Sunday 19 December 2021

Napoleon on French and European Stamps

The year went by so fast that I sometimes completely forgot that I have neglected this blog for so long. Actually I made plans for at least four bigger posts I wanted to write during the course of the year and some smaller ones, but like so often other things prevented me from doing so. This post however I still want to write now, as I had the idea a long while ago and really liked it. As you all probably know 2021 marks the Bicentenary of the Death of Napoleon Bonaparte. I knew I wanted to do something about this anniversary, but did not want to just plainly write down his life. Instead I came up with the idea of diving into his presentation on various stamps and this is now the result of this idea. At first I will have a look at French stamps to see how one of the most famous Frenchmen in history is depicted and afterwards I will add up this story with some other stamps from Europa. Below all the stamps I will also write a bit more about vacancies and the development of this post if that is something that interests you and if you are not only here for the stamps.

But let's get this post started and where would it be better to start than at the beginning? Napoleon Bonaparte was born in Ajaccio on the island of Corsica on 15th August 1769 and Napoleon's Birth Bicentenary was honoured with a French stamp in 1969. The building on the left is the Maison Bonaparte in Ajaccio, the ancestral house of the family. It is often said that Napoleon is actually not a Frenchmen, because he was from Corsica which was supposedly not part of France at the time of his birth. That is however not true. Corsica was at the beginning of the 18th century indeed a territory of the Republic of Genoa, which lost the control of most of the island in the middle of the century. By 1768 France began the capture of the island which was concluded in May 1769. At that point various powerful Corsican families joined the French side including the Bonapartes. Napoleon later got his education in France and although he had an affection for the Corsican nationalists in his early years, he ultimately devoted himself to the French cause. The portrait on the right shows Napoleon at the age of 23 as member of the French Republican volunteers on Corsica. This first stamp thus mainly highlights Napoleon's Corsican heritage. 

Fighting for the Revolution his tactical skill soon became apparent. Three years after the stamp above two campaigns in Napoleon's early career were shown on French stamps, the Battle of Arcole during the Italian Campaign and the Egyptian Expedition. Napoleon went to Italy shortly after his marriage with Joséphine de Beauharnais in 1796. He quickly defeated the Austrian ally Piedmont and became involved in the Siege of the Austrian garrison in Mantua. The Battle of Arcole was part of an Austrian attempt to lift the siege, which however failed, and the overall campaign resulted in the Treaty of Campo Formio granting France the rule over Northern Italy and the Low Countries, which were subsequently exploited by Napoleon and his troops. During this period his influence in France increased. Plans for an invasion of Great Britain followed, but Napoleon decided that the French marine was not strong enough and so decided that at first Egypt should be captured to hamper Britain's access to India. This Egyptian Expedition began with the capture of Malta, but at the end resulted in a French catastrophe. After Horatio Nelson destroyed or captured most of the French fleet, Napoleon went on some brutal attacks on the Ottoman cities of Arish, Gaza, Jaffa and Haifa and ultimately fled back to Paris in August 1799. The focus of this second stamp is however not the French defeat, but the scientific dimension of the expedition. More than 150 scientists joined Napoleon and their discoveries included after all the Rosetta Stone, which Jean-François Champollion later used to decipher the hieroglyphs. 

The following events in Napoleon's life and career are ignored on French stamps. The next event to be honoured is the preparation of the Code Civil. The Code Civil or Code Napoleon entered into force in March 1804. This collection of written laws was a important step in the defeudalistion of Europa and is still used in France to this day. Even in parts of Germany it survived the end of Napoleon's rule and was in use until the end of the 19th century. Shown on the stamp are the Conseil d'État, Napoleon and Jean-Étienne-Marie Portalis. Portalis drew up the Code Civil together with François Denis Tronchet, Félix-Julien-Jean Bigot de Préameneu and Jacques de Maleville, but also worked on the Concordat of 1801 and later became a member of the government as Minister of Public Worship. Another stamp about the Code Civil was issued in 2004. Also there are two stamps about the creation of the Légion d'honneur in 1802 (1954 and 2002), which falls in the same period but which I unfortunately do not have.

On 2nd December 1804 Napoleon was coronated Emperor at the Notre Dame de Paris in the presence of Pope Pius VII. During the ceremony a golden laurel wreath recalling the Roman Empire and a replica of Charlemagne's crown were used. Napoleon had the laurel wreath on his head and crowned his wife with the replica. The stamp shows a detail of the painting The Coronation of Napoleon by Jacques-Louis David. It was created as official depiction of the event and is now kept in the Louvre. As France decided not to thematise anything that happened before the coronation, I guess it is fair to do the same.

Last year this stamp about La Roche-sur-Yon was issued. The city had been destroyed during the Vendée Revolt and was rebuilt had the behest of Napoleon. In May 1804 it officially became the seat of the Vendée. At this time it was called Napoléon-sur-Yon. Shown on the stamp is the statue of Napoleon that was erected in 1854.

Today the first French Emperor is naturally known as Napoleon, but did you know that this was not always the case? During his early career the man was known as Bonaparte or even earlier as Buonaparte. It was just when he became Emperor that the given name became synonymous with the ruler and as such he went out to gain his biggest victory at the Battle of the Three Emperors near the small Austrian/Czech town of Austerlitz (Slavkov u Brna) on the first anniversary of his coronation. Known as tactical masterpiece, Napoleon defeated the outnumbering armies of Austria and Russia. After this battle Napoleon was definitely the hegemon of Continental Europa. For the 200th anniversary of the battle France jointly issued this stamp with the Czech Republic. As you have seen so far this is one of the very few Napoleonic battles that was honoured with a French stamp, which makes this one a bit outstanding. Probably they have chosen the battle, because it was his biggest victory, but on the other hand maybe the idea for this joint issue came from the Czech Republic, which however later issued stamps about Napoleon's big defeat in Leipzig. A gorgeous, but mysterious issue! Apropos, the monument on the stamps is the Cairn of Peace Monument in Prace.

After his victory in Austerlitz installed friends and family as rulers in various European states. The only one of them who was shown on a French stamp was Joachim Murat. Murat was a military commander and married Napoleon's younger sister Caroline in 1800. He became Grand Duke of Berg (1806-1808) and King of Naples (1808-1815). The stamp however only calls him Roi de Naples, his earlier title in the small artificially created grand duchy in Germany is ignored. After the Battle of Leipzig he switched sides to save his throne, but switched back after Napoleon's return from Elba in 1815 and was killed in the end by the forces of the rightful King Ferdinand IV of Naples.

From Austerlitz and Joachim Murat we jump in time straight to 1815. You might remember that there was some sort of battle this year and you remember right. Who does not know the Battle of Huningue? Huningue is a small Alsatian town right at the border between France, Germany and Switzerland and is more or less a suburb of Basel. Due to its location the Sun King Louis XIV instructed Vauban to built a fortress there. The fortress was first besieged by the Austrians in 1796/97, later by the Bavarians in 1813/14 and once again by the Austrians in 1815. When the new French government demanded a ceasefire after Napoleon's abdication, the commander decided to bombard Basel instead. Ultimately however the fortress surrendered. 

The first French stamp about Napoleon was issued in 1951 and now 70 years later his death is acknowledged with a stunning souvenir sheet. In my opinion this is one of the most visually appealing stamp issues of the year. You really need to seek it out to see it in real life. A scan can not do it justice. It is printed in a combination of offset and intaglio printing and much gold foil is applied. Of special interest are those small bees recalling artifacts from the grave of the Frankish king Childeric I from the Merovingian dynasty, as Napoleon wanted a royal symbol that has a historic model without being connected to the Ancien Régime. The pomp of this issue however can not disguise Napoleon's fate. Beaten he was sent to exile on the island of Saint Helena. There he could either watch the sea as shown on the lower stamp or play with the rats as was often shown on contemporary caricatures. There on a remote island in the South Atlantic Ocean one of the most famous and influential men in European history died on 5th May 1821.

After all those French stamps it is time to add the narrative of the First Emperor of France with some stamps from other European countries. Let's get one thing out of the way, not all of them are as flattering as this Monégasque stamp issued for Napoleon's Birth Bicentenary in 1969. 

Adding the stamps in the chronological order of the depicted events the first I have is however another victory, the Battle of Marengo. This battle was part of the War of the Second Coalition and was fought near the city of Alessandria in Northern Italy in June 1800. After all the Battle of Arcole and the Treaty of Campo Formio had not ended the Austrian involvement in Italy. Barely four years later they had to be driven out again. This battle also consolidated Napoleon's rule as First Consul. It has to be mentioned that this battle has also appeared on a French stamp. In 1968 there was a stamp about General Desaix, the French commander during the battle, which also shows a scene of the battle. Unfortunately I became aware of it too late to add it to my collection. 

Leaving Europa for a stamp, the rule of Napoleon had also an influence on the USA. In 1803 Napoleon sold the French colony of Louisiana or more precisely for most of the area the right to obtain it. Napoleon actually planned to re-establish the French rule in the territory, but after some failures decided to sell it instead. This Louisiane Purchase nearly doubled the size of the USA. Shown on this US stamp are not only the US negotiators, but also French Treasury Minister François Barbé-Marbois. After this sesquicentennial issue from 1953 a bicentennial stamp was also issued in 2003.

Everyone who has ever been to London probably knows Trafalgar Square and the Nelson's Column there, but many maybe do not know what Trafalgar was. Or was that just me when I was in London in 2011? The Battle of Trafalgar was a naval battle in the War of the Third Coalition in October 1805. Napoleon had the idea to conquer Great Britain and to accomplish that plan the French and Spanish navies were combined to take control of the English Channel. The fleet however was met off Cape Trafalgar on the southwest coast of Spain by the British navy under the command of Admiral Lord Horatio Nelson and Nelson was against all odds victorious, although loosing his own life. The battle became a focal point in the history of British naval supremacy in the 19th century. As such it was already honoured on many stamps. I think for the Bicentenary in 2005 not only the United Kingdom itself, but also all overseas territories and crown dependencies issued stamps, which in the usual British tradition are not just single stamps, but always bigger sets. In my collection I have this set from Gibraltar issued on 31st January 2005. Actual timber from the original HMS Victory, Nelson's ship during the battle, is affixed to the £1.60 stamp and similar stamps have been issued in Ascension Island, the Bahamas, Bermuda, the British Indian Ocean Territory, Cayman Islands, Jamaica, Kiribati, Naura, Saint Helena, Saint Lucia and Tristan da Cunha.


As philatelist you probably know that there are French and Spanish stamps issued for Andorra. The reason is that this small country is actually headed by two co-princes, one from France and one from Spain. The turbulent years of the French Revolution however brought change on the French side and in 1806 Napoleon restored the status quo ante. I could not find much about what this means in detail, but it was enough for this Bicentenary issue in 2006 by the French Post in Andorra.

About the Napoleonic era on the Iberian Peninsula I know very little, as it is never the focus for German depictions of the time. For my collection I got this Portuguese set about the Bicentenary of the Peninsular War issued in 2010, so I will focus on that period and ignore the background. Well, Portugal was that time still an ally of the United Kingdom and had no interest in joining the Continental System (the German word Kontinentalsperre or the French blocus continental somehow sound nicer). To change that Napoleon decided to attack Portugal and invade Spain on the way. That was in 1807. It is however also said that Napoleon's real motive might have been to dethrone the Spanish King to replace him with one of his brothers. The result was a big political mess and a military catastrophe, as the Spaniards did not like to be conquered and began a bloody guerrilla uprising that binded French forces which should been used in other theaters. Portugal and Spain were later supported by the United Kingdom. Shown on these stamps are the battles of Vimeiro (1808), Bussaco (1810), Grijó (1809) and Pombal (1811). In 1928 there had already been a set about the Battle of Rolica (1808). The fightings on the peninsula had actually World-historical dimension, as it enabled the independence of the South American colonies of both countries.


Inspired and scared by the events in Spain, Austria began to fear a similar fate for its monarchy and also hope for uprisings in the German territories. To help in both cases armaments and reforms were started. Napoleon thought that Austria would not do anything without allies and thus not acted at all. Austria however feared that Napoleon just waited for an ending of the fightings in Spain to do the same with the Austrian monarchy and became active with an attack on the French ally Bavaria. After some small battles Austria was defeated in Eckmühl near Regensburg in April 1809 and Vienna was captured three weeks later. Another week later the Austrians however defeated Napoleon in the Battle of Aspern and Essling (21st/22nd May 1809), before being defeated again by Napoleon in the Battle of Wagram (5th/6th July 1809). The Austrian fate was not as bad as that of Prussia or Spain, but the consequences of this hubris were not good either. Although Austria mainly fought alone, these fightings are known as War of the Fifth Coalition, as they were theoretically backed by Sardinia, Sicily and the United Kingdom. Good to see the ultimately pointless victory in Aspern and Essling on an Austrian souvenir sheet. 

Not all Austrian hopes for uprisings were baseless. In Tyrol the innkeeper Andreas Hofer started in the context of the War of the Fifth Coalition in April 1809 a rebellion against the Bavarian occupiers, who controlled the territory by Napoleon's grace since 1805. The rebellion failed, but Hofer is to this day celebrated as a Tyrolean national hero. His remains are buried in the Hofkirche in Innsbruck next to the cenotaph of Emperor Maximilian I and I know of at least three Austrian stamps about Hofer including this souvenir sheet as most recent one. As consequence of the rebellion Bavaria had to cede parts of Tyrol to direct French control. 

From the events in Austria we jump straight to Russia. Checking the timetable in the small monography by Johannes Willms I had read about Napoleon this seems to be justified, as he also does not include any events between 1809 and 1812. Russia was at this time the probably most independent European great power. The relations with Napoleon had been for a while amicably and on eye level. When the Russian Emperor however decided in December 1810 to leave the Continental System, which had more disadvantages than advantages for Russia, the conflicts began anew. In June 1812 Napoleon began his Campagne de Russie. He thought that the war would be over the faster the more troops he would send there, but in the end this idea just meant that more soldiers died in the harsh Russian winter. This Soviet souvenir sheet honours the 175th anniversary of the bloody Battle of Borodino, which ended with a French victory used to capture Moscow where Napoleon waited too long. The invasion ended in a desaster, but Napoleon was not yet defeated. The other European states however hesitated to seize the moment. 

The governments might have hesitated, but in the population it began to seethe. Especially in Prussia the people demanded to join the fight and the king had to grant their wish. Together Prussia and Russia were now fighting against Napoleon, but after some French victories, Austria negotiated a ceasefire between the three and afterwards Austria, Prussia and Russia signed a modest proposal which would have saved Napoleon's rule in France and big parts of Europa against the loss of former territories of the three powers and some of their allies. Napoleon denied and the for the being final war began. He soon lost the big Battle of the Nations at Leipzig, his Confederation of the Rhine crumbled, the allies were on their way to a war-weary France and due to his hubris Napoleon was eventually dethroned and send to Elba. This War of the Sixth Coalition is in Germany usually known as Befreiungskrieg(e) (War(s) of Liberation) and is connected with an idea of national identity. Although they played a big part in the conception of a united German history, they were rarely featured on German stamps. A Berlin stamp showed the Prussian National Monument for the Liberation Wars, the "anti-imperialist" German Democratic Republic (East Germany) showed some nice Prussian militaries on a set for the 150th anniversary and here in West Germany only the participants Blücher (shown below), Clausewitz, Körner and Stein were shown on some incoherent stamps. For the Bicentenary of the Battle of Leipzig the Czech Republic and Russia issued souvenir sheets, but here in Germany only a stamp for the Centenary of the Monument to the Battle of the Nations was issued. The focus is thus not the victory over France, but the technical feat of constructing Germany's biggest monument. 

Napoleon might have been defeated and in exile, but it was not long until he returned. He quickly gathered an army and created a new rule which soon ended with the War of the Seventh Coalition and the Battle of Waterloo. This battle in modern day Belgium is unlike the Battle of Huningue probably one of the most famous battles in European history. It occured while the European powers were already discussing the political future of the continent in Vienna and led to Napoleon's final exile on Saint Helena. For the Bicentenary Belgium issued a stunnng souvenir sheet with five stamps about leaders during the battle. I have those two about Napoleon (on a Waterloo card) and the Prince of Orange and the other three are Blücher, Ney and Wellington. The Isle of Man and the United Kingdom also issued some stamps and in Germany we got a special postmark. 


I had written about it earlier this year and will hopefully do so again soon, but unlike the last years 2021 does not have one big jubilee. The Death Bicentenary is however a jubilee that spawned at least a resonable number of stamps. Beside the obligatory catch penny issues to my knowledge there were only stamps from Andorra (French Post), Italy, Malta and Saint Helena. In my collection I only have the one from Italy. It shows a detail of Andrea Appiani's painting Ritratto di Napoleone (1805) and includes the opening phrase of Alessandro Manzoni's ode Il cinque maggio (1821) written in response to the news of Napoleon's death, Ei fu (He was). Unlike the French sheet this stamp was issued on Napoleon's actual death day the 5th May. 


Both the French and the European stamps only offer a desideratum of Napoleonic history. While France is more focused on the domestic politics of Napoleon (Code Civil, Légion d'honneur, Coronation, reconstruction of La Roche-sur-Yon), much of his way to power is generously ignored. Interestingly all the foreign affairs are either connected to Austria or Italy (Arcole, Marengo, Austerlitz, Joachim Murat as King of Naples), but never to for example the Netherlands, Prussia/Germany or Spain. The other European countries on the other hand are mainly issuing stamps about Napoleon's defeat and do not care about how pointless those defeats might have been in the end (Aspern and Essling). The good sides of Napoleon's rule are never touched. The two exceptions are the Czech stamp for the Battle of Austerlitz and the Italian stamp for the Battle of Marengo. Both stamps are a bit mysterious to me. The Czech Republic can laud itself to be the only country to honour both a Napoleonic victory (Austerlitz) and defeat (Leipzig). The Italian connection to Napoleon is something I would be interested to know more about. As an outsider I do not really understand why there is a reason to celebrate the switch from Austrian supremacy to French supremacy and whether the Italian situation was better afterwards. Biased on the other hand by German historical education, which is of course focused on the Napoleonic era in Germany and Prussia in particular, I think it is strange that no country seems to care about it. My assumptions would be that either the German and the French spared each other due to the post-World War II friendship (the Élysée Treaty was after all signed in the year of the 50th anniversary of the Battle of the Nations in 1963) or that in the German case the era is not much shown on stamps, as there were not only those German states that suffered during the time (e.g. Brunswick, Hanover, Prussia), but also strong Napoleonic allies (e.g. Baden, Bavaria, Württemberg). In conclusion I can say that there are many interesting stamps to collect about this theme, but that there are also many vacancies that I would wish to see on stamps.




_____________________________________________________________________________

Shown here are by far not all stamps about Napoleon. First and formost I have limited myself to European stamps with the single US stamp as exception. There are many thematic stamps from African and Arabic countries and territories which in most cases however are cheap catch penny wallpaper issues. Also I have not added any stamps about contemporaries of Napoleon which might have had some sort of connection to the ruler. This also includes some of his generals. The only exception here is Joachim Murat, as he was no simple contemporary, but a relative of Napoleon. Furthermore these are some stamps which I would have liked to add to this post, but which I was not able to get on time:
  • From France I have already mentioned the stamps about the Battle of Marengo and the Légion d'honneur. In 2004 there was also a very interesting set showing Napoleonic soldiers and the Emperor himself as some sort of small toy figures
  • The Free State of Danzig in the Interwar Period issued a stamp about the city's return to Prussia in 1814 in a set about historic events.
  • From Germany I have already mentioned the stamps about Clausewitz, Körner and Stein. Of interest might be also a stamp about Prussian Queen Louise of Mecklenburg-Strelitz who met Napoleon in Tilsit in 1807.
  • As part of sets about the Battle of Trafalgar Gibraltar and the Isle of Man also included stamps about the Battle of the Nile, the latter also included the Battle of Copenhagen. 
  • During the Napoleonic era the French colony Haiti became independent and of course there are some stamps of that event from the country.
  • For the Bicentenary of the French Revolution Italy issued a stamp showing a Bicorne, the hat famously worn by Napoleon. In 2014 there was a stamp about the New City of Bari, which was constructed at the behest of Joachim Murat.
  • Malta issued a set of four about the Bicentenary of Napoleon's French capture in 1998. One of the stamps shows Napoleon himself.
  • Apart from the stamp above Monaco issued some more stamps about the Emperor. A set of four about the Bicentenary of his Coronation also includes a stamp about his wife Stéphanie de Beauharnais. In 2011 for some reason even a stamp about the Bicentenary of the Birth of his son Napoleon II was issued.
  • With the grace of Napoleon Poland was reborn as (semi-)independent state after it was divided between Austria, Prussia and Russia at the end of the 18th century. As I have learned too late, there are a few Polish stamps about this time of the Duchy of Warsaw.
  • In 2002 Russia issued a set about Emperor Alexander I. One of them shows him entering Paris after Napoleon was defeated.
  • Saint Helena of course issued many stamps about its most famous inhabitant. The most interesting in my opinion is the souvenir sheet issued for the Bicentenary of Napoleon's Arrival in 2016. Unfortunately I was not able to get it.
  • Napoleon liked San Marino and offered the state an enlargement at the cost of its neighbours. The offer was denied, but nonetheless was honoured with stamps.
  • The Czech Republic issued a stamp for the Battle of Austerlitz and Slovakia followed with a stamp for the Peace of Pressburg/Bratislava signed as result of the Austrian defeat. The stamp shows a small portrait of Napoleon and the Primate's Palace in Bratislava where the treaty was signed.
  • As I have written above, my knowledge of the Napoleonic era on the Iberian Peninsula is rudimentary and due to that I was not sure which Spanish events and stamps I had to include. I know now however that there are at least stamps about Agustina de Aragón, artworks by Francisco Goya, the Spanish flagship during the Battle of Trafalgar and the Constitution of 1812. In a series about Spanish history in caricatures issued in 2002 there is also one stamp about Napoleon. 
Napoleon influenced the whole of Europa and due to that it is virtually impossible to write a complete history about his rule. Especially in Germany and Italy which were not united countries at the time as they are today there are so many different stories that you can never expect to know them all or see all of them on stamps (I am living rather close to the site of the Battle of Ölper where the local Black Duke Fredrick William of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel fought against the troops of the Napoleonic puppet Kingdom of Westphalia). Nonetheless these are some things that I somehow regret that they have never been on European stamps:
  • As I had mentioned before, it would be nice to see a bit more of Napoleon's early life and way to power on stamps. Things and events I might imagine are the military academy at Brienne, the École Militaire in Paris, the Siege of Toulon and Napoleon together with the other Consuls.
  • The War of the Fourth Coalition is not honoured on any European stamp. This war followed the creation of the Confederation of the Rhine and saw the Prussian defeat at Jena and Auerstedt, the Russian defeats in Eylau and Friedland and the Treaties of Tilsit. For the Bicentenary of the Battle of Jena and Auerstedt there were two special postmarks used in Jena and Auerstedt respectively, but so far I have never seen them for sale anywhere. There were however some catch penny issues about the battle from territories like Chad, Congo, Equatorial Guinea and Sharjah.
  • Above I have already mentioned the Battle of Wagram from the War of the Fifth Coalition. That one was also never shown on a European stamp (there is however a rather nice one from Ascension Island). Generally I would have wished that all the big Napoleonic victories had got the "Austerlitz treatment" for their Bicentenaries.
  • Additionally it would be nice as well to see more relatives of Napoleon on French stamps like the one about Joachim Murat. Those might include King Joseph of Spain, Grand Duchess Elisa of Tuscany, King Louis of Holland, King Jérôme of Westphalia, Eugène de Beauharnais, Napoleon II and his wives Joséphine de Beauharnais (shown on a stamp from Monaco) and Marie Louise of Austria.
  • I am not aware that there were any stamps about the Napoleonic time in Belgium (apart from Waterloo), Denmark, Central Italy, the Netherlands, Sweden or Switzerland. Generally a stamp about the map of the Napoleonic Empire would be very interesting.
  • No stamp has ever shown Napoleon on Elba. Stamps about the Villa Mulini and the Villa San Martino would be nice.
Sources:
The French philatelic website, Phil-Ouest, that I often look at has a site about Napoleon on French stamps (click here), which was a good start to create this post. Later I also found the great blog Napoléon Art et Philatélie. Although it is in French, it is easy to navigate and includes a complete(?) list with stamps about the Napoleonic era. The texts here like usual rely on Wikipedia, but I also used a short monography simply called Napoleon written by Johannes Willms and published by C.H. Beck in Munich in 2019.

Thursday 8 April 2021

Pre-selected Sites for the European Heritage Label 2022

Exactly a year ago I wrote here about the new sites that got the European Heritage Label. Today again I can present you some news about the label, as the pre-selected sites for 2022 were announced recently. Let's have a closer look at them:

  • Grand Commandery Alden Biesen, Belgium - one of the largest and most impressive castle estates in Europa, former headquarters of a Grand Commander of the Teutonic Order, oversaw twelve smaller commanderies in the Rhine-Meuse region
  • MigratieMuseumMigration, Belgium - migration museum in Brussels, opened in 2019
  • Museum Center "Thracian Art in the Eastern Rhodopes": the Unknown European Ancestors, Bulgaria - shows a replica of a Thracian tomb dated to the 4th century BCE, the tomb itself is noted for its high artistic value of its frescoes
  • Fulda and Petersberg – Centers of the Carolingian Education Reform, Germany - the name says it all, check out their website for more
  • The Oderbruch | A landscape made by people, Germany - marshland near the German-Polish border, to bring the land under cultivation Frederick the Great ordered its drainage in the 18th century
  • Archaeological Site of Nemea, Greece - known as site of Heracles' fight against the Nemean Lion and the Nemean Games
  • Almadén Mining Park, Spain - production site of the largest quantity of liquid mercury metal in the World, also a UNESCO World Heritage Site
  • Seminaarinmäki Campus – Equality of Education, Finland - oldest campus of the Jyväskylä University, said to be the most beautiful campus in Finland
  • The Wellspring of Multilingualism - Baška Tablet (Bašćanska ploča) and the Complex of the Church of St Lucy, Croatia - one of the oldest monuments containing an inscription in the Croatian language
  • Vučedol Culture Museum and Vučedol Archaeological Site – source of European civilization, Croatia - centre of the eponymous culture, which was contemporary with the Sumer period in Mesopotamia, the Early Dynastic period in Egypt and the earliest settlements of Troy, second application
  • Mariapocs National Shrine, Hungary - important place of pilgrimage
  • Land of Water, Land in Water. The Po River Delta and Venice, Italy - not sure at all what this site will include
  • Ventotene, Italy - island in the Tyrrhenian Sea, site of a Bourbon and later Fascist prison camp, Altiero Spinelli wrote there the Ventotene Manifesto, which promoted the idea of a federal Europa after the war
  • Echternach Saint Willibrord Heritage, Luxembourg - important site of the Early Medieval Christianisation of Europa and the Frisians in particular
  • The Historical Centre of Turaida, Latvia - in 1212 a peace treaty was signed here between the Estonian tribes and the Livonian Brothers of the Sword, the Archbisphoric of Riga, the Livonians and the Latgalians
  • The Address of the Polish Bishops to the German Bishops, November 18, 1965, Poland - invitation sent by Polish bishops to their German counterparts to the 1000 Anniversary Celebrations of Poland's Christianisation, important step in German-Polish reconciliation after World War II
  • Lech Hill with Gniezno Cathedral, Poland - first historical capital of Poland, important site in the history of Christianity in Poland, site of the Congress of Gniezno, royal coronation site
  • Lines of Torres Vedras, Portugal - built to protect Lisbon against the Napoleonic forces, second application
  • ASTRA Museum of Traditional Folk Civilization, Romania - one of the largest open-air museum in Central and Eastern Europa, contains houses and workshops of Romanian folk culture from the pre-industrial era
  • The Palace of the European Commission of the Danube, Romania - housed the European Commission of the Danube until 1921, the commission itself dates back to 1815
  • Medieval wall painting in Gemer and Malohont Regions, Slovakia - medieval wall paintings by Italian frescoers and their masters
Unfortunately again no more information than the name was given yet, so for anything else research has to be done. Like always this is easy for some, but difficult for others, as some names are not very meaningful. As a reminder, this is what is important for the final inscription:

"The goal of the European Heritage Label is to raise awareness of European shared history and to highlight education opportunities. The award strengthens people’s sense of belonging to the European Union’s values and identification with Europe’s cultural heritage. 

Sites which have played a significant role in the history and culture of Europe are eligible for the European Heritage Label award."

Important is also the European narrative of the site and the demonstration of "education oppurtunities". This however means that maybe the site with the most significant role is not inscribed, as noone created the right narrative or highlighted European education oppurtunities. In reverse this also means that nearly everything can be inscribed if an energetic initiave worked out both. In my opinion this leads to the inscription of sites that nobody ever heard of, while important sites of European history and culture will never be inscribed, as the responsible persons there might have never heard of the label. For sure all sites are somehow interesting, but they do not always represent the pinnacle of European history, but only add to the already immense number of sites that have to be considered. 

For me the most interesting of these sites are the Thracian museum in Bulgaria, Fulda and Petersberg, the sites of the Vučedol culture, Ventone, Echternach, Lech Hill and the Lines of Torres Vedras. I am looking forward to see the final inscriptions later on. 

Although some of the sites should be easy to get on cards, so far I only got one from Fulda. However I also have these two philatelic items about the sites.

Prepaid Cover about Fulda

Souvenir Sheet about the 1000th anniversary of the
Congress of Gniezno

Friday 19 March 2021

Review and Overview of the Beethoven 2020 Stamps

EDIT: Information gathered after I published this post is included in orange.

Like I had promised earlier here is a small overview of the Beethoven stamps that were issued last year.
  • Beethoven stamps were issued in Albania, Argentina, Armenia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina (Post Mostar), Bosnia and Herzegovina (Serb Post), Brazil, Bulgaria, Croatia, Dominican Republic, Faroe Islands, France, Germany, Gibraltar, Guernsey, Hungary, Israel, Jersey, Kazakhstan, KEP, Lebanon, Liechtenstein, Macau, Malta, Mexico, Moldova, Monaco, Mongolia, North Macedonia, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Spain, Ukraine, Uruguay, Vatican and Vietnam.
  • So in total 38+2 postal administrations issued stamps about Beethoven for his 250th birth anniversary. 25+1 of them are from Europa, 9 from Asia and 4+1 from the Americas. Also there were a few agency-produced catch penny issues from Africa, but these can be ignored without loss. 
  • There might be more stamps out there. About the issue from Mongolia for example I just learned in February 2021.
  • I am not sure if the stamp from Mexico was issued. The Mexican Post announced it on Instagram, but as of now it is still not included in the Colnect catalogue. Nonetheless for everything written below I have included it. The stamp is still (8th April 2021) not included in the Colnect catalogue, but on Mon Blog Timbré you can see a used version on a cover, so it was definitely issued.
  • Latvia and Slovakia originally also announced Beethoven stamps, but they were apparently cancelled in the course of the year. 
  • The first country with the Beethoven stamp was Germany, where the stamp became available already on 2nd January. As Beethoven was just baptised in December 1770, this stamp was issued nearly a year before the actual anniversary. Apart from the normal gummed stamp there have been also a gummed souvenir sheet and self-adhesive stamps from the coil and a booklet. All however use the same design.

  • Counting all the "different" stamps (so counting Germany as one, but for example a souvenir sheet of four different stamps as four) there are 84+3 of them. 
  • So on average there are two stamps from every country, but in fact just eight+1 of the 38+2 countries issued more than one stamp. Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Portugal, Romania and Vietnam issued two stamps, Guernsey and Uruguay issued four, Jersey issued seven and Lebanon issued a sheet with 20(!) different stamps.
  • Most countries issued sets or single stamps solely dedicated to Beethoven, but Gibraltar, KEP and Moldova all issued one stamp in a bigger set about anniversaries. 
  • Unfortunately many of the stamps are not very creative. 20+1 of the 38+2 postal administrations used the famous portrait of Joseph Karl Stieler on at least one of their stamps. Some countries like the Faroe Islands, Germany and Israel reimagined the portrait, but others like Brazil, Hungary and Portugal just used the plain portrait and added country name, face value and a few other words. Many countries however used completely different images and especially in bigger sets like those from Guernsey and Jersey multiple portraits are used. 
  • 16+1 of the 38+2 postal administrations used the official logo of the jubilee year on their stamps: BTHVN 2020. 

  • As I had already written, Guernsey issued four stamps, but they were not issued at once, but on different dates in the course of the year. This issue format was apparently quite popular, as they are doing the same now of the Royal British Legion this year. When the last stamp was issued, all four became however also available in a combined souvenir sheet. 
  • The stamps from Jersey are advertised as "Award-Winning Stamp Issue", as they "were a winning entry in Communication Arts magazine's 61st annual design competition, a prestigious international competition showcasing the best in visual communications."
  • The issue from Spain takes the form of a vinyl disc and can actually be listened to. It reproduces Symphony No. 5 in C minor, Op. 67 performed by the Madrid Festival Orchestra.
  • You can read a very nice review of the Israeli stamp on the Israel Stamp Review blog (click here).
  • Since the Reformation Jubilee in 2017 I have not tried to collect all the international stamps about any of Big Jubilees, but only got a few selected issues. In my collection for Beethoven I only have the stamps from Austria, France, Germany, Israel, Macau and Portugal, but I still hope to get the ones from Poland and the Vatican later on.
  • Of all the Beethoven stamps issued in 2020 my favourite comes from France. It might not be the best designed issue, but I think it is nicely straight forward and decent and on the other hand also much more creative than others and has a great golden touch. 


This was definitely not the deepest dive into history or philately, but I had fun writing this small article. Although it is already March, I still have not seen anything that hints at a Big Jubilee in 2021. Themes for which I have seen at least two announced stamp issues include Dürer, Insulin, Kepler and Stanislaw Lem. Napoleon will get stamps from France, Italy and Saint Helena and both for Napoleon and Dante some more might be announced later on. However I think that there might be something bigger that I have not yet spotted. 

Sunday 31 January 2021

My Favourite History Stamps of 2020

Last month I promised you a list of my favourite history stamps issued in 2020. This is the list I came up with at the end of December:

  1. Women of the Reformation (Germany)
  2. Robert Schuman (Spain)
  3. Poles rescuing Jews - Edward Raczynski (Poland)
  4. Treasures of German Museums (Germany)
  5. Women's Suffrage (USA)
  6. 800 years Faculty of Medicine in Montpellier (France)
  7. 75 years AM-Postmarken (Germany)
  8. Olympe de Gouges (France)
  9. 50 years first Satellite (China)
  10. Battles of Thermopylae and Salamis (Greece)
  11. Les Grandes Heures de l'Historie de France (France)
  12. Centenary of the Carinthian Plebiscite (Austria)
  13. Roman Britain (United Kingdom)
  14. 250th birth anniversary of Ludwig van Beethoven (France)
  15. 75 years Peace (Norway)
Well, I do not like this list, I did not really like it back then and still do not like it now. First of all this actually can not be the final list, as I still not have the Roman Britain set (my order is travelled for over a month) and the golden rule is that I only include stamps in such favourite lists that I got during the year. So in fact the list has a gap and I do not know how to fill it. Also when I made the list in 2019, I did so to honour some stamps that I did not manage to include in my main list. This list however is different, as I made it completely seperately and that is not what I wanted. Furthermore I have no real connection to most of these stamps and that is again something that is important for me when I make such lists. Many of the stamps on the list I could exchange against other equally good issues with problems. Especially the first place had some serious contenders and also the last places were not very obvious. Just like Roman Britain there were some other issues that would deserve to be listed, but which I can not list, as I did not get them on time. So finally I decided to rework the list and present you a much shorter version here. Enjoy!

8. 250th Birth Anniversary of Ludwig van Beethoven (France)
Beethoven was the big anniversary of the year and while I did not try to collect all stamps for the theme, I still tried to make a list of them and collected a few. The stamp from France is my favourite of these and soon I plan to post a review of all of them.


7. Les Grandes Heures de l'Historie de France (France)
This series is now issued for some years and I never really took notice of them, although now that I saw this one, I have also checked out the last issues. In real life this sheet looks even better, but also digitally you can enjoy the beautiful design based on the Bayeux Tapestry. However it is not the overall theme of the sheet, Matilda of Flanders and William the Conqueror, but two of the smaller details. First there are the small animals at the borders that remind me of a seminar about Animals in the Middle Ages I attended at the university when somethig like that was still possible and second there are the men cutting trees. Have you ever expected to see Medieval men cutting trees on a stamp? I did not. Later this year I hope to make clear to you, why this fascinates me.


6. Centenary of the Chinese Translation of Das Kapital (China)
Chinese History and especially Chinese-European connections were among the themes that interested me very much last year and also I always like Germans on Foreign Stamps. This one got all of these. In the initial list it was not included, as I did to thought it would reach me before the year was over, but it did.


5. 75 years AM-Postmarken (Germany)
This one is an issue of local interest. First printed in Washington D.C. and London, a later version of them was also printed here in Braunschweig. Unfortunately no special postmark was available here, but I got it cancelled with a date postmark beside the First Day Special Postmark from Berlin. Also I think this is the first stamps of the Allied Occupation that is honoured on a German stamp.


4. Centenary of the Women's Suffrage in the USA (USA)
Just like the Chinese stamp this is not really European history, but in an election year where hope is reborn this is actually a nice selection.


3. Treasures of German Museums (Germany)
Like I had already mentioned in the last post, German museums were closed for a long time in 2020 (four months plus January 2021) and at the moment it is still not foreseeable when they are allowed to reopen. However in the remaining eight months, I managed to visit some interesting museums and exhibitions. I especially liked the Museum am Rothenbaum in Hamburg, the House of the Bavarian History in Regensburg, the Rubens exhibition in Paderborn and the Pilgrimage exhibition in Lüneburg. The first museum I visited in 2020 was the Kunsthalle Bremen, because a painting from there was shown on the last stamp in the series Treasures from German Museums. This painting by Vincent van Gogh was actually not shown when I was there, as the complete permanent exhibition was under construction. I actually thought about another visit in summer, but the virus prevented me from doing so. Maybe this year.


2. Edward Raczynski (Poland)
This stamp I think is very interesting. Edward Raczynski was a Polish politician, diplomat of the Polish Government in Exile during World War II and President of Poland in exile between 1979 and 1986. This stamp from the series Poles Rescuing Jews commemorates his Note of 1942, the first official and a very accurate report on the Holocaust to inform the Western public about these crimes. Just like the Polish Underground State this is a theme I want to do some more research about. 


Honourable Mention: Brexit (Austria)
With closed museums, cancelled events and postponed books 2020 was not a good year to remember history, but on the other side it was a year that will definitely go down in history. Beside the omnipresent Covid-19 pandemic the year also saw the Brexit. Covid-19 stamps there were so many that I did not want to choose just one of them for a Honourable Mention (will do a whole post about them in March), but the Brexit just got this one. A very interesting stamp!


1. Robert Schuman (Spain)
When I first saw this stamp, I wondered how the stars are supposed to form a map of Europa. It took a moment until I noticed that it is actually a portrait of Robert Schuman. I really like the design of this stamp, which is said to be the start of a new series about the Founding Figures of the European Union. imitating a cube. Really looking forward to see Konrad Adenauer and the others on stamps like this.


As you can see the first place was actually supposed to go to the Women of the Refomation, but honestly that stamp does not deserve the inclusion. I like the theme, but the design was horrible and the face value way too high.

What were your favourites?