The Collecting Adventure

The Pleasure of Collecting.

African Ethnic Stamps and Postcards

A Ethnic view of Africa. The Richness and Beauty of African Culture and People.

Germany - History On Stamps

100 years of German History told in Stamps, Letters and Postcards.

French Stamps

The Culture and the History of France in Stamps.

The Virtual Art Museum

The Art in Stamps. Painting, Sculpture and Art Personalities in a Virtual Philatelic Museum.

Apr 30, 2012

Germany on Stamps: Richard Wagner

 COMPOSER RICHARD WAGNER

(22 May 1813 – 13 February 1883)



Wilhelm Richard Wagner born in Leipzig, Germany, and was a German composer, conductor, theatre director and polemicist primarily known for his operas, or "music dramas", as they were later called.

Wagner's compositions, particularly those of his later period, are notable for their complex texture, rich harmonies and orchestration, and the elaborate use of leitmotifs: musical themes associated with individual characters, places, ideas or plot elements. Unlike most other opera composers, Wagner wrote both the music and libretto for every one of his stage works. Perhaps the two best-known extracts from his works are the Ride of the Valkyries from the opera "Die Walküre", and the Wedding March (Bridal Chorus) from the opera "Lohengrin".

Initially establishing his reputation as a composer of works such as "The Flying Dutchman and Tannhäuser" which were in the romantic traditions of Weber and Meyerbeer, Wagner transformed operatic thought through his concept of the Gesamtkunstwerk ("total work of art"). This would achieve the synthesis of all the poetic, visual, musical and dramatic arts and was announced in a series of essays between 1849 and 1852.

Wagner realized this concept most fully in the first half of the monumental four-opera cycle "Der Ring des Nibelungen". However, his thoughts on the relative importance of music and drama were to change again, and he reintroduced some traditional operatic forms into his last few stage works, including "Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg".

Wagner pioneered advances in musical language, such as extreme chromaticism and quickly shifting tonal centres, which greatly influenced the development of European classical music. His "Tristan und Isolde" is sometimes described as marking the start of modern music. Wagner's influence spread beyond music into philosophy, literature, the visual arts and theatre.



Wagner had his own opera house built, the "Bayreuth Festspielhaus". It was here that the Ring and Parsifal received their premieres and where his most important stage works continue to be performed today in an annual festival run by his descendants. His extensive writings on music, drama and politics have all attracted extensive comment in recent decades, especially where they have anti-Semitic content. Wagner achieved all of this despite a life characterized, until his last decades, by political exile, turbulent love affairs, poverty and repeated flight from his creditors.

In 13 February 1883, Wagner died suddenly of a heart attack. His funeral was held in Bayreuth, Germany.

His pugnacious personality and often outspoken views on music, politics and society made him a controversial figure during his life, which he remains to this day. The impact of his ideas can be traced in many of the arts throughout the twentieth century.
Some Wagner's Works:
  • "Tannhäuser und der Sängerkriegaus Wartburg" (Tannhäuser and troubadours tournament of Wartburg) is an opera in three acts with music by Richard Wagner, with libretto by the composer himself. He debuted in the year 1845 in Dresden, Germany.

  • "Der fliegende Holländer" (The Flying Dutchman) is an opera in three acts. Premiered in 1843 in Königliches Hof-Theater, in Dresden.

  • "Das Rheingold" (The Rhine Gold) is the first of the four operas that constitute Richard Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen (The Ring of the Nibelung). "Das Rheingold" received its premiere at the National Theatre in Munich on 22 September 1869,Wagner wanted this opera to be premiered as part of the entire cycle, but was forced to allow the performance at the insistence of his patron King Ludwig II of Bavaria.

  • "Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg" (The Mastersingers of Nuremberg) is an opera in three acts, written and composed by Richard Wagner. It is among the longest operas still commonly performed today, usually taking around four and a half hours. It was first performed at the National-Theater in Munich, on June 21, 1868.

  • "Die Walküre" (The Valkyrie), is the second of the four operas that form the cycle Der Ring des Nibelungen (The Ring of the Nibelung). It received its premiere at the National Theatre Munich on 26 June 1870.

  • "Siegfried" is an opera, part three of the four that comprise the tetralogy Der Ring des Nibelungen (The Ring of the Nibelung). Its premiere took place in the Bayreuth Festspielhaus (Bayreuth Festival Theatre), in Bayreuth, Germany, August 16, 1876, as part of the first full presentation of the Saga of the Ring.

  • "Tristan und Isolde" (Tristan and Isolde, or Tristan and Isolda, or Tristran and Ysolt) is an opera, or music drama, in three acts to a German libretto by the composer, based largely on the romance by Gottfried von Straßburg. It was composed between 1857 and 1859 and premiered in Munich on 10 June 1865. Wagner referred to "Tristan und Isolde" not as an opera, but called it "Eine Handlung" (literally drama or plot), which was the term used by the Spanish playwright Calderón for his dramas.

  • "Lohengrin" is a romantic opera in three acts by Richard Wagner, who was also responsible for the libretto. His premiere took place in Weimar, Germany, August 28, 1850. The story of the protagonist is drawn from a medieval German novel, the story of Perceval and his son Lohengrin.


Germany on Stamps: Franz Lüderitz

FRANZ ADOLF LÜDERITZ

(16 July 1834 – 30 October 1886)



Franz Adolf Eduard Lüderitz was a German merchant and founder of the first German colony in Southwest Africa. He was born in Bremen, Germany, where he engaged in the tobacco business with his father. Adolf Lüderitz succeeded to the management of the business. Lüderitz had traveled to the United States from 1854 to 1859.

Lüderitz sought and obtained prior assurance of German protection when in 1882 he declared his intention to build a factory for purposes of trade on a desert coast he had never seen. His grand design was to acquire possession of land in the interior from tribal chiefs and "introduce German goods under German labels".

For such a project he needed "the protection of the German flag". Besides he did not want to pay duties to the British authorities on imports through Walfischbucht (Walvis Bay).

He initially sent out a young man named Heinrich Vogelsang as his agent. Vogelsang persuaded Joseph Fredericks, a tribal chief who claimed suzerainty over that part of the coast, to part with Angra Pequena -- the anchorage along with all land within a radius of 8 km -- for £100 in gold coin and 200 rifles. Lüderitz did not pay the £100 in gold, but in trade goods.

 
Less than three months after the first deal, Vogelsang bought the entire coast from Angra Pequena to the Orange River, to a width of 20 "geographical miles". Known for a time as Lüderitzland, the acquisition contained vast treasure in the form of diamonds, although nobody knew it at the time.

The agreed price was £500 in gold and 60 rifles, but as before no gold changed hands. Lüderitz again paid in trade goods.

Lüderitz later bought the coast north of Angra Pequena, as far as the Kunene River, from other chiefs for the princely sum of £170 in all.

To all intents and purposes Lüderitz had bought an entire country, the future South West Africa, in little more than two years from 1 May 1883 to 19 June 1885. He owned about a third of it outright and held mineral rights to a large part of the remainder.

Unfortunately for him he had run out of money. Unable to exploit his acquisitions and concessions, he sold them to the Deutsche Kolonialgesellschaft für Südwest Africa (DKGSWA) (German Colonial Society for Southwest Africa, known as DKGSWA), a chartered company founded in Berlin to develop the colony.

Lüderitz had failed as a trader and his geological expeditions -- each more costly than the one before -- failed to discover the gold and copper he sought.

With a subsidy from the DKG he went on a final expedition in search of mineral wealth. On his homeward journey in a small boat with a flimsy sail, he and his helmsman were lost at sea, somewhere between the Orange River mouth and Angra Pequena, in 1886.

Diamonds were discovered 22 years after his death in the desert he had once owned.

The DKGSWA bought all of Lüderitz' land and mining rights, following Bismarck's policy that private rather than public money should be used to develop the colonies.


Apr 28, 2012

Germany on Stamps: New Ruanda-Urundi 5Ct Postcards



New Postcards from Belgium Occupation of German East Africa, in Ruanda-Urundi territory (1916/1922). These Postcards are from the 5Ct Collection.

Novos Postais da Ocupação Belga da África Oriental Alemã, no território do Ruanda-Urundi (1916/1922). Estes postais são da colecção de 5Ct.


Apr 24, 2012

Stamps of France: New 1941 Vichy France Set


New 1941 Complete Set from Vichy France, with the theme "Marshal Henri Pétain".

Nova Série Completa, de 1941, da República de Vichy com o tema "Marechal Henri Pétain".



Stamps of France: New 1941 Vichy France Set


New 1941 Complete Set from Vichy France, with the theme "National Aid".

Nova Série Completa, de 1941, da República de Vichy com o tema "Ajuda Nacional".


Stamps of France: Ambroise Paré

AMBROISE PARÉ


(c. 1510 – 20 December 1590)


Ambroise Paré was born in Bourg-Hensent, near Laval, in France and died in Paris, France. He was the great official royal surgeon for kings Henry II, Francis II, Charles IX and Henry III and is considered as one of the fathers of surgery and modern forensic pathology. He was a leader in surgical techniques and battlefield medicine, especially the treatment of wounds. He was also an anatomist and invented several surgical instruments.

"Je le pansai, Dieu le guérit" (I treat and God heal) is a quote that summarizes his work philosophy. At this time, little could be done for battlefield wounds and injured soldiers were often put out of their misery by comrades if the wound was too severe to be treated.

At the time it was believed that the injuries caused by firearms were poisonous and should be treated with boiling oil. Paré replaced it with a mixture of egg yolk, rose oil and turpentine. He found that the new mixture caused a more rapid healing than the boiling oil.

Paré was the author of the artificial limbs and eyes, as well as the precursor of the dental implant. He invented new surgical instruments, the operation of the cleft lip and was the first to realize that syphilis caused aortic aneurysm. He was pioneered homeostasis amputated limbs, with the use of clamps and threads for connecting the vessel, as it practice today.

Paré was considered "Huguenote" (French Calvinist Protestants), and escaped death on the night of S. Bartholomew, the August 23, 1572, because the very King Charles IX, who ordered the killing, hidden him in the palace.

In 1545, Paré published a book on his findings: "La Méthode de traicter lês playes faites par les arquebuses et autres bastons à feu" (Method for treating wounds made by arquebuses and other firearms). In 1553, he published a second edition with the same name. In 1564 he published " Dix livres de la Chirurgie" (Ten Books of Surgery) in 1575, at 65 years of age, gathered all his works under the title "Les Oeuvres de M. Ambroise Paré, avec les figures et les portraits de l'Anatomie que des instruments de chirurgie et de plusieurs monstres" (The Works of M. Ambroise Paré, with pictures and images of anatomy, surgical instruments and various monsters).


Stamps of France: Marie-Henri Beyle

MARIE-HENRI BEYLE

(23 January 1783 – 23 March 1842)



Marie-Henri Beyle, better known by his pen name Stendhal, was a 19th century French writer. Known for his acute analysis of his characters' psychology, he is considered one of the earliest and foremost practitioners of realism in his two novels "Le Rouge et le Noir" (The Red and the Black, 1830) and "La Chartreuse de Parme" (The Charterhouse of Parma, 1839).

Beyle was born in the small provincial town of Grenoble in France. He became an auditor with the "Conseil d'État" (State's Council) when he was 27 years of age and took part in both the French administration and the Napoleonic wars. In 1814 he went to Italy with which he formed a deep affection and would settle here for the rest of his career. It is here whilst working as French consul that his writing began to flourish.

Beyle chose the pseudonym Stendhal from a list of hundreds. His Realistic style of writing was not in the beginning appreciated by his readers most possible because at the time they were living in the Romantic period.

Stendhal syndrome

Stendhal syndrome, Stendhal's syndrome, hyperkulturemia, or Florence syndrome is a psychosomatic illness that causes rapid heartbeat, dizziness, fainting, confusion and even hallucinations when an individual is exposed to art, usually when the art is particularly beautiful or a large amount of art is in a single place.

The name of the syndrome is due to Stendhal who, after being attacked by this disorder in 1817, made the first detailed description of your symptoms, subsequently published in the book Naples and Florence: a journey from Milan to Reggio.


Apr 21, 2012

Germany on Stamps: Third Reich - 1936 Pages



The Third Reich (1936) Stamps, Postcards, Letters and Blocks pages are now on-line.

As páginas de Selos, Postais, Cartas e Blocos do Terceiro Reich (1936) estão agora on-line.




Apr 15, 2012

Germany on Stamps: Stamps of Type Germania


THE "GERMANIA" STAMP TYPE


In the end of XIX century and with the intention to substitute the basic series (Eagles), in circulation at that time, the Kaiser Wilhelm II putted in charge to the graphical artist German Paul Waldraff to carry through the drawing destined to a new series of stamps.

It's the beginning of XIX century and Germany, now unified and transformed into a powerful colonial empire, desired to above all use to advantage the national identity and the spreading that provided the stamps, due to ample world-wide covering that the post office started to have, thanks to the development of the commerce and the ways of communication.

To have a powerful impact was decided to represent the image of Germany in a feminine figure that incarnated the values of the native land. Thus "Germania" appeared, inhaled in warlike mythology as the symbol of the empire.

The designer had as model the actress Anna Führing (according to some personal friend of kaiser Wilhelm II), and it drew a series of sketches and projects until arriving at the final model.

On 1st January of 1900 it was emitted the first set: Ten stamps with face values in "pfennig" being four of them in "German Marks". All they had the registration "Reichspost" (imperial post office).

Throughout its long existence the stamps of the series "Germania", had been used in the German normal post office, had been printed matters in postal cards, had served as advertising form adding to the stamp advertising vignettes, had been used during the World War I in the occupied territories with local overprints.
Still they had been reproduced by the allies as form of military propaganda, in Germany as values of tax after World War I, as colonial stamps and as beneficence stamps.

They had still served in the new, adventurer and pioneer air mail that for those times gave the first steps.

The stamps of this type had given to the German post offices an enormous service and have enormous and historical importance to German post history. They are tempting to any stamps collector.

Some types exist in several colours and with legends and varied overprints that tell us innumerable facts of historical relevance.


Germany on Stamps: Beer Hall Putsch

BEER HALL PUTSCH

The Beer Hall Putsch, (also known as the Munich Putsch ( German: Hitlerputsch or Hitler-Ludendorff-Putsch) was a failed attempt at revolution that occurred between the evening of 8 November and the early afternoon of 9 November 1923, when Nazi Party leader Adolf Hitler, Generalquartiermeister (quartermaster general) Erich Ludendorff, and other heads of the Kampfbund (league of patriotic fighting societies and the German National Socialist party) unsuccessfully tried to seize power in Munich, Bavaria and Germany.

Hitler's objective was taking power to the Bavarian government, and then tries to seize power throughout the country. But the action was quickly controlled by the Bavarian police, and Hitler and several supporters - among them Rudolf Hess - were arrested.

The term "Putsch" (coup) is caused by Hitler's exhortation to his followers would have to take action at the brewery "Burgebräukeller""one of the most famous of Munich. Having gathered a group of followers, Hitler began the trial of the "revolution" with a shot at the ceiling.

The Coup

Hitler decided to use Ludendorff in 1923 as front man in an attempt to seize power in Munich, the capital of Bavaria, who then enjoyed, as well as in the German Reich, in some political autonomy. The objective was imitating the famous March on Rome by Benito Mussolini, with a "March on Berlin" - but the coup failed, and become known as the Beer Hall Putsch.

Hitler and Ludendorff obtained the clandestine support of Gustav von Kahr, the governor of Bavaria, several prominent personalities of the German army (Reichswehr) and the police authority itself. As can be understood through political posters of the time, Luddendorff, Hitler, and several military leaders of the Bavarian police purposes was forming a new government.

However, in November 8, 1923, Kahr and some officers fell into place and denied him support in the brewery "Burgebräukeller." Hitler, surprised, put them at the same time and decided to proceed with the coup. Unknown to Hitler, Kahr and other former supporters were freed by order of Ludendorff, under the commitment not to interfere. However, they make the necessary efforts to thwart the coup.

In the morning, when the Nazis marched from the brewery to the headquarters of the Bavarian War Ministry to overthrow what they considered a traitor to the Bavarian government in order to begin the March on Berlin, the army proceeded rapidly to dispersion. In the fight with the police, Ludendorff was wounded and 16 Nazis were killed. Later, the Nazi propaganda turned these dead heroes of the cause of National Socialism.

Hitler escaped home of Ernst Hanfstaengl and thought seriously about suicide. Has since been arrested for high treason, and fearing that some members "leftist" party might attempt to seize the leadership of the party during his imprisonment, Hitler quickly appointed Alfred Rosenberg and later Gregor Strasser, as temporary leaders of the party.

Contrary to what could have foreseen, he met during his imprisonment in an environment receptive to their ideas. During the trial in April 1924, the magistrates responsible for the case that Hitler managed to turn this defeat into a temporary feat of propaganda. He was granted the opportunity to defend himself almost without any restriction of time, before the court and a wide audience that quickly before his exalted speech, based on a strong nationalist sentiment.

Hitler was sentenced to five years in prison in Landsberg prison for the crime of conspiracy with intent of treason. In prison, as well as preferential treatment, had the opportunity to check their popularity by letters he received from several supporters.

The future dictator of Nazi Germany remained only nine months in Landsberg prison and during this time he writing his political manifesto, "Mein Kampf" (My Struggle). Upon leaving prison, Hitler would have taken the decision that would guide his future in politics: do not challenge the authority more directly, but marched on to power by law. Having uttered the famous phrase "Democracy must be destroyed by their own forces", Hitler would reach its goal in less than 10 years with the complicity of military and political conservatives, who wanted to put an end to disorder caused by power struggle between Nazis and Communists.



Germany on Stamps: Dirigible Zeppelin




DIRIGIBLE ZEPPELIN

A Zeppelin is a type of rigid airship pioneered by the German Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin in the early 20th century.

It was based on designs he had outlined in 1874 and detailed in 1893. His plans were reviewed by committee in 1894 and patented in the United States on 14 March 1899. Given the outstanding success of the Zeppelin design, the term zeppelin in casual use came to refer to all rigid airships.


Before World War I

Before World War I, a total of 21 Zeppelin airships (LZ 5 to LZ 25) were manufactured. In 1909, LZ 6 became the first Zeppelin used for commercial passenger transport. The world's first airline, the newly founded DELAG, bought seven Zeppelins by 1914.

Seven of the twenty-seven were destroyed in accidents, mostly while being moved into their halls. There were no casualties. All together, the several airships traveled approximately 200,000 kilometers (120,000 miles) and transported about 40,000 passengers.

The German Army and Navy purchased 14 Zeppelins.

By 1914, state-of-the-art Zeppelins had lengths of 150 to 160 meters (490 to 520 ft) and volumes of 22,000–25,000 m3, enabling them to carry loads of around 9,000 kilograms (20,000 lb).

They were typically powered by three Maybach engines of around 400 to 550 horsepower (300 to 410 kW) each, reaching speeds of up to 80 kilometers per hour (50 mph).

During World War I

Zeppelins were used as bombers during World War I.

At the beginning of the conflict the German command had high hopes for the craft, as they appeared to have compelling advantages over contemporary aircraft – they were almost as fast, carried many more guns, and had a greater bomb-load and enormously greater range and endurance. However, their great weakness was their vulnerability to incendiary ammunition.

The German airships were operated by both the Army and Navy. The main use of the craft was in reconnaissance over the North Sea and the Baltic, where the endurance of the craft led German warships to a number of Allied vessels divisions.

The Naval and Army Air Services also directed a number of strategic raids against Britain, leading the way in bombing techniques and also forcing the British to bolster their anti-aircraft defenses.

The possibility of airship raids was approved by the Kaiser on 19 January 1915, although he excluded London as a target and further demanded that no attacks be made on historic or government buildings or museums.

The nighttime raids were intended to target only military sites on the east coast and around the Thames estuary.

Technological progress

Strategic issues aside, Zeppelin technology improved considerably as a result of the increasing demands of warfare.

The pre-war M-class designs were quickly enlarged, first to the 530 feet (160 m) long duralumin P-class, which increased gas capacity from 880,000 cubic feet (25,000 m3) to 1,130,000 cubic feet (32,000 m3), introduced a fully enclosed gondola, and extra engines. These modifications added 2,000 feet (610 m) to the maximum ceiling, over 10 mph to the top speed, and greatly increased crew comfort and hence endurance.

In 1916, the Zeppelin Company had spawned several dependencies around Germany and delivered airships of around 200 meters (660 ft) in length (some even more) and with volumes of 56,000–69,000 m3.

These M-class dirigibles could carry loads of 3–4 tons of bombs and reach speeds of up to 100 to 130 kilometers per hour (62 to 81 mph) using six Maybach engines of 260 hp (190 kW) each.

To avoid enemy defenses such as British aircraft, guns and searchlights, Zeppelins became capable of much higher altitudes (up to 7,600 meters (24,900 ft)) and they also proved capable of long-range flights.

For example, LZ.104 L.59, based in Yambol, Bulgaria, was sent to reinforce troops in German East Africa (today Tanzania) in November 1917. The ship did not arrive in time and had to return following reports of a German defeat by British troops, but it had traveled 6,757 kilometers (4,199 miles) in 95 hours and thus had broken a long-distance flight record.

End of the war

The German defeat in the war also marked the end of German military dirigibles, as the victorious Allies demanded a complete disarmament of German air forces and delivery of the remaining airships as reparations. Specifically, the Treaty of Versailles contained several articles dealing explicitly with dirigibles.

After World War I

Count von Zeppelin had died in 1917, before the end of the war. Dr. Hugo Eckener, a man who had long envisioned dirigibles as vessels of peace rather than of war, took command of the Zeppelin business.

With the Treaty of Versailles having knocked out their competitor Schütte-Lanz, the Zeppelin company and DELAG hoped to resume civilian flights quickly. In fact, despite considerable difficulties, they completed two small Zeppelins: LZ 120 Bodensee, which first flew in August 1919 and in the following two years actually transported some 4,000 passengers; and LZ 121 Nordstern, which was envisaged being used on a regular route to Stockholm.

However, in 1921, the Allied Powers demanded these two Zeppelins be delivered as war reparations.

Further Zeppelin projects could not be realized, partly because of Allied interdiction. This temporarily halted German Zeppelin aviation.

Eckener and his co-workers refused to give up and kept looking for investors and a way to circumvent Allied restrictions. Their opportunity came in 1924. The United States had started to experiment with rigid airships, constructing one of their own and ordering another from the UK.

Under these circumstances, Eckener managed to acquire an order for the next American dirigible. Of course, Germany had to pay the costs for this airship itself, as they were calculated against the war reparation accounts, but for the Zeppelin Company, this was secondary. So engineer Dr. Dürr designed LZ 126 and using all the expertise accumulated over the years, the company finally achieved its best Zeppelin so far, which took off for a first test flight on 27 August 1924.

No insurance company was willing to issue a policy for the delivery to Lakehurst, which, of course, involved a transatlantic flight. Eckener, however, was so confident of the new ship that he was ready to risk the entire business capital, and on 12 October 07:30 local time, the Zeppelin took off for the US under his command. His faith was not disappointed, and the ship completed her 8,050 kilometers (5,000 mi) voyage without any difficulties in 81 hours and two minutes. American crowds enthusiastically celebrated the arrival, and President Calvin Coolidge invited Dr. Eckener and his crew to the White House, calling the new Zeppelin an "angel of peace".

Under its new designation the ZR-3 USS Los Angeles (the former LZ 126), became the most successful American airship. She operated reliably for eight years until she was retired in 1932 for economic reasons. She was dismantled in August 1940.

With the delivery of LZ 126, the Zeppelin Company had reasserted its lead in rigid airship construction, but it was not yet quite back in business. Acquiring the necessary funds for the next project proved a problem in the difficult economic situation of post-World-War-I Germany, and it took Eckener two years of lobbying and publicity work to secure the realization of LZ 127.

Another two years passed before 18 September 1928, when the new dirigible, christened Graf Zeppelin in honor of the Count, flew for the first time. With a total length of 236.6 meters (776 ft) and a volume of 105,000 m3, it was the largest dirigible yet.

Eckener intended to supplement the successful craft by another, similar Zeppelin, projected as LZ 128. However the disastrous accident of the British passenger airship R101 on 5 October 1930 led the Zeppelin Company to reconsider the safety of hydrogen-filled vessels, and the design was abandoned in favor of a new project.

LZ 129 would advance Zeppelin technology considerably, and was intended to be filled with inert helium.

Hindenburg, end of an era

Following 1933, the establishment of the Third Reich in Germany began to overshadow the Zeppelin business.

The Nazis were not interested in Eckener's ideals of peacefully connecting people; they also knew very well dirigibles would be useless in combat and thus chose to focus on heavier-than-air technology.

On the other hand, they were eager to exploit the popularity of the airships for propaganda.

As Eckener refused to cooperate, Hermann Göring, the German Air minister, formed a new airline in 1935, the Deutsche Zeppelin-Reederei (DZR), which took over operation of airship flights. Zeppelins would now display the Nazi swastika on their fins and occasionally tour Germany to play March music and propaganda speeches for the people from the air.

On 4 March 1936, LZ 129 Hindenburg (named after former President of Germany Paul von Hindenburg by Eckener) made her first flight.

The Hindenburg was the largest airship ever built. However, in the new political situation, Eckener had not obtained the helium to inflate it due to a military embargo; only the United States possessed the rare gas in usable quantities. So, in what ultimately proved a fatal decision, the Hindenburg was filled with flammable hydrogen.

Apart from the propaganda missions, LZ 129 began to serve the transatlantic lines together with Graf Zeppelin.

On 6 May 1937, while landing in Lakehurst after a transatlantic flight, in front of thousands of spectators, the tail of the ship caught fire, and within seconds, the Hindenburg burst into flames, killing 35 of the 97 people on board and one member of the ground crew.

The actual cause of the fire has not been definitively determined; it is likely that a combination of leaking hydrogen from a torn gas bag, the vibrations caused by a swift rotation for a quicker landing to have started static electricity in the duralumin alloy skeleton and a flammable outer coating similar to rocket fuel accounted for the fact that the fire spread from its starting point in the tail to engulf the entire airship so rapidly (34 seconds).

Whatever caused the disaster, the end of the dirigible era was due to politics and the upcoming war, not the wreck itself, though it surely led to some public misgivings Graf Zeppelin completed more flights, and was retired one month after the Hindenburg wreck and turned into a museum.

After the German invasion of Poland started the Second World War on 1 September, the Luftwaffe ordered LZ 127 and LZ 130 moved to a large Zeppelin hangar in Frankfurt, where the skeleton of LZ 131 was also located.

In March 1940 Goering ordered the destruction of the remaining airships and the Duralumin fed into the Nazi war industry. In May a fire broke out in the Zeppelin facility, which destroyed most of the remaining parts. The rest of the parts and materials were soon scrapped, with almost no trace of the German "giants of the air" remaining by the end of the year.



Germany on Stamps: President Paul von Hindenburg

PRESIDENT PAUL VON HINDENBURG

(2 October 1847 – 2 August 1934)



Paul Ludwig Hans Anton von Beneckendorff und von Hindenburg, was born at Posen in Prussia and he was incorporated in the Prussian army in 1866, where he stayed about 40 years, serving in the War of the Seven Weeks and in the Franc-Prussian War.

During an honourable but undistinguished military career, he served in the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 and in the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-71, retiring in 1911.

At the beginning of the World War I, in August of 1914, he was recalled to command the 8th German Army in the Russian border, as the nominal superior of Erich Ludendorff, a talented military strategist. Credit for Ludendorff's invasion of Russia was misdirected to Hindenburg, who was appointed field-marshal and commander of all German land forces, with Ludendorff at his side.

He oversaw the mobilisation of the whole German state for war, and became immensely popular throughout the country. Kaiser Wilhelm II was sidelined.

After the war, he retired for the second time.

In 1920, in his memories "Mein Leben" (My Life), he explains that the German defeat, in the Great War had origin in an internal revolution, which it ended the German Empire and established the Republic in 1919.

In 1925 he was elected Weimar Germany's second president, after Friedrich Ebert.

In 1930, as economic depression took hold and the government fell. In July he authorised Chancellor Heinrich Brüning to dissolve the Reichstag (Parliament).

In 1932 he run for the presidential re-election as the only candidate capable to defeat the Nazi party of Adolf Hitler, what it came to happen. At that election's he dismissed as Chancellor, Heinrich Brüning, the only capable politician Weimar Germany had from 1930 to January 1933.

In the later years of his presidency, Hindenburg was heavily influenced by those who surrounded him. Hindenburg showed more and more signs of senility and was open to their suggestions. Though he disliked Hitler, he was persuaded to appoint him chancellor in January 1933.

In February of this year the Reichstag building was burned down. Hitler told to the president that it was the work of the communists in Germany and that he, as president, should introduce emergency powers. Hindenburg readily agreed. Hitler also knew how to play on the president's fear of communism. The introduction of emergency powers, legal under the Constitution, which suspended many civil liberties, was the beginning of Hitler's move into a dictatorship.

Later the Reichstag would come to give to Hitler dictatorial powers. From that date on, Hindenburg started to be a simple decorative figure in the Germanic government.

Hindenburg died at aged 86, in his Prussian estate, in August 2, 1934, and was buried at Tannenburg. Hitler used the opportunity to give him a state funeral. With his death, Hitler declared the office of President vacant and, as "Führer und Reichskanzler" (Fuehrer and Reich Chancellor), made himself Head of State.


Apr 11, 2012

Stamps of France: Ramparts of Aigues-Mortes


RAMPARTS OF AIGUES-MORTES

Aigues-Mortes (dead waters) is a commune in the Gard department in Provence, southern France. This medieval city of "dead waters" is named after the swamps and lagoons that graced the landscape centuries ago. The surrounding city walls are well preserved.

The 1,650 meters of city walls were built in two phases: the first during the reign of Philippe III, the Bold, and the second during the reign of Philippe IV, the Fair, who had the enclosure completed between 1289 and 1300. The Constance Tower, completed in 1248, is all that remains of the castle built in Louis IX's reign.

The revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685 caused severe repression of Protestantism, which was marked in Languedoc and the Cévennes in the early 18th century by the "Camisard War". From 1686, the Constance Tower was used as a prison for the Huguenots who refused to convert to Roman Catholicism.
In 1893, a conflict erupted between the French and the Italians who worked in the salt evaporation ponds of Peccais. The Massacre of Italians at Aigues-Mortes resulted in several Italian deaths with hundreds injured in the ethnic violence.
The ramparts, the castle and the tower of Constance are classified as historical monuments since 1 December 1903. Various adjoining parcels are also classified from 19 July 1921, 28 July 1928, 14 October 1929 and 8 January 1964.


Apr 8, 2012

Germany on Stamps: Ruanda-Urundi 10Ct Postcards


Ruanda-Urundi Territory

In the First World War, Ruanda-Urundi (part of German East Africa) was conquered by forces from the Belgian Congo in 1916.

After publishing my 5Ct Postcards Collection is now time to publish the 10Ct Postcards.



Território do Ruanda-Urundi

Na Primeira Guerra Mundial o Ruanda-Urundi (parte da África oriental Alemã) foi ocupado, em 1916, pelas forças Belgas oriundas do Congo Belga.

Após a publicação da minha colecção de Postais de 5Ct é agora a altura de publicar a colecção de Postais de 10Cts.




Stamps of France: Nicolas Rolin and Guigone de Salins


NICOLAS ROLIN

(1376 – 1462)




Nicolas Rolin was a leading figure in the history of Burgundy and France. Chancellor of Burgundy, in 1422, he was a sort of minister to Philippe le Bon, a rank he held for more than forty years as one of the principal architects of the monarch's success. He was the lawyer of Jean sans Peur, and presented at the lit de justice of 1420 conclusions relative to the murder at Montereau.

Rolin was one of the participants in drafting the 1435 Treaty of Arras by which Charles VII recognised the independence of Burgundy, thus separating it from the English in the Hundred Years' War.

Enormously rich, Nicolas Rolin contributed to the founding of the universities of Dôle and Louvain. He had luxurious tastes and was a protector of the arts.

Having founded the Hospices de Beaune with his wife Guigone de Salins, in 1443, in 1452 Rolin created a new religious order, "Les sœurs hospitalières de Beaune" (The Hospitaller Sisters of Beaune). He ordered the painting of an altarpiece, The Last judgement by the Flemish painter Rogier van der Weyden for the hospices.

The house in which Rolin was born is now the Autun town museum and is known as the Musée Rolin. He owned the Château d'Oricourt and in 1435 he commissioned Jan van Eyck the famous The Virgin with Child and Chancellor Rolin, now at the Louvre.


GUIGONE DE SALINS

(1403 – 1470)


Guigone de Salins was the founder with her husband Nicolas Rolin, the Hospices de Beaune.

From the family of the lords of Salins, in the Jura, Guigone de Salins married at age 18, in 1421, with the Chancellor of Burgundy Nicolas Rolin.

She encouraged her husband to charity. They built the Hotel-Dieu in Beaune. It introduces the art in the hospital where the poor and pilgrims will be treated in the setting of a castle.

The tile in the main hall of the poor reflects the love of Nicolas Rolin to Guigone: it includes the Rolin monogram and his motto: "Seulle", in reference to his wife.

From 1462, widowed, she devoted herself to comfort the sick. She rests in the chapel of the Hotel Dieu.


Apr 5, 2012

Stamps of France: New Vichy France Letter


New Vichy France Letter with the "Celebrities of the 16th Century", complete Set.

Nova Carta da França de Vichy com a Série "Celebridades do Século XVI", completa.


Stamps of France: Dauphiné Panorama


DAUPHINÉ PANORAMA


The school dauphinoise

It is known by the name school dauphinoise, a group of landscape painters of the late 19th century. This school has specialized in mountain scenery, majestic and spectacular.


Close to the Realist movement, sometimes accused of theoretical, the school dauphinoise enjoyed a certain vogue at the time for the mountain scenery.


The Dauphiné

The Dauphiné or Dauphiné Viennois is a former province in southeastern France, whose area roughly corresponded to that of the present departments of Isère, Drôme, and Hautes-Alpes.

The Dauphiné (also called Dauphiny in ancient English) was an independent state from 1040 to 1349, under the rule of the Counts of Albon, before joining the Kingdom of France. As a French province, it maintained its autonomy until 1457.




Apr 1, 2012

Stamps of France: The Vichy France 1943 Page


New Stamps from 'Stamps of France' Collection with 1943 Page from Vichy France theme.

Novos Selos da Colecção 'Stamps of France' com a página do ano de 1943 respeitante ao tema A França deVichy.

Stamps of France: New 1942 Vichy France Stamps
















New Vichy France Stamps, dated from 1942.

Novos selos da França de Vichy, datados de 1942.


Stamps of France: New 1941 Vichy France Stamps













New Vichy France Stamps, dated from 1941.

Novos selos da França de Vichy, datados de 1941.