Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Mongolian 1978 Union of Mongolian Writers Commemorative

The 50th anniversary of the Union of Mongolian Writers commemorative stamp.
From the land of Genghis Khan comes this stamp from late 1978 commemorating the 50th anniversary of the Union of Mongolian Writers.

Established in 1929, the UMW is Mongolia's oldest writer's association. According to their website, they have over 800 members as well as their own writers' publications, annual poetry and fiction readings, programs for visiting foreign authors, a writers' museum, and much, much more. Ever since their creation, the UMW has been a crucial organization for promoting Mongolian authors at home and abroad and for promoting foreign literature in Mongolia.

As for the stamp above, the artwork says it all! Through pen and paper (and in our own time, word processing programs and text editors) it's possible to bring back to life the world of Genghis Khan and transform our own modern-day world into writing.

A very meaningful stamp which commemorates not just the anniversary of the UMW, but writing and reading in general!

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Two Mexican Stamps

Two Mexican stamps issued in 1977.
Here are two new stamps I added to my collection this week: a couple of Mexican stamps from 1977-78.

The stamp on the left is a special airmail issue from that year commemorating 40 years of Mexico's Federal Board of Conciliation and Arbitration. This board is Mexico's equivalent of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service government agencies in the US and Canada, who also intervene in labor disputes. This stamp was issued in a $1.60 peso denomination.

A side view of the airmail stamp.
The stamp on the right is a special anti-tuberculosis seal issued in Mexico during 1977. These stamps are issued yearly by Mexico's National Committee Against Tuberculosis and Respiratory Diseases (C.N.LT., or Comité Nacional de Lucha contra la Tuberculosis Mexico). In 1977, the subject for the seals that year were cactii from around the world. The artwork on this particular stamp is of a sea urchin cactus and, like all other anti-tuberculosis issues, it features the Cross of Lorraine international anti-tuberculosis logo in the corner. This stamp was a 20 centavos issue and was issued on New Year's Day 1977.

Links:
-http://tbsealsmexico.org/english.htm (English homepage of the CNLT and of the Mexican anti-tuberculosis seals.)

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

1962 Romanian Cruiser Aurora and Lenin Commemorative

Romanian stamp commemorating 45 years of the uprising on the Russian cruiser "Aurora".
One of the most dramatic incidents in Russia's October Revolution was the uprising abroad the Navy cruiser Aurora. It was aboard this ship that, on October 17th, 1917, a number of the crew joined the Bolsheviks, led a mutiny, and took control of the ship. They then fired the shot that signalled the attack on the Winter Palace in Petrograd (St. Petersburg) and supposedly even joined the attacking Bolshevik forces! This attack was one of the last episodes of the Bolshevik Revolution.

Forty-five years later, the Romanian postal authorities issued a special commemorative honoring the uprising aboard the Aurora. The stamp features a super-imposed Lenin and a Soviet flag pointing upwards. In the background is the Aurora itself.

This stamp was a fitting tribute to the Aurora and the October Revolution in general by Poșta Română during the period of time when Romania was under Communist rule and an ally of the Soviet Union. 

Monday, April 15, 2013

Japanese National Sports Festival Commemoratives

Two stamps commemorating Japan's 13th National Sports Festival held in 1958.
During the 1950s and 60s, two 5-yen stamps were issued in Japan every year during the month of October. These two stamps commemorated the National Sports Festival, which is held throughout the year and reaches its conclusion in October.

The National Sports Festival - or the Kokutai (国体) games as they are often called - is one of Japan's biggest yearly sporting competitions. These games pit teams from each prefecture against each other in a variety of sports, such as basketball, weightlifting, water sports, hockey, and more. Each competition is seasonal. Winter games are played during the winter, summer games during the summer, and fall games during the fall. The fall games held in September-October are the most crucial and determine which cities win the Emperor and Empress Cups.

One of the 12th National Sports Festival commemoratives from 1957.
The two commemoratives were usually issued around the time when the fall games were reaching or had reached their conclusion. They typically depicted athletes or gymnasts at play and scenes which would have typically been seen at the games.

While the pairs from the 1950s were very memorable in their own right, some of the last stamps issued in the mid to late 1960s featured some very striking and colorful artwork and were printed using the rotogravure process.

A 17th games commemorative from 1962.
These stamps were an excellent way to pay tribute to the athletes who gave their all at the games that year, no matter whether they won or lost!

Links:
-http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Sports_Festival_of_Japan (The National Sports Festival at Wikipedia.)

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Polish 1966 Dinosaur Commemoratives

Two stamps from the Polish 1966 Dinosaur and Prehistoric Vertebrates series.
Today I'd like to share two early stamps from my collection that I acquired as a boy:

In 1966, Poczta Polska (Poland's postal service) issued one of the year's most vivid and collectable set of commemoratives: The Dinosauar and Prehistoric Vertebrate set! This set consists of nine commemoratives that were released on March 5th of that year and these stamps feature some amazing artwork of dinos and other "less-than-prehistoric" mammals that have left us, such as the wooly mammoth and the Machairodus, or the European sabre-toothed tiger.

These stamps were issued in denominations ranging from 20 groszy to 7.10 złotys.

For you dino lovers out there or collectors of dinosaur stamps, this commemorative set is a must-have for your own stamp collection (if you don't have it already)!

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Hungarian 1964 Anniversaries and Events Commemoratives

Two stamps from the 1964 Hungarian "Anniversaries and Events" set honoring the National Forestry Service and the Aggtelek National Park. The Aggtelek stamp (right) features the stalactite formation known as "Sesak Szifon" found in one of the caves.
If you bought any type of international stamp packets in the late 20th century, chances are you have some of these stamps in your collection since they were (and still are?) very common. Chances are also good that you've been curious about the meanings of these stamps and have possibly been spent years or even decades trying to decipher them! If this is the case, look no further! In today's blog entry, we'll take a look at the meanings behind these stamps, and a little about the Hungarian-language inscriptions.

Throughout 1964, Magyar Posta (the Hungarian postal service) released a set of commemoratives commemorating birth and death anniversaries of various Hungarian and international figures, as well as national events that took place that year.

The people honored on these stamps include various noteworthy people from Hungarian history, such as the 100th anniversary of the death of Hungarian writer András Fáy. Also commemorated are the anniversaries of births of famous international figures such as Shakspeare, Karl Marx, and Galileo. In addition are two stamps dedicated to sporting figures. These stamps feature eponymous figures of a bowler and two runners. 

A stamp honoring the Albia Regia Days.
Also featured in this set are stamps commemorating events of national significance held in Hungary that year, such as the stamp (right) honoring the Alba Regia Days held in the Hungarian city of Székesfehérvár (also known as Alba Regia) and a stamp commemorating the Budapest Fair. Sporting events such as the 1964 Tennis Exhibition in Budapest and the 9th European Women's Basketball Championship were also commemorated in this series.


Celebrating 30 years of Hungary's aluminum industry.
Two other stamps in this set commemorated the 600th anniversary of the founding of the city of Cegléd and 30 years of Hungary's aluminm industry (right).

Like some of the other Hungarian commemoratives from the 1950s-60s, this set comes in a wide variety of shapes! Square, triangular, and diamond-shaped stamps are all used in this set.

Now about the inscriptions on the stamps. On the sides of all of the stamps are the words Évfordulók- események, which translate to "Anniversaries-Events" in English. The descriptions of the people and events vary depending on the person or event, as well as the stamp artwork. The stamps were issued in 60 fillér, 1, and 2 forint denominations and were issued through March-November 1964.

Stamps from the set commemorating the 100th anniversary of the deaths of Hungarian playright Imre Madach, Andras Fay, and  a stamp commemorating Hungarian revolutionary Ervin Szabo (1877-1918).
This is a fairly large set of commemoratives that covered a wide spectrum of people, places, and topics, and is definitely among the most recognizable of all Hungarian stamps!

For more about this set, be sure to have a look at the following site:

Thursday, April 11, 2013

1967 Bulgarian Nikola Kofardzhiev Stamp

A 1967 Bulgarian stamp dedicated to Nikola Kofardzhiev (1904-1931).
In 1967, Bulgaria Posts released a commemorative stamp dedicated to one of its "anti-fascist heroes": Nikola Kofardzhiev.

According to the 1986 edition of the Biographical Dictionary of the Comintern, Kofardzhiev was a Communist leader and revolutionary who lived in Bulgaria during the 1920s. He was a barber who was also a leader of the national young communist movement, as well as an early member of the Bulgarian Communist Party's Central Committee. He took part in the attempted 1923 Communist insurrection in Bulgaria which ultimately proved to be a failure. However, he didn't flee like many of his contemporaries and stayed in the country to organize and lead the Party. From 1928-1930, Kofardzhiev was also one of Bulgaria's representatives to the Comintern Executive Committee in Moscow under an alias. After returning home, he became head of the BCP's Party Secretary and found himself in opposition to a clique that had split the Party. In October 1931. Kofardzhiev was killed by Sofia police after returning from consultations in Moscow on how to deal with this split. Along with other young Communist leaders in Bulgaria, Kofardzhiev was gvien a bad rap in the history of the Party for "leftist deviation".

This stamp was issued in a 1 stotinka denomination and, according to Colnect.com, was part of an issue titled Anti-fascist Heroes.