 1931–1941 |
| 32. | Josef Beran | 1946–1969 |
| 33. | František Tomášek | 1977–1991 |
| 34. | Miloslav Vlk | 1991–2010 |
| 35. | Dominik Duka | 2010–2022 |
| 36. | Jan Graubner | 2022-2026 |
| 37. | Stanislav Přibyl, C.Ss.R | since 2026 |
The first Orthodox mission in Czech lands was led bySaints Cyril and Methodius, some time before theEast–West Schism, with its centre inMoravia. The currentCzech and Slovak Orthodox Church comes from the Czech Orthodox clubs and partly arose from the earlyCzechoslovak Church which separated from the Roman Catholic Church in the 1920s. Consequently, the Czechoslovak Church tended towards Protestantism and an Orthodox branch split off. The Prague Archeparchy encompasses the whole ofBohemia.
Apostolic Exarchate in the Czech Republic was established in 2006. Exarchs:
TheCzechoslovak Hussite Church (until 1971 Czechoslovak Church) split off from the Roman Catholics in 1920s. Initially the church varied between Catholic modernism, Orthodoxy and Protestantism; today it is a Protestant church in principle.
Bishops of Prague Diocese:
Prague is also the seat of patriarchs. The two first Bishops of Prague were also patriarchs. Since 1946, the patriarch is a different bishop.