Otto Hornung (10 September 1920[1] in Ostrava[2] – 8 January 2013[3]) was a distinguished philatelist and philatelic journalist who won Gold medals at several philatelic exhibitions and was a Fellow of The Royal Philatelic Society London. He signed the Roll of Distinguished Philatelists in 1993 and lived in Wembley, London.

Otto Hornung
Born10 September 1920
Died8 January 2013 (aged 92–93)
OccupationPhilatelist

Early life

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Whilst in Ostrava, Hornung witnessed the German invasion of Czechoslovakia in March 1939 but managed to escape to Bogumin, then in unoccupied Poland, dressed as a postman in the mail wagon of a goods train.[2] After that he joined the Czechoslovak Legion. Hornung spoke Polish and Czech fluently as both were used freely in Ostrava.

Philatelic career

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Hornung was a former Secretary of the Philatelic Traders Society and organiser of the Stampex show.[1] He was also a founder member of the Association Internationale des Journalistes Philateliques (AIJP) in 1952 and its former President.[1] As a philatelist, Hornung specialised in the stamps and postal history of Turkey and won Large Gold medals at India 1989, New Zealand 1990, London 1990, Philatokyo 1991 and Granada 1992.[1]

Philatelic memberships

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Hornung was a member of the following societies (amongst others):

Philatelic publications

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  • The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Stamp Collecting, Hamlyn, London, 1970. ISBN 0-600-01797-4
  • Wie Sammle Ich Richtig Briefmarken, Verlag Werner Dausien, 1972. ISBN 3-7684-4233-0 (German language)
  • The Czecho-Slovak Legion in Poland and Russia 1939-1945 and Czechoslovaks in the Middle East, 1940 - 1943, Czechoslovak Philatelic Society of Great Britain, 2003. (With Dr. Vratislav Palkoska)
  • The Early Postal History of Carpatho-Ukraine with Particular Reference to The Usage Of The First Postage Stamps of Austria, 2007. ISBN 978-0-9536555-9-5

References

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  1. ^ a b c d http://hps.gr/fipliterature/bureau/hornung.html FIP Literature Commission profile retrieved 30 September 2009.
  2. ^ a b "The Slania I Knew" by Otto Hornung in Gibbons Stamp Monthly, June 2005, p.90.
  3. ^ "Farewell Otto Hornung". briefmarken.de. Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2013-02-01.
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