- Postage stamps and postal history of Vatican City
Vatican City has operated its own postal service and issued its ownpostage stamp s since1929 .The
postal history of the City begins shortly after its official foundation on11 February 1929. Two days later, the Vatican post office began operating with supplies and equipment donated by the Italian government. Vatican City became a member of theUniversal Postal Union on1 June , and then on29 July Vatican City and Italy signed apostal agreement , going into effect on1 August , providing for the routing of its mail throughRome .The first of August also saw the issuance of the first Vatican stamps (Italian stamps were used previously), in the "Conciliation"
definitive series of 15 values. The low values, 5 to 75 centesmi, depicted thepapal coat of arms , while the higher values (80 centesmi to 10 lira) featured a full-face portrait of the reigningPope Pius XI .On
1 April 1933 , the Vatican issued its firstsemi-postal stamp s, a set of four marking the 24thHoly Year . On31 May of the same year, the "Gardens and Medallions" definitives were issued. While the lowest value still depicted the coat of arms, higher values included views of the gardens and of St Peter's.On
18 February 1939 , just a little over Pius XI's death on 10 February, the arms stamps of 1929 wereoverprint ed "SEDE VACANTE / MCMXXXIX". They remained valid until3 March , the day after the election ofPope Pius XII .The Vatican has acquired a reputation for producing handsome and attractive issues in limited quantities (even today, the average production run for most issues is only between 300,000 and 500,000 stamps). Vatican stamps are produced under the authority of the
Philatelic and Numismatic Office of the Vatican City State .Much, but by no means all, of the mail handled by the Vatican is from tourists or official congregations of the Roman
Curia . Many Romans, distrustful of the unreliable Italian post office, make weekly trips to the Vatican just to post their important letters. Italian stamps may not be used on Vatican mail nor vice versa. According to the Universal Postal Union, the Vatican post office is "one of the best postal systems in the world" and "more letters are sent each year, per inhabitant, from the Vatican's 00120 postal code than from anywhere else in the world."References
*
Bolaffi catalog
*Michel catalog External links
* [http://www.vaticanphilately.org Vatican Philatelic Society]
* [http://groups.yahoo.com/group/vaticanstamps VatiStamps Yahoo Discussion Group]
* [http://www.vatican.va Vatican Website]
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