– Petrov Hill; Gothic church rebuilt in the Baroque style during the 18th century, later partially reconstructed in the Neo-Gothic style; two characteristic towers (81 m high) dating from 1905; cathedral since 1777 – Dominikánské Square; a Baroque church from the 17th century, until the Edict on Idle Institutions in the 1780s, a church of the Dominican Order; later (1905 to 1950) used by the Redemptorists; some of the former monastery buildings serve as the New Town Hall (Nová radnice) of Brno.
John the Baptist and John the Evangelist, since the Middle Ages a part of the Franciscan monastery; the originally Gothic church was renovated in the Baroque style during the 1720s-1730s, when the Loreto Chapel with the Holy Stairs was built next to the church.
– originally the parish church of the non-Slavonic inhabitants of Brno, built from 14th to 16th centuries predominantly in the Gothic style; the spire (from 1592) is 92m high (the 7th highest building in the Czech Republic and the tallest in Brno).
– a Baroque church with a monumental facade from 1665–1675 on the spot of the Gothic one damaged in the Thirty Years' War; since 1350 a part of an Augustinian monastery, planned as a burial place of Moravian rulers (Margrave Jobst is buried there); in the 1780s the Augustinians moved to Staré Brno.
– built in the 19th century for Czech-speaking Protestants – built in the 1860s in Neo-Gothic style for especially German-speaking Protestants (till the expulsion of Germans from Czechoslovakia after World War II) – built in 1930–1931 at the foot of Špilberk Hill – originally a Cistercian Convent, from the 1780s a monastery of Augustinians transferred from St. Thomas Church in the city centre; famous for its association with Gregor Mendel, who served as its abbot from 1868 to 1884 – a Baroque church of the Brothers Hospitallers with a hospital in the Vienna (Vídeňská) Street – finished in 1935 – situated in Žabovřesky, Help of Christians from the 1990s – situated in Královo Pole, built in the 1370s as a part of Carthusian monastery (founded 1375, abolished 1782), later reconstructed in Baroque style – situated in Zábrdovice, a Baroque church from the 1660s (interior from the 18th century), a part of the former Premonstratensian monastery abolished in 1780s with St. Cunigunde Church (dedicated 1211); as of 2010[update] it serves as a hospital – situated in Husovice, with Art Nouveau elements, finished 1910; since the 1990s administered by the Franciscans – situated in Židenice, finished 1935 – situated in Trnitá, built in the 1910s in Art Nouveau style to replace the demolished St. Stephen Church – situated in Komárov, started in the beginning of the 12th century (the oldest church in Brno), later rebuilt – a functionalistic building from 1928-1929 – the only remaining one of Brno' synagogues, a functionalistic building from the 1930s – in the Vienna (Vídeňská) Street; the first mosque in the Czech Republic (opened 1998), with no minaret