Chrismas - Germany / Federal Republic of Germany 2005 - 55 Euro Cent

Designer: Prof. Ernst Jünger und Lorli Jünger

Chrismas - Germany / Federal Republic of Germany 2005 - 55 Euro Cent


CountryGermany / Federal Republic of Germany
Issue Date2005
Face Value55.00 
PerforationK 13 3/4
Stamp TypePostage stamp
Item TypeStamp
Chronological Issue Number2366
Chronological ChapterGER-BRD
SID249374
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The special postage stamps of the series "Christmas" appear with supplements in favor of the working group of the free welfare care to the normal postage value. The proceeds from these supplements will be donated to the Federal Welfare Association, a consortium of charitable organizations. The current stamps show paintings by the late medieval painter Stefan Lochner, who was born around 1400 in Hagnau am Bodensee. In his pictures, Lochner ingeniously combined stylistic devices of the Sea-Swabian painting with the art of the Dutch, Flemish and Cologne schools. So he became one of the most important artists of the Cologne School and a respected and wealthy citizen. In 1444 he bought a representative Cologne town house, acquired three years later the Cologne Bürrechte and moved as a representative of the painters' guild in the city council. In 1451 Lochner was a victim of the plague epidemic in Cologne. The special postal stamp shows the painting "Our Lady in the Rose Arbor". It is exhibited in the Cologne Wallraff-Richartz Museum.

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The special postage stamps of the series "Christmas" appear with supplements in favor of the working group of the free welfare care to the normal postage value. The proceeds from these supplements will be donated to the Federal Welfare Association, a consortium of charitable organizations. The current stamps show paintings by the late medieval painter Stefan Lochner, who was born around 1400 in Hagnau am Bodensee. In his pictures, Lochner ingeniously combined stylistic devices of the Sea-Swabian painting with the art of the Dutch, Flemish and Cologne schools. So he became one of the most important artists of the Cologne School and a respected and wealthy citizen. In 1444 he bought a representative Cologne town house, acquired three years later the Cologne Bürrechte and moved as a representative of the painters' guild in the city council. In 1451 Lochner was a victim of the plague epidemic in Cologne. The special postal stamp shows the painting "Our Lady in the Rose Arbor". It is exhibited in the Cologne Wallraff-Richartz Museum..