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Iceland 1972, Ending the Soviet Chess domination, if Bobby will show up

The Soviet Union was the center of world chess. As a young chess master, American Bobby Fischer went on a TV game show to win money for airfare to Moscow. Fifteen years later, he had to be coaxed to show up in Reykjavik for the Chess Olympiad to take on world champion Boris Spassky. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

Here we have a world map mounted on a chessboard and a rook chess piece to remind that the world checkers tournament was somewhere else. Serviceable design, but not a great one.

Todays stamp is issue A117, a 15 Krona stamp issued by Iceland on July 2nd, 1972. It was a single stamp issue. According to the Scott Catalog, the stamp is worth 45 cents used or in this case unused.

Bobby Fischer was not a typical chess master. For 24 years up to 1972, the Soviet Chess club supplied the world chess champion. Bobby Fischer is a Jewish American being raised by a single mother. His father was not the man his mother had been married to but a prominent Hungarian phycisist and mathimatician. As a latch key kid, his mother bought him a chess set to play with his sister while alone. As she soon lost interest, he played mostly against himself. At a used book shop on vacation, Bobby found a book of chess strategys that he devoured. After the family moved to New York, Bobby was able to make a big impression on the local chess scene, becoming junior champion. He had his mother write to Soviet President Kruschev for permission to come to Moscow to play the young Soviet players. Permission was granted but he then had to go on a tv game show to have the show pay for airfare. It did not go well in Moscow. 15 year old Fischer was rude and quickly beat young players. Then senior player Tigern Petrosian was summoned to the club to play Bobby and beat him. Fischer was outraged that the matches were informal and the Soviets were outraged at his rudeness.

Bobbu Fischer

Boris Spassky was also not a typical Soviet champian. He was from Leningrad and an Orthadox Christian with open far right monarchist political views. He learned to play at age five when he met a chess master on a train while being evacuated during the German siege of Leningrad in 1942.

Boris Spassky

When the tournament opened in Reykjavik, it did so without Bobby. The prize money was to be $125,000,($857,000 in 2022) going 5/8 to the winner and 3/8 to the loser of the multimatch tournament. Fischer also wanted 30% of the world television rights, all for the winner. American Jewish National Security Advisor Henry Kissenger pleaded with him to go to the tournament that had been delayed for two days. He did go when a British Jewish Banker agreed to double the prize money, still 5/8ths and 3 /8ths. The Soviets thought this drama was all a cheat  to psyche out Boris Spassky. Bobby Fischer insinuated  his own cheating theory that Soviet chess masters purposly play each other to draws to enhance their rankings.

The place in Iceland where the 1972 matches were played. Here it hosts basketball.

Bobby eventually beat Boris 12.5 games to 8.5. Inspite their differing backgrounds, the two became friends. Twenty years after the tournament, Boris, who had in 1976 defected to Paris, decided to do a wierd “revenge” match. To do it in dramatic style, it was conducted in Belgrade Yugoslavia during the time of their civil war when the Serbian side was under UN Sanction. Bobby won again but felt himself cut off from America and defected to Budapest where his father was from. From Budapest he went on to Iceland where he was granted citizenship as a humanitarian gesture. He died in 2008 of kidney failure after refusing surgery to clear a urinary blockage. He believed massage was a better treatment.

Boris is still alive and happily back in Putin’s Russia. He is the oldest living former chess champion and has the distiction of winning chess matches against 6 other world champions including Bobby Fischer.

Well my drink is empty. Come again soon for more stories that can be learned from stamp collecting.

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Iceland 1925, Denmark builds a storehouse of culture, as part of sending Iceland on it’s way

The-Philatelist often writes up stamps of newly independent countries that take credit for infrastructure left behind by the former colonial power. Something like a power station is one thing but what about something that was the place’s central storehouse of knowledge and culture. Isn’t some sort of thanks in order for the generosity? Apparently not, and this is even true where both colony and colonial power were within Scandinavia. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

You can see from the printing style, how influential Denmark was on Iceland’s stamps. The fact that they were printed in Denmark often meant stamp shortages in Iceland at the time of this stamp. In 1928 a proposal to solve the problem lead to more trouble. A Vienna group of stamp dealers calling themselves the ‘Friends of Iceland” proposed printing a large batch of commemorative stamps. Against the advise of the Postmaster, Iceland agreed to the printing of 813,000 Kronars of stamps, 600,000 of which would go to Iceland for postal use and the other 213,000 would compensate the Austrian Friends of Iceland. Fraud was then perpetuated and Iceland did not not catch that the print order that they signed off on had at some point had a 1 inserted before the 8. A police investigation was initiated but still had made no progress when the war broke out more than a few years later. No jurisdiction in Vienna perhaps even among “Friends of Iceland”. If the Iceland police had renewed their efforts after the Anschluss, the might have had more cooperation. The stamp issue with so many extras seems to have better values than this issue today, so perhaps a crooked Austria beats a niggardly printing Denmark.

Todays stamp is issue A12, a 20 Aurar stamp issued by Iceland on September 12th, 1925. It was a 5 stamp issue in various denominations. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 85 cents used. The value of the stamp unused rises to $45, showing how few went to collectors when new. The 20 Aurar stamp from the Vienna issue is worth $90 used, twice what it was worth unused. That one got to collectors.

In 1906, Denmark started construction in Reykjavik of a new building that could properly house a National Library and national archive. The large stone building in traditional Scandinavian style was the work of architect Johannes Magdahl Nielson. This was his only building commission outside of Denmark. At home he was more known for his many churches. The year the library was finished, Nielson was awarded the Eckersberg Medal. Later in 1925, he was Knighted.

In modern times as Culture House

The building, now known unofficially as the Culture house, held the National Library and also took in the collections of the national university library and a noted collection of traditional Icelandic furniture. The building held the National Library until 1994 and came under the auspices of the National Museum in 2013 to continue the furniture display. The building is on the national registry of historic places but the history as laid out now mainly goes over the work of Icelandic stone masons and leaves out entirely that the whole thing being a gift of Denmark.

Well my drink is empty and so I will have to wait until tomorrow when there will be another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.

 

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Iceland honors King Christian one last time before the union with Denmark ends

Iceland had a rough time in the later years as a part of Denmark. So it might be natural for Iceland to go it alone, especially when Denmark is not in a place to contest. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

Todays stamp is just not the best. It just shows the then Danish King Christian X and the unfortunately generic to English speakers place name of Island. Sorry but world wide philatelists will need more information to get excited by a stamp. Iceland corrected this in a stamp issue a few years later with a stamp displaying a Viking sacrifice to the Norse God Thor. That is perhaps a little fantastic but at least puts you in a time and place.

Todays stamp is issue A8, a one Eyrir stamp issued by Iceland in 1920. It features Danish and then still Icelandic King Christian X and was part of a 21 stamp issue in various denominations, According to the Scott Catalog, the stamp is worth $1.25 used.

The climate and volcanic activity had been rough on the Danish territory of Iceland in the eighteenth and nineteenth century. There had been a heavy migration out, often to the Canadian province of Manitoba. Danish power was on the decline with the separation of Norway and then the interruption of contact with Denmark in World War I and again in World War II. The Danes had granted ever more self rule and by 1918 only the Danish King was still the ceremonial leader of Iceland. Even this ended during World War II with Denmark falling unopposed to Germany and Britain  invading Iceland also unopposed. Iceland then declared King Christian incapable of fulfilling his duties to Iceland and removed him as King.

King Christian was trying hard to hold together a greater Denmark but not having much luck. The territory of Schleswig had both ethnic Germans and Danes but was in the possession of Germany. Denmark hoped to reclaim most of it after WWI and indeed the northern portion voted to join Denmark, the rest voted to stay German. This was not enough for the King and he ordered the elected Prime Minister to include the city Flensburg in the reunification. The Danish Prime Minister refused and resigned and the King appointed a new cabinet that would follow his wishes. What followed was a constitutional crisis that saw the King back down and call new elections and in future confine himself to ceremonial functions.

World War II saw another crisis for King Christian. Denmark did not resist the 1940 German invasion and the King and government remained in place in cooperation with the Germans. This was not good pr and the King hit on a way to appear to be resisting. He would ride daily through Copenhagen on a horse alone in full Danish Military uniform. The German occupiers allowed it and it got the peoples spirits up to see him. One legend as the King stopping his ride in front of a big hotel flying the Nazi flag as it was being used as a administrative center. The King confronted the German sentry stating that the flag must come down as it violated the armistice agreement. The sentry refused the King. The King then stated that a Danish soldier will come and pull down the Nazi flag if he did not. The German sentry then stated that the Danish soldier would be shot. The King then said that the He was the Danish soldier  and the sentry then took down the flag. Allied wartime propaganda ate this stuff up.

King Christian X during one of his wartime rides

The horse rides did not end well for the now elderly King. He took a spill in late 1942 that left him an invalid for the rest of his life, dying in 1947. His rides had restored his popularity and insulated him from the obvious charge of collaboration with the German invader. Iceland also aquiest to British occupation with Americans following and traditional Iceland neutrality was replaced by NATO membership postwar.

Well my drink is empty and faced with the choice of a horse ride of another drink, you can guess my choice. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.