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LIGHTHOUSES - PORER

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Code: 308320 Available

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LIGHTHOUSES - PORER

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Number: 641
Value: 5.00 HRK
Design: Orsat Franković, Ivana Vučić and Želimir Boras, designers, Zagreb
Photo: Andrija Carli
Size: 48.28 x 29.82 mm
Paper: white 102 g, gummed
Perforation: Comb,14
Technique: Multicolored Offsetprint
Printed by: Zrinski d.d., Čakovec
Date of issue: 14/9/2007
Quantity: 100.000


Porer is actually a round-shaped rock 80 m in width, in the middle of which there is a rounded stone tower 35 m high that was built in 1833.


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Motifs: lighthouses, photos by Andrija Carli The well-indented coastal line like the eastern side of the Adriatic, with numerous bays and coastal protrusions, with almost one thousand islands, small rocky isles and crags, with steep slopes of sheer rock and possible traps of dangerous shallow spots, all this demanded exceptional navigational skills. In the thousand-year-long history of Adriatic navigation, starting from the times of the Greeks and Illyrians, the Romans and the people living along the banks of the river Neretva, the Venetians and the people from Senj, all through to the late 19th century, it was quite usual to embark upon voyages during the day only, in full sunshine and it was only the easier or better-known parts of the route that could be covered at night, working out one’s course by watching the stars. The technical advancement and the need for a speedy and secure transport at the time of the Austrian rule of Dalmatia and Istria stimulated the construction of reliable strongholds in order to facilitate orientation in space. Our part of the Mediterranean was covered by a network of more than twenty night lighthouses, so that it became navigable even in aggravating circumstances during dark and stormy days. These lighthouses were built in specially exposed geographical spots, on sharp promontories and far-away open seas, waste, uninhabited islets, on otherwise inaccessible places and spaces that almost jealously protected their solitude, threatening chance travellers with winds and waves. Many of the lighthouses were therefore built as towers and fortifications, many of them shaped as temples or churches with proud bell-towers. It would definitely not be by chance that the ancient lighthouse on the island Rhodes had been considered one of the Seven Wonders of the Earth. It is equally not unusual that we experience their building as a pledge to Neptune, god of the sea, or as the expression of respect to powerful forces that rule the blue expanses. Indeed, with each of the lighthouses the elementary power of the sea gets tamed and the landscape becomes humanized, a defined human measure is imposed upon the hard-to-tame nature, an important landmark is placed in the field of vision of the seaman and the immenseness of the wide open space is relativized by the recognizable sign on the horizon. For a century and a half, approximately, the Adriatic lighthouses have regularly performed their function by giving direction to the navigation, enabling a dependable exchange of people and goods on the sea, saving at the same time many endangered lives. They continue flashing and blinking, even nowadays they gladly serve some skipper and sailor to make it easier to find his way in the space. Yet, nowadays lighthouses are more monuments of the exciting past than participants of the navigational orientation. However, our lighthouses, both individually and as a lighting archipelago, remain an undisputable aesthetic value of courteous ambience, in a certain way they are a heavenly projection as they represent the brilliant constellation of stars on the sea. Porer Situated a nautical mile southwest of the southern cape of Istria, Porer is actually a round-shaped rock 80 m in width, in the middle of which there is a rounded stone tower 35 m high that was built in 1833. From the tower, on the surface of 150 square metres, the accommodation quarters and out-houses are spread in all the four directions. The lighthouse was built to the design of the architects Pietro Nobile and Matteo Pertsch. This islet will definitely fascinate each and every enthusiastic devotee of a Robinson Crusoe-like holiday by its crystal-clear sea, unrepeatable sunsets and magnificent views toward the open sea. The submarine world round Porer, with its numerous submarine cliffs and shallow spots, is markedly rich due to the strong sea currents that surround the rock as well as due to the mixing of the colder and warmer strata of sea water.

Number: LIGHTHOUSES (C)
Type: P
Description:   The stamps have been issued in 10-stamp sheets; there is also a First Day Cover (FDC).
Date: 14/9/2007

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