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Information about postal stamps and stationeries denominated in Slovak currency

The following provides basic information about the postal stamps and stationeries related to the introduction of the euro in Slovakia by virtue of Act No. 659/2007 Coll. of the National Council of the Slovak Republic on the Introduction of the Euro Currency in the Slovak republic and on the Changes and Amendments of Certain Acts dated 28 November 2007.

  • Postal stamps and stationeries (postal stationery covers, letter cards, stamps booklets, aerograms, pigeongrams) will not be subject to dual price quotation.
  • Until 31. 12. 2009, postal stamps and stationeries denominated in Slovak currency may be used to pay for postal services or other services pursuant to the Slovak Postal Service Tariff Book.
  • From 1. 1. 2009 until 31. 12. 2009, i.e. following the transition to the euro, postal stamps and stationeries denominated in Slovak currency and in euro, as well as the postal stamps and stationeries without nominal value, can be used and can be mutually combined to pay for postal services.
  • Starting 1. 1. 2009, postal stamps and stationeries denominated in Slovak currency can only be sold to potential customers through the Postal Philately Service (POFIS) network.
  • Validity of postal stamps and stationeries denominated in Slovak currency will definitively expire on 31. 12. 2009.
  • Postal stamps and stationeries denominated in Slovak currency cannot be exchanged for other valid postal stamps, i.e. for postal stamps and stationeries denominated in euro or without nominal value.
  • Within 90 days of their expiration, i.e. during the first three months of 2010, the Slovak Post will completely withdraw from circulation postal stamps and stationeries denominated in the Slovak currency and destroy its stock thereof in cooperation with the ministry.
  • Starting 1. 1. 2010, only postal stamps and stationeries denominated in euro and stamps and stationeries without nominal value can be used to pay for postal services.

Church of St. Martin in Spišská Kapitula

Issue number: 444
Date of Issue: 02. 01. 2009
Face value: 0,50 €
Dimensions: 27 x 22 mm
Layout/Format: TL
Stamps per TL: 100
Number in set: 1
Stamp designer: Peter Uchnár
Graphic lay-out: Peter Augustovič, Peter Biľak
Stamp engraver: Arnold Feke
Printer: Poštovní tiskárna cenin, a. s. Praha
Print technology: rotary recess printing combined with gravure
Stamps edition: 2 mil.
FDC designer: Peter Uchnár
FDC engraver: Arnold Feke
Cancellation design: Peter Uchnár
FDC Printer: TAB, s.r.o., Bratislava
FDC Print technology: WAITE
FDC edition: 3200

© Slovak Post, 2009

Spišská Kapitula used to be a spiritual centre of Spiš from as early as the 12th century. Already during this time, at a place called Pažica today, a monastery was situated. Moreover, an abbey was set up in Spišská Kapitula no later than at the end of the 12th century. In the 1st half of the 13th century a new representative church devoted to St. Martin was erected, probably with the support of the king. In terms of its construction, an architectonic disposition widely spread on the territory of contemporary medieval Hungary (and which can be found also on many other important buildings) was chosen. We are talking about a three-nave basilica type without the cross nave and with three eastern apses, western gallery and two-tower western front. The eastern part of the church ceased to exist in the 15th century during the late Gothic reconstruction when a new presbytery was erected and a new vault replaced the original vaulting in a three-nave. However, the centre of the late Romanesque building – initially an abbey, today a bishop’s church – has stood till the present. The original character has been preserved mostly in the western part, in the interior created by a gallery and an entrance hall vaulted by a cross rib vaulting, and in the exterior it is a two-tower façade with a jamb portal in the central axis. It is also decoration, which has been preserved in these parts of the church, that shows how familiar were builders with contemporary architecture of medieval Hungary. The typical feature of buildings from this period is that side by side of older Romanesque forms also elements of Gothic architecture started to appear more often. In Spišská Kapitula such an element is e.g. a berry head. It is a dominant decorative motif on preserved Late-Romanesque parts, whether it is in the western entrance hall on massive pillars bearing the vault or on both Late-Romanesque portals set in the western and northern wall. Similar heads have been preserved e.g. on a former Premonstratensian church in Ócs.
Moreover, a priceless plastic of a lion dates back to the time of the church construction, too. Similar sculptures originated in Romanesque Italian art, from which the motif spread also to Central Europe. However, the lion in Spišská Kapitula is special. It is different from others because it has got no mane and holds an open book in the front paws. It is not sure whether it stood inside or outside, e.g. in front of the portal. Today, it can be found inside the church, by the northern entrance. It was cut out from travertine and it derives its name from the light colour of the stone – leo albus, a white lion.

Bibiana Pomfyová

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