Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts

Friday, July 1, 2011

Execution of 27 Protestant Leaders (21.6.1621) on the Old Town Square



Catalogue number0686
Date of issue1.6.2011
Face value26 CZK
Print sheets4 stamps
Size of picture50 x 40 mm
Graphic designerZdeněk Ziegler
Engraver
Printing method
Václav Fajt
recess print from flat plate in black combined with offset in red

The stamp commemorates the 390th anniversary of the execution of 27 Czech Protestant leaders on the Prague's Old Town Square. The mass execution of June 21st, 1621 became a symbolic end of the series of events that begun with the second defenestration of Prague on May 23rd, 1618, central to the start of the Thirty Years' War in 1618, and ended with the Protestant armies' defeat at the Battle on White Mountain near Prague, November 8th, 1620.
The execution was to become a shocking and frightening performance intended to prove to the contemporary Europe that the Habsburgs were not impressed by the leading Protestant aristocracy's revolt and that no rebellion, staged by Protestants, was able to jeopardize their authority. It led to a stronger position of the Habsburg dynasty on the Czech throne and suppression of any form of resistance on the side of a potential opposition.
A set of cobblestones, installed at the place where the scaffold (dismantled after the execution and given to the Prague's Monastery of Merciful Brothers) stood, commemorates the execution site and the sad end to the Czech Protestants' uprising.


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Friday, March 11, 2011

Easter

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Catalogue number 0677
Date of issue 23.3.2011
Face value 10 CZK
Print sheets á 50 stamps
Size of picture 23 x 30 mm
Graphic designer Libuše and Jaromír Knotek

one of the Easter symbols - newly hatched chicks
Easter is a spring time festival in its origin. The originally Canaanite spring time festival obtained a completely new meaning some 3500 years ago when the Jews adopted and transformed it into their Pascha, commemorating the passover and exodus, or liberation of the Jewish people from their slavery in Egypt. Easter is also the central Christian religious feast, commemorating the resurrection of Jesus Christ, an event believed by Christians to take place the third day after his crucifixion. Easter is a moveable feast. The First Council of Nicaea (325) established the date of Easter as the first Sunday after the first spring full moon. As such, the feast can be celebrated in March or April. The days preceding the Easter Monday have also their own names: Maundy (or Green in the Czech tradition) Thursday; Good (or Great in the Czech tradition) Friday; Holy (or White in the Czech tradition) Saturday, ended with the Easter Vigil starting after sundown on Holy Saturday and celebrating the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Easter still enjoys much popularity in the Czech Republic. Ordinary people normally associate it with children who go carolling on Easter Monday and get decorated eggs, sweets and other treats.

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Friday, March 4, 2011

Personalities - Famous Czechs: St Agnes of Bohemia (1211-1282)

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Catalogue number 0668
Date of issue 20.1.2011
Face value 12 CZK
Print sheets 50 stamps
Size of picture 23 x 40 mm
Graphic designer Renata Fucikova
Engraver Jaroslav Tvrdon

St Agnes of Bohemia (c. 1211 - March 6th, 1282), Czech princess and abbess of the Convent of St Francis in Prague, was the youngest daughter of Czech king Premysl Ottokar I and Constance of Hungary. When she was three years old, she and her sister Anna were entrusted to the Cistercian order in Trzebnica and Doksany to be educated. At that time she was probably engaged to Konrad, son of duke Henry I the Bearded of Silesia and his wife Hedwig. Konrad later died and both sisters returned back to Prague. At the age of eight, Agnes was engaged by her father Premysl Ottokar I, who wished to establish a relationship with the Hohenstaufen family, to Henry, son of Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor (later Henry VII of Germany). For the next six years Agnes was sent to the court of Leopold VI of Babenberg to continue her education. But Leopold managed to secure Henry for his own daughter Margaret, and the fourteen-year-old Agnes returned back to Prague again. Her father then planned for her to marry Henry III of England. Henry's delegation was welcomed at Prague Castle a year after her return from Babenberg and Agnes was engaged to Henry, but Henry broke the engagement in 1229. Henry VII of Germany, at the time already married to Margaret of Babenberg, then showed interest in Agnes again. The last suitor was Henry's father Frederick II, but Agnes, who was then free to decide as her father already died and her brother Wenceslaus I loved her, rejected him.
With the help of her brother Wenceslaus I, Agnes founded the Hospital of St Francis in Prague (1232) and two convents where the Franciscan friars and Clare nuns who worked at the hospital resided. She joined the Prague Clares in 1234 as their abbess. She also contributed to the promotion of the Franciscan brotherhood working at the hospital as an individual order, the Knights of the Cross with the Red Star, based on a strict compliance with the Franciscan rules, although her first attempt in 1237 failed. In 1238 she gave up the office of abbess of the Prague Clares, the office remaining vacant until her death.
Agnes played an active role in the social life of her time. Her contribution to the conciliation between Wenceslaus I and his son Premysl was vital. During a controversy between her nephew Premysl Ottokar II and the papal protégé Rudolf I of Habsburg, Agnes clearly took the side of her family when she accepted Premysl's daughter Kunhuta under the roof of the convent in 1277 and denounced the pope's anathema placed on Premysl by asking the nuns to pray for Přemysl during his war campaign against Rudolf before the battle on the Moravia Field.
Agnes remained highly active even prior to her death, which occurred at the then venerable age of 71 years. Her famous charitable works and involvement in the country's affairs gave rise to numerous legends emerging immediately after her death. Although the early attempts at canonization of this pioneer of care for the poor and hospital care in the Czech lands made by Elisabeth of Bohemia and her son Charles IV failed, Agnes was beatified in 1874 and later, on November 12th, 1989, formally canonized.

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Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Christmas - Zlutice Hymn Book

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Catalogue number 0664
Date of issue 10.11.2010
Face value 10 CZK
Print sheets 50 stamps
Size of picture 40 x 23 mm
Graphic designer Fabián Puléř, Zdeněk Ziegler

The 1558 Zlutice Hymn Book is a rare renaissance parchment folio (sized 63x40x16cm, weighing 28kg), containing 471 sheets of Czech utraquist liturgical texts for the divine services and hymns, decorated with remarkable paintings. The book was ordered by the Zlutice town councillors for the local literary brotherhood, for the considerable expense of 283 threescore of Meissen groschen, of which the sum of 23 threescore was contributed by the lord of the estate. Jan Táborský of Klokotská Hora, owner of a painting shop in Prague, used the following words to appreciate their generosity: "Eager to sing, the people of Zlutice ordered costly scripts to be made and written in a reasonable (i.e. Czech) language." The author of the letters (Czech bastarda) and notation was Vavrinec Bily. The book was illuminated by the famous painter Fabian Puler of Usti nad Labem. The 16 miniature paintings in the initial letters and arabesques are particularly well appreciated. They contain the coats of arms of Zlutice and each of the donators and guilds, scenes from the Old and the New Testaments as well as from the life of the townspeople (feasts, bull slaughtering, Sunday rest), paintings of famous Czech historic persons (Saint Wenceslas, John Hus, Jerome of Prague; the two latter ones being erased in the 17th century) as well as certain of the donators, both townspeople and lower noblemen from the neighbourhood.
The Hymn Book, until 1977 deposited in the Prague's City Museum, is now a part of the collections of the Museum of Czech Literature in Prague. The City Museum keeps a replica of the book.

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