- Postage stamps and postal history of Hamburg
This article is about the postage stamps and postal history of
Hamburg from the medieval messengers until the entry of the Hamburg Postal Administration into the Northern German Postal District in 1868.Historical development
After the foundation of the German
Hanseatic League in late Middle Ages, so-called "regulated messenger hauls" formed, which were used to transport messages from Hamburg viaLübeck ,Rostock ,Stettin ,Danzig , andKönigsberg toRiga , as well as viaBremen toAmsterdam and viaCelle andBraunschweig toNuremberg .In 1649 a Danish post office opened in Hamburg. In the 17th century the
Thurn und Taxis post settled down in Hamburg; the royal privileged post and goods carriage between Hamburg and Nuremberg was established .In 1810
Napoleon annexed the three Hanseatic cities and the Northwest of Germany in the course of theContinental System againstGreat Britain .After the end of the French occupation, several post offices were re-established in Hamburg. The Hanseatic city had its own offices in Hamburg and
Ritzebüttel . In the Hamburg city post office (Mengstraße Nr. 43) the Swedish-Norwegian post, the post of Thurn and Taxis, and the post ofHannover were housed. ThePrussian Central Post Office, the Mecklenburgish Post, and the Danish Post worked in their own buildings.Registers were available where one could look up where to give up his post for different destinations. The post to England and overseas was delivered by the city post. The Thurn und Taxis post was in charge of the post to France,
Spain ,Portugal ,Italy ,Belgium , andSwitzerland . Prussia delivered the post toRussia andPoland as well as toTurkey andAustria .Scandinavia was supplied by the Danish or Swedish-Norwegian post.Starting in 1796 the post to then Danish
Heligoland was delivered by a Hamburg postal agent, as there was a Hamburg postal agency on Heligoland.On
January 1 1852 Hamburg joined theGerman-Austrian Postal Union . Since 1866 Hamburg was part of theNorth German Confederation , which took over the postal service in theNorth German Postal District onJanuary 1 1868 .tamps
Postage stamps of the Hamburg City Post
The first
postage stamp s of the Hamburg City Post Office were introduced onJanuary 1 1859 . They were rectangular and in the middle there was the coat of arms of the city, overlaid with the value number. Below is the word "Postmarke" (postage stamp), above "Hamburg". Value and currency ("Schilling") are imprinted as text at the borders. Values of ½, 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, and 9 "Schillinge" were issued. In 1864 the supplemental values 1,25 and 2,5 "Schillinge" with different frame design were issued. These early issues were already gummed but imperforated. The following nine values, issued in 1864 and 1867 and again with the design of the first issues, finally had perforations. In 1866 another two values with changed octagonal frame design were issued; and onMay 5 1867 another one with the design of the first stamps. Hamburg's stamps were valid until the end of 1867, sinceJanuary 1 1868 only the stamps of the North German Postal District were valid.tamps of the Institute of Hamburg's Messengers
The Institute of Hamburg's Messengers issued a stamp with the value of ½ "Schilling". The private company delivered only letters and newspapers within the city of Hamburg and charged half a "Schilling". The stamps were printed in black on coloured paper.
Literature
* B. E. Crole: "Geschichte der Deutschen Post". II. edition. Publishing house W. Malende in Leipzig, Leipzig 1889. The author is Bruno Emil König from Berlin. P. 293, "Die Hansestädte."
* K. Schwarz (Postrat): "Zeittafel zur deutschen Postgeschichte". R.V.Deckers Verlag, Berlin 1935, Volume 22 "Post- und Telegraphie in Wissenschaft und Praxis."
* "Handwörterbuch des Postwesens". Frankfurt a. M. 1953, ASIN B0000BJ291ee also
*
Postage stamps and postal history of Bergedorf
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