1957, Austria Basilica of Mariazell |
1957, Basilica of Mariazell Austria 1 schilling
Text: 1 schilling REPUBLIK OSTERREICH
Condition: Ø = used
Title: Buildings
Face value: 1 S
Country/area: Austria
Year: 1957
Stamp number in set: 1
Basic colour: Brown
Exact colour: Chocolate brown, Violet brown
Usage:
Definitive
Type: Set
Theme: Baroque,
Gothic, Anniversary, Churches, Towers
Geographical themes: Mariazell
Stamp subject: Gnadenkirche Mariazell
Michel number: 1035
Yvert number: 868
Scott number: 621
Stanley Gibbons number: 1325
Designer: Strohofer,
Hans
Perforation: K 14
Watermark: Without watermark
Printing: Letter-press
printing
Gum: Gummed
Print run: Onbekend
Dimensions: 25 x 29 mm
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Mariazell Basilica
The Mariazell Basilica (also the Basilica
Mariä Geburt or in English the Basilica of the Birth of the Virgin Mary) is a
Marian basilica in Mariazell,Austria. It is the most important pilgrimage
destination in Austria and one of the most visited shrines in Europe.[1] In the
church, a miraculous wooden image of the Virgin Mary is honored.
The territory around Mariazell was given
to the Monastery of St. Lambrecht around 1103, and the monks built cells there
in order to serve the local residents. Legends give the town's founding day as
December 21, 1157, but it is first documented in 1243. A Marian altar was
dedicated there in 1266.
In the fourteenth century, a Gothic church stood at Mariazell with a 90 m high spire and an ogive portal. In 1420
and 1474, the church was destroyed by fire. The church building was later
expanded and baroque-ified by Domenico Sciassia from 1644 to 1683. To the left
and right of the Gothic spire a baroque tower was built, the nave was
lengthened and widened, and a dome was added on the eastern side. The high
altar, consecrated in 1704, was designed by Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach.
The twelve side chapels each contain a
baroque altar. The plaster stucco work of the organ gallery and the 1737 organ
console was created by the Viennese sculptor Johann Wagner in 1740.
In front of the main entrance are two
life-sized lead statues created by Balthasar Moll in 1757. To the left stands
King Ludwig I of Hungary and to the right is Heinrich, Margrave of Moravia.
In 1907, the pilgrimage church was elevated
to a basilica minor.
The basilica has been undergoing a
general restoration since 1992, which is expected to be completed in 2007.
The older part of the building, built in
1690, contains the Gnadenkapelle. This chapel sits on the site of the first
"cell" and holds a Late Romanesque miraculous image of the Virgin
Mary - the "Magna Mater Austria" - a 48 cm tall statuette made of
linden.
Pilgrims were already making their way to
the Marian sanctuary in the 12th century. Larger numbers of pilgrims are
documented beginning around 1330, when a secular court imposed a
"Zellfahrt" ('Zell journey) as atonement for its criminals. In the
following years increasing numbers of pilgrims came from neighboring lands.
After the Counter-Reformation, the Habsburgs made Mariazell a national
sanctuary. However, in 1783, Emperor Joseph II dissolved the monastery in
Mariazell, and in 1787, he completely banned pilgrimages there. After the early
withdrawal of the restrictions, today around a million pilgrims visit Mariazell
each year. In May 2004, the Central European Catholic Day (mitteleuropäische
Katholikentag) took place there.
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