Petr Parléř (born 1330, Schwäbisch Gmünd, Württemberg [Germany]—died July 13, 1399, Prague, Bohemia [now in Czech Republic]) was the best-known member of a famous German family of masons. His works exemplify the tendency toward profuse ornamentation and technical ostentation that are characteristic of late Gothic architecture.
At the age of 23 Parléř was called by King Charles IV of Bohemia to Prague to continue the cathedral church of St. Vitus. Seemingly influenced by English late Gothic style, he built complicated vaults with hanging bosses and ribs rising free through space; these vaults were the first real net vaults on the European continent. Parléř was also the first to use an even number of sides for the polygon of a choir (at Kutná Hora, Bohemia, in 1360). His sculptural work and vault innovations greatly influenced subsequent architecture.