Search This Blog

Tuesday 23 May 2023

2836) Castles in Croatia: Hrvatska Pošta (Croatian Post) has issued a set of four postage stamps depicting i) BATTHYANY, LUDBREG –: ii) OLD TOWN, VARAŽDIN – a medieval and Renaissance fortress and Erdödy Castle: iii) ZRINSKI, ČAKOVEC – medieval burgh and a Renaissance and Baroque fortress with a castle: iv) FEŠTETIĆ, PRIBISLAVEC – old Zrinski Palace and the new Feštetić Castle: Date of Stamp set issue: 18.05.2023:

2836) Castles in Croatia: Hrvatska Pošta (Croatian Post) has issued a set of four postage stamps depicting i) BATTHYANY, LUDBREG – : ii) OLD TOWN, VARAŽDIN – a medieval and Renaissance fortress and Erdödy Castle: iii) ZRINSKI, ČAKOVEC – medieval burgh and a Renaissance and Baroque fortress with a castleiv) FEŠTETIĆ, PRIBISLAVEC – old Zrinski Palace and the new Feštetić Castle: Date of Stamp set issue: 18.05.2023:

About the Castles of Croatia included in this stamp set:

The four stamps set.

i) BATTHYANY, LUDBREG – castle of the Counts of Batthyany:

Ludbreg's architectural history dates back to Roman times as evidenced by the archaeological site near the castle which was built in the late Baroque era, combining a medieval burgh and a Renaissance castle.

The castle was first mentioned in 1320 under the name "castrum". 

In the middle of the 16th century, at the time of the reign of the Thuroczy family, an outdoor bulwark, towers and water ditch were built so the building took on the characteristics of a Wasserburg (burgh). 

Count Ludovik Batthyany is responsible for the Baroque-Classicist castle, the construction of which began in 1745 and lasted until the beginning of the 19th century. Joseph Hueber, a prominent architect from Graz, was in charge of the construction.

The layout size of the castle is 32.00 metres x 33.00 metres with an inner courtyard. It consists of four floors. 

The fourth floor was originally incorporated into the mansard roof, which was altered in the 19th century, so the castle took on its present appearance. 

The castle is part of the Baroque-Classicist urban complex north of the medieval settlement. Two large two-storey buildings were built south of the castle and numerous economic facilities were built on the north side. All were compositionally positioned around the central axis in a north-south direction.

Historical interiors were not preserved due to modifications to the castle in the 20th century

The original wall and ceiling paintings in the Hall of Sallaterain have been preserved on the ground floor of the western building south of the castle. Painted ceilings and walls in the castle Chapel of the Holy Cross from 1753 were restored in the 1950s

Their arrchitect was Michael Peck from Kaniža. There is a collection of sacral art and historical archives in the Chapel of the Holy Cross, including the Papal bull of Pope Leo X from 1513, confirming the Eucharistic Miracle from 1411 which, according to a legend, happened in the chapel in the Gothic tower of the castle.

The castle and the land were in the ownership of the Hungarian Counts of Batthyany for 228 years, from 1695 to 1923

In 1742, Queen Maria Theresa acknowledged the Ludbreg land as an inalienable good of the Batthyany family. 

For most of the 20th century, the castle did not have any useful purpose until 1992, when a Conservation Centre was established as an international restoration work room for art restoration.

ii) OLD TOWN, VARAŽDIN – a medieval and Renaissance fortress and Erdödy Castle:

In the 11th and 12th centuries, the fortress of county prefects (castrum comitis) was built next to the intersection of three Roman roads. 

Today's Old Town developed from it. The first mention of the name "Varaždin" was recorded in 1181

There was a settlement that developed as a suburb of the Old Town, which became a free royal town in 1209 – the first royal town in Croatia at the time, 33 years before Zagreb. 

Since then Varaždin is proprietarily and legally a dual town – a feudal/noble fortress of the Wasserburg type – today's Old Town – and a civil town that was the capital of Croatia from 1756 to 1776.

Architectural layers from the medieval era to the last thorough restoration in 1989 can be found in the nine centuries-long history of the Old Town. 

In the long history of construction, adjusting to military tasks and the needs of everyday life, the Old Town is recognised as a balanced unit of great national value with Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque characteristics

The largest construction works were done in the 16th and 18th centuries – firstly because of the danger posed by the Turks, the medieval feudal town (Wasserburg) was transformed into a Renaissance fortress, followed by a Baroque transformation of the fortress into a castle that is suitable for housing. 

At the invitation of the owner Ivan Ungnad, the Renaissance construction works from 1544 to 1575 were led by Domenico dell'Allio, an Italian architect and the main fortress architect on the border with the Ottoman Empire. 

Round towers and tall earthen embankments surrounded by water moats were built which are largely preserved to this day. 

When the threat from the Turks no longer existed, the Old Town was restored in 1705, as evidenced by the inscription on the facade, and then again in 1776, when the thorough Baroque transformation of Varaždin began after the great fire.

Ivan Ungnad, the commander of the border area towards the Ottoman Empire, and Counts of Erdödy take credit for the construction, architectural transformations and preservation of the Old Town. 

In 1584, Ivan Ungnad's granddaughter married Thomas Erdödy II, a Croatian ban and the commander of the Croatian army in the defense of Sisak in 1593, bringing the Old Town as a dowry. 

Counts of Erdödy owned it for 340 years up until 1925 when, on the occasion of the thousandth anniversary of the Kingdom of Croatia, the "Varaždin" City Museum was opened in the Old Town.

2025 marks the 100th anniversary of the Museum in the Old Town, 450 years since the construction of the Renaissance fortress, 250 years since the end of the Baroque transformation of the Old Town and 1,100 years of the Kingdom of Croatia.

iii) ZRINSKI, ČAKOVEC – medieval burgh and a Renaissance and Baroque fortress with a castle:

Today's castle in Čakovec contains a medieval Wasserburg, a Renaissance fortress of pentagonal shape with Renaissance and Baroque bastions, a Baroque manor/palace in the center and a park from the 19th century built in the area of a glacis (glacis, clearing). 

Such a layered architectural unit was the core of the settlement that has been developing as a suburb since the Middle Ages. Today this complex with a park is the center of a contemporary city and the most valuable cultural and historical monument in Međimurje.

In the seven-centuries-long history, four families are to be thanked for the castle. 

It was in the possession of the Croatian noble family Ernušt for 67 years (1473–1541), 124 years in the possession of the Zrinski family (1546–1670), the family of the Czech counts Althan owned it for 71 years (1719–1791) and the Croatian noble family Feštetić for 127 years (1791–1919). 

After the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1919, the history of this estate ends. 

From the mid-19th century up until the middle of the 20th century, the castle was used for various purposes – sugar factory, for housing, as an educational institution. 

Since 1954 it has been owned by the "Čakovec" Museum of Međimurje.

Today this is a renovated historical complex of the fortress and a castle as a museum of the intangible cultural heritage of Međimurje with an in-situ depiction of the architectural development from a burgh and a fortress to a castle and a museum.

In the late Middle Ages (13th century) a wooden fortification was built at the time of the ownership of the Čaka family (Csáka), who gave Čakovec its name. 

It was mentioned as a fortified palace in 1333, and by the middle of the 16th century, a Wasserburg was built with defensive walls. 

In the 16th century ban Nikola Zrinski built Bastion fortifications, turning the burgh into a strong lowland Renaissance fortress to defend against the Turks.

After the earthquake in 1738, the Counts of Althan restored the fortress, built/upgraded a quadrangular manor/palace with an inner courtyard and built a new tower above the entrance. 

At the time of the reign of the Feštetić family there were no major construction works because, in the middle of the 19th century, they decided to build a new castle in a nearby Pribislavec.

iv) FEŠTETIĆ, PRIBISLAVEC – old Zrinski Palace and the new Feštetić Castle:

Pribislavec, a property that belonged to the nobility with headquarters in Čakovec, is located three kilometers east of Čakovec. 

The owners are the same as the owners of the Čakovec estate – the Ernušt family (1473-1541), Zrinski (1546-1670), Althan (1719-1791) and Feštetić (1791-1923). There was an old castle in an elevated position, which is mentioned in a text from 1752 from the era of the Counts of Althan. The smaller castle supposedly existed at the time of reign of the Zrinski family as the seat of Majur.

Today's castle was built in the middle of the 19th century by Count Juraj Feštetić, a descendant of the old noble family Feštetić (hun. Festetics), originating in Turopolje, southeast of Zagreb. King Ferdinand II gave them the title of nobility and the coat of arms in 1625. 

Family members owned estates in different places of the Habsburg Monarchy. Their influence in southwest Hungary, where they owned the Kesthely Castle, was strong. Feštetić family gave up investing in the renovation of the castle in Čakovec and from 1850 to 1870 they built a new castle in Pribislavec. 

The castle was built in the neo-Gothic style with carved stones, with accompanying economic buildings and a park. It is a one-story castle with a U-layout with an attached Neo-Gothic tower, prominent oriel window, high windows and neo-Gothic decorations on the facades. They lived in the castle until 1918 when the Austro-Hungarian Empire collapsed. 

There is a coat of arms of the Feštetić family on the castle, which is well-known by stork or heron. Emperor and king Franz Joseph I visited the castle twice, in 1887 and in 1896.

The castle was destroyed and robbed in 1918 and 1941, when the roof burned down, but was restored in 1944

A thorough and lengthy renovation for educational purposes lasted from 1946 to 1968. A primary school was located in the castle from 1952 to 2020, when it was moved to another building. 

Međimurje County – the new owner of the castle – started to prepare project documentation for the renovation and conversion of the castle into a heritage hotel with accompanying cultural content.

The First Day Cover (FDC), shows a concise map of the four castles together with their individual Coats of Arms, at bottom left. 

At top right are affixed the four stamps issued in the set cancelled with a special cancellation postmark/handstamp of Zagreb Post Office. The date of Cancellation is marked - "18.05.2023".

A Sheetlet depicting a composite of all the four castles together with their individual Coats of Arms.

Technical details:

Stamp set Issue Date: 18.05.2023

Designer: Dean Roksandić, designer from Zagreb

Printer: AKD d.o.o., Zagreb

Process: Offset Printing

Colours: Multicolour - cyan, magenta, yellow, black (CMYK)

Size: 34.08 mm x 35.50 mm

Stamp Values: 0.47 EUR (x 4 stamps)




Related Links on this Blog:

1) 200 Years of the Discovery of Antarctica, Estonia: A 2 Euro Commemorative Coin dedicated the the Bicentenary of the Discovery of Antarcticca by Admiral Fabian Gottlieb Benjamin von Bellingshausen on board the "Vostok": Coin issue date: 01/2020

2) Solomon Islands: 250th Anniversary of Captain James Cook's first Pacific "Voyage of Discovery" and charting of New Zealand and Australia's East Coast: Date of Coin issue: 2020















Links: Crypto-Currency Stamps & Coin Posts:

1) Croatian Crypto Stamp - 2, Croatia: A 50 HRK stamp (a combination of the analog and the digital) issued by "Hrvatska Posta" (Croatian Post) in coordination with the Croatian Blockchain community gathered around the Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Association: Date of Stamp issue: 16.12.2020

2) Did You Know Series (49): Dogecoin (DOGE), Blockchain Mint, Singapore: Blockchain Mint has issued Silver DOGE Medals in three variants - i) Silver Dogecoin Cryptocurrency Medal Gem BU, ii) Silver Dogecoin Cryptocurrency Medal Proof-Like in Blister Pak, iii) Dogecoin Cryptocurrency Commemorative Medal Antiqued in Blister Pak: Date of Medal release/shipping: 05/2021

3) Did You Know Series (50): A Guest Post by Avery Wright: "Is Making the Crypto Space Legally Complaint Paving the Road to Mass (Blockchain) Adoption?" - A perspective:

4) Gibraltar Cryptocurrency Stamp: Stamp value 4 Pounds: Date of Stamp issue: 15.05.2021: (Pre-orderd accepted from 19.04.2021):

5) Bitcoin Backed Banknotes are being envisaged by "Noteworthy" which are aimed at generating user confidence in the Cryptocurrency

6) "Blockchain Technology", Principality of Liechtenstein: A Crypto Stamp of CHF 5.20 titled "Perspective" issued by Liechtensteinische Post: Date of Stamp issue: 06.09.2021

7) "Bitcoin Logo", Niue Island: A $2 (Two Dollars) Silver Brilliant Uncirculated (BU) Coin features this iconic Logo of the well known Cryptocurrency: Year of Coin issue: 2022

8) Crypto-stamp - Rimec Nevera, Croatia: Htvatska posta (Croatian Post) has issued a Crypto-stamp Souvenir Sheet (a combination of the analog and the digital) of One Stamp of HRK50.00 on a PVC background: Date of Crypto-stamp issue: 09.09.2021

9) "UN Crypto Stamps", United Nations: "New Technologies for the United Nations Stamp Series": United Nations Postal Administration brought out its first time ever UN Crypto Stamps, which run on Etherium Blockchain: Date of Stamps issue: 24.11.2020

10) "Equality", Liechtenstein: A "BlockChain Stamp Series: A Stamp 4.1 "Equality issued by Liechtensteinische Post (Philately Liechtenstein) with a face value of CHF 9.00): Date of Stamp issue: 09.09.2022

11) Croatian Crypto Stamp, Croatia: A 50 HRK Stamp (a combination of the analog and the digital) issued by "Hrvatska Posta (Croatian Post) in coordination with the Croatian Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Association: Date of Crypto Stamp issue: 09.09.2020

12) Crypto Stamp 4.0 - Grab the Bull by the Horns - set, Austria: Osterreichische Post AG (Austrian Post) has released a Joint-issue between two countries - Austria and Netherlands, featuring the new technology "Augmented Reality", with a new motif of the Bull: Date of Crypto Stamp issue: 28.10.2022

13) "UN Crypto Stamps", United Nations: "New Technologies for the United Nations Stamp Series": Series II of United Nations Crypto Stamps issued by the United Nations Postal Administration (UNPA) which run on Blockchain Technolgy: Date of Stamps issue:18.11.2022

14) 2022 NL Crypto Stamp - Duo Set Crypto The Netherlands (NL) + Oostenrijk (Austria) - Collectibles: Date of Joint Crypto Stamp issue: 22.09.2022

15) Nikola Tesla's inventions as motifs feature on Croatia's Fourth Crypto Stamp of 50 HRK issued by Hrvatska Posta (Croatian Post): Date of Crypto Stamp issue: 20.12.2022

Links to Posts on Croatia on this Blog:












15) Crypto-stamp - Rimec Nevera, Croatia: Htvatska posta (Croatian Post) has issued a Crypto-stamp Souvenir Sheet (a combination of the analog and the digital) of One Stamp of HRK 50.00 on a PVC background: Date of Crypto-stamp issue: 09.09.2021

17) Croatian Crypto Stamp, Croatia: A 50 HRK Stamp (a combination of the analog and the digital) issued by "Hrvatska Posta (Croatian Post) in coordination with the Croatian Blockchain and Cryptocurrency Association: Date of Cryptoo Stamp issue: 09.09.2020

18) "Peljesac Bridge", Republic of Croatia: The Croatian National Bank (CNB) has issued a 25 Kuna Commemorative Circulation Coin to mark the opening of this bridge: Date/Year of Coin issue: 26.07.2022

19) Shunting Locomotives, Croatia: Hrvatska Posta (Croatian Post) has issued a set of two stamps of HRK 10 each featuring shunting locomotives: Date of Stamp set issue: 06.10.2022

20) Minerals and Rocks, Croatia: Hrvatska Posta (Croatian Post) has issued two Postage Stamps of HRK 5.00 each on this fascinating Geological subject: Date of Stamp Set issue: 20.10.2022

21) i) The World's smallest Gold Coin minted by the Croatian National Bank (CNB) marks farewell to Kuna currency as Croatia adopts the Euro: ii) The last 1000-Kuna commemorative coin of Croatia for 2022 is dedicated to the Visnjan Observatory: Date/Year of Coin issue: 12/2022

22) Croatian Postage Stamps (or Hrvatske Postanske Marke"), Croatia: A Stamp Album of 29 Postage Stamps issued by Croatian Post in 2016

23) Introduction of the Euro as the Official Currency of the Republic of Croatia: Hrvatska Posta (Croatian Post) has issued a postage stamp of 1.14 Euro celebrating the inclusion of the country in the Euro Area (EU): Date of Stamp issue: 25.01.2023

24) Plastic Waste in the Seas, Croatia: "Climate Change Stamp Series": Hrvatska Posta (Croatian Post) has issued a postage stamp of 1.14 Euro depicting the harmful effects of Plastic pollution in the World Oceans on Marine life and the ecological balance: Date of Stamp issue: 20.04.2023

25) The Croats Military Units - Contour Necktie, Croatia: First Coins issued in Euros after Croatia joined the European Union (EU): 6 Euro Silver and 100 Euro Gold Coins minted by the Mint of Croatia at their facilities in Sveta Nedelja, on behalf of the National Bank of Croatia: Date/Year of Coins issue: 02.05.2023

26) International Day of Families (15th May), Croatia: Hrvatska Posta (Croatian Post) has issued a postage stamp of 0.47 Euro highlighting the importance of the International Day of Families: Date of Stamp issue: 15.05.2023

27) Castles in Croatia: Hrvatska Posta (Croatian Post) has issued a set of four postage stamps depicting i) Batthyany, Ludbreg: ii Old Town, Varazdin: iii) Zrinski, Cakovec and iv) Festitic, Pribislavec - Castles, Fortresses, Palaces etc: Date of Stamp set issue: 18.05.2023

For some other interesting posts from United Nations Organisation, please visit the following links:



















26) "UN Crypto Stamps", United Nations: "New Technologies for the United Nations Stamp Series": United Nations Postal Administration brought out its first time ever UN Crypto Stamps, which run on Etherium Blockchain: Date of Stamps issue: 24.11.2020

27) World Humanitarian Day (19/08), United Nations (UN): The United Nations Postal Administration (UNPA) has issued stamps for three offices of the United Nations - Geneva, New York and Vienna commemorating the Day: Date/Year of Stamps issue: 19.08.2022

28) The Great SPA Towns of Europe, United Nations: The United Nations Postal Administration (UNPA) has issued two stamps each for their Geneva, New York and Vienna offices detailing six such towns: Date of Stamp set issue: 09.09.2022

29) UN International Year of Artisanal Fisheries & Aquaculture (IYAFA - 2022), Greenland: Tussass AS (formerly Greenland Technical Organisation and Telepost) has issued a postage stamp of DKK 29.50 highlighting IYAFA - 2022: Date ofStamp issue: 31.08.2022





No comments:

Post a Comment