- Postage stamps and postal history of Russia
This a survey of the
postage stamp s andpostal history ofRussia . Traditionally, philatelists include theSoviet Union period in this category also.Early postal history
Records mention a system of messengers in the 10th century. Early letters were carried in the form of a roll, with a
wax orlead seal; the earliest known of these seals dates from 1079, and mentions a governor Ratibor ofTmutarakan . The earliest surviving cover was sent in 1391 fromLa Tana (nowAzov ) toVenice .By the 16th century, the postal system included 1,600 locations, and mail took 3 days to travel from
Moscow toNovgorod . In 1634, a peace treaty between Russia andPoland established a route toWarsaw , becoming Russia's first regular international service. Peter the Great enacted reforms making the postal system more uniform in its operations, and in 1716 the firstpost office s opened, in Moscow andSaint Petersburg .The earliest known Russian
postmark dates from July 1765; it is a single line reading "ST.PETERSBOVRG" (in Latin letters), but the first official recommendation to use postmarks did not come until 1781.Postal stationery made its first appearance in 1845, in the form of envelopes that paid the 5-kopeck fee forlocal mail in St. Petersburg and Moscow. The idea worked well, and was extended throughout Russia onDecember 1 ,1848 .Local postal systems used stamps referred to as
Zemstvo s, from the term for local governments begun under Alexander II in 1864. [See, for example, http://web.inter.nl.net/hcc/Langenberg/Zemstvo.html.]Postage stamps
The
postage stamp idea had already swept much of the world when, in September 1856, the Russian authorities decided to follow suit. The first stamps went on sale10 December 1857 , but were not valid for use until1 January 1858 . The first value was a 10-kopeck to be used for letters weighing up to one lot (about 12.8 grams). It was animperforate stamp depicting thecoat of arms of Russia, and printed usingtypography in brown and blue. This was followed on10 January by 20-kopeck and 30-kopeck perforated stamps using the same design but in different pairs of colors, along with a perforated version of the 10-kopeck stamp. The paper was originallywatermark ed with the numeral, but this was soon abandoned, and later printings in 1858 are on regularwove paper .A 5k stamp for local postage was introduced in 1863, and in the following year a new common design, with the arms in an oval, was introduced for 1k, 3k, and 5k values. These were used to make up complicated rates for international mail, which had previously required cash payments at the post office. After 1866 the stamps were printed on
laid paper watermarked with a pattern of wavy lines and "EZGB" in Cyrillic. The "grain" of the laid paper was usually horizontal, but for a minority of each value the grain is vertical.In September 1865, the
Shlisselburg district became the first of the "zemstvo " offices to issue stamps; the system was officially organized by a decree of27 August 1870 .In 1874, Russia became one of the original 22 countries forming the
General Postal Union (later theUniversal Postal Union ).The coat of arms design was changed in 1875, and used for 2k and 8k values, and a 7k in 1879. The 7k was also printed on
revenue stamp paper watermarked with a hexagon pattern; these are quite rare.A new issue of
14 December 1883 featured an updated design, lower values printed in a single color, and new high values - 14k, 35k, and 70k. January 1884 saw the introduction of 3.50-ruble and 7-ruble stamps, physically much larger than existing stamps.In 1889 the designs were changed again, this time to introduce
thunderbolt s across theposthorn s underneath thedouble-headed eagle , and in printings after 1902 the usual grain of the paper was changed to be vertical.At the end of 1904 Russia issued its first
semi-postal stamp s. The four values were each sold at 3k over face to provide for orphans of casualties in theRusso-Japanese War .In 1909 a new series came out, using a mix of old and new designs, all printed on unwatermarked wove paper, and with lozenges on the face to discourage
postage stamp reuse .Russia's first series of
commemorative stamp s appeared2 January 1913 to mark the 300th anniversary of theRomanov dynasty . The 17 stamps featured portraits of the variousTsar s, as well as views ofthe Kremlin ,Winter Palace , andRomanov Castle . But in 1915 and 1916, as the government disintegrated under the pressures ofWorld War I , several of the designs were printed oncardboard and used aspaper money . 7k and 14k stamps were also surcharged 10k and 20k due to shortages.Revolution
The period of the Russian Revolution is complicated philatelically; post offices across the country were thrown on their own devices, and a number of the factions and breakaway republics issued new kinds of stamps, although in some cases they seem to have been as much for publicity purposes, few genuine uses having been recorded.
Entities issuing their own stamps include:
*Armenia
* Army of the Northwest
*Batum
*Far Eastern Republic
* Georgia
*Latvia
*Siberia
*South Russia
*Transcaucasian SFSR In 1917 the Provisional Government reprinted the old Tsarist designs, but sold them imperforate. The first stamps of the
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic appeared in 1918, as two values depicting a sword cutting a chain. While great quantities of these stamps survive, they saw little use, and used copies are worth more than mint.The next stamps appeared in 1921, after
inflation had taken hold. The set's values range from 1 to 1,000 rubles. By the next year these stamps were being surcharged in various ways, with face values of up to 100,000 rubles.A currency reform in 1922 that exchanged money at a 10,000-to-1 rate enabled new stamps in the 5r to 200r range, including a set marking the 5th anniversary of the October Revolution, Tsarist stamps surcharged with a five-pointed star containing a
hammer and sickle . Stamps with portraits of aworker ,peasant andsoldier also appeared this year; variations on these portrait designs would continue to be issued throughout the 1920s.Finnish occupation of Aunus
At 1919–1921 there was
Aunus expedition where a group of Finnish volunteers occupied parts ofEast Karelia (Aunus in Finnish,Olonets Karelia in Russian). There were stamps issued for Aunus troops by local authorities. They were Finnish definitives from 1917 with overprint Aunus.Soviet Union
Russian Federation
ee also
*
List of people on stamps of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics External links
* [http://www.rossia.com/stamps/history/history.htm Russian postal history]
* [http://stampslandia.webng.com/gallery3/rus/rus_old.htm 1904 War Orphans and 1913 Romanov Dynasty Tercentenary set on Stampslandia]Sources
*
Stanley Gibbons Ltd: various catalogues
* [http://www.jl.sl.btinternet.co.uk/stampsite/home.html Encyclopaedia of Postal History]
*References
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