Antiques, collectables, fairs, shows, galleries in Croatia

Website for collectors of antiques and collectibles. Articles, links, about numismatics, philately, vintage postcards, paintings galleries, fairs, antiques shops in Croatia and it's neighbour countries.

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Location: Zagreb, Croatia

B.sc.(economics) with an interest in art, antiques, and collectables; also an editor of www.antikviteti.net (Croatian antiques and collectables website).

Saturday, May 20, 2006

Ancient Indian Coins

The study of Ancient Indian coins is both interesting and fascinating. India was a boiling pot of various cultures since ancient times, witnessing numerous invasions and attacks by rulers of other regions of the world..

India was always perceived as a land of bounty and enormous wealth. Thus it attracted attention of some of the world's most famous rulers like Alexander, the Huns and the Islamic rulers.

Early days before the advent of coinage

Self-Subsistent economy was prevalent in ancient India during Pre-Vedic era. A Family would cultivate and produce what was required for itself. Gradually, these small families came together to form small communities or tribal clans. That's when the needs of people elevated from the self subsistence economy to barter economy where goods were exchanged between people or between various communities.

People began to realize the limitations of the barter system economy mainly because two commodities were never of the same value. Certain things got preference over the others and a higher value was attached to them. This resulted in conflicts between parties or most often, there was no equal benefit accrued to one of the parties because of the transaction.
That's when the need for a common commodity as a medium of exchange arose and they were the precursors of coins. The huge granaries found at the Mohenjo Daro and Harappa excavation sites corroborate to the fact that agricultural products were used a medium of exchange.
The Vedic people used cows as a medium of exchange and this is evident from various ancient literary sources like the Aitreya Brahmana, the Rig Veda and the Ashtadhyayi.
One passage in the Rig Veda mentions the price of the image of Indra offered on sale to be ten cows.

Similarly in the Aitreya Brahmana, there is a reference to the number of cows as an estimation of wealth. It is mentioned that a price of a hundred cows was paid to the father of Sunahsepa, when he was being sold for a sacrifice conducted by Harishchandra. Cows remained as a medium of exchange till the later part of the post-Vedic period. This is evident from the certain passages of Ashtadhyayi of Panini.

Cows met the needs of the age, as they were not easily perishable, can be moved from one place to another and had the capacity to multiply, work and supply milk. However, cows were a troublesome medium of exchange as they required to be cared and some degree of skill in rearing. Hence, this medium was not suitable for large transactions and long-term savings etc.
This gave arose to the need for a more stable medium of exchange - metals. The problem of how to use them was solved by inventing balances and weights, and the metals were cut according to a pre-defined standard weight. Metal was weighed against seeds and different kinds of seeds (krishnala seeds or Abrus Precatorius) were introduced in different regions as standard weights according to their availability.

Transactions involving metal were equally tedious. Scales were required to weigh the metals and touchstones to determine the purity of the metal was used. In addition, there were problems of rampant debasement of metal, forgery etc that again resulted in a loss of value in transactions. Hence, official authorities or merchant guilds stamped metal pieces, and conducted a check to ensure genuineness and the purity of the metal content.

Thus, first coins of Ancient India came into existence and were known as “Punch Marked Coins”. The Ashtadhyayi mentions that the metallic pieces were stamped (ahata) with symbols (rupa). These were in circulation along with the unstamped variety of metallic coins which were referred to as the ‘nishka’, ‘satamana’ and ‘pada’. There is also a mention of ‘shana’ and ‘karshapana’, terms used for different monetary denominations.

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Thursday, May 11, 2006

Eduard Slavoljub Penkala

Croatia can be justly proud of Eduard Slavoljub Penkala, the extraordinary inventor and innovator. He was a man with great energy and enthusiasm, whose aim was to make practical devices simpler, more useful and of a higher quality. In this book we pay tribute to him and to the legacy he left behind.

Penkala was born on 20 April 1871 in Liptovsky St Mikulas (today in the Slovak Republic), to a Polish father and a Dutch mother. As a young boy he already showed great interest in solving technical problems and was always repairing something at home in his own small workshop. His parents urged him to become a doctor, and he enrolled in the Faculty of Medicine in Vienna. But he felt he had made the wrong choice, and eventually moved to Dresden where he studied chemistry and met his future wife, Emilija, a music student.

The year following his graduation the young couple were married, and in 1900 they moved to Zagreb. Penkala found the city stimulating, and he soon became a high ranking official in the Austro-Hungarian Ministry of Finance. He was later appointed Royal Technical Controller. To mark his loyalty to his new homeland he took on the Croatian name Slavoljub.

In spite of his responsible job and growing family, Penkala spent many hours working on a variety of inventions, and on 24 January 1906 he registered the patent for an automatic pencil, a truly revolutionary innovation among writing instruments. Soon afterwards he met Edmund Moster, one of nine children of a much respected tradesman and steam mill owner. The Moster family's wealth had been earned by diligence and shrewdness, and Edmund and his brother Mavro immediately recognised the huge potential of Penkala's invention. In August 1906, Penkala and the Mosters set up a company for the purpose of manufacturing the automatic pencil, with the Mosters as principal financiers. Production began seven months later.

The automatic pencil was an instant success in domestic and foreign markets. "Penkalomania" spread around the world, helped in no small way by a clever advertising logo depicting a friendly man with a pointed nose and big ear with an automatic pencil tucked behind it. The company diversified into other writing instruments and accessories patented by Penkala. As the business grew, a second factory was set up in Berlin..

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Wednesday, May 10, 2006

Philately meetings and fairs

International fair takes place in Zagreb (in organisation of Classical stamp collectors club: http://www.kpkm.antikviteti.net)
Saturday, 27th of May 2006. and 4thNovember 2006.
in Vukovarska street number 68.

Regular meetings are held in Habdelicava street number 2 (view map: http://kpkm.antikviteti.net/karta.htm ) every Thursday from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. and other clubs have meetings every Sunday from 10 a.m. to 12 a.m.

Antique fairs in Croatia

Antiques fair in Zagreba

address: Vukovarska 68, Pucko otvoreno uciliste working hours from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
03.06.2006.
23.09.2006.
21.10.2006.
18.11.2006.
16.12.2006.

address: Britainac (Britain square)
timetable: every Sunday, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
view images: http://www.udruga-libertina.hr/dogadaji-britanac.html

Antiques and collectables fair in Sibenik
view website: http://www.sibenik.antikviteti.net

Fair in Pula
address: Cisuttijeva street
timetable: every Saturday from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.
view images: http://www.antikviteti.net/sajmovi_pula.htm

Antiques and collectables- WANT LIST

If you have vintage and antique items (pictures, maritime objects, postcards, WW1 and WW2 letters, maps, militaria, posters, advertising, memorabila, numismatics- paper money and coins, etnography, silver ...) that you think are from Croatia (or Slovenia, Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia- ex Yugoslavia countries) or could be interesting to collectors that you have no use of, please contact me on e-mail admin[et]antikviteti.net . I'm interested in acquisition.

www.antikviteti.net

Hi. This blog is related to my core site in croatian (http://www.antikviteti.net) and here I will demonstrate a small part of it becuase most of the articles shown on antikviteti.net is in croatian.