Helvetia 2022 - Exhibition Catalogue
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HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong><br />
WORLD STAMP EXHIBITION<br />
18 — 22 MAY <strong>2022</strong><br />
LUGANO<br />
EXHIBITION<br />
CATALOGUE
honegger<br />
philatelie ag<br />
–––– est 1965 ––––<br />
SWISS CLASSIC PHILATELY<br />
ONE OF THE<br />
MOST BEAUTIFUL<br />
INVESTMENTS.<br />
> constantly new offers on our website<br />
> free luxury catalogue every January<br />
> immediate information about new<br />
offers through our free e-mail newsletter.<br />
Subscribe today!<br />
info@honegger-philatelie.ch, +41 55 286 20 00<br />
Kürzestrasse 1, CH-8716 Schmerikon, www.honegger-philatelie.ch
284.-291. CORINPHILA<br />
30. MAI – 4. JUNI <strong>2022</strong><br />
ex Baron de Worms (1938)<br />
ex Dr. Douglas Latto (1992)<br />
Schweiz – Die Sammlung ERIVAN (4. Auktion)<br />
Schweiz, inkl. Strubel 1854–1863 – Spezialsammlung (Teil II),<br />
Schweiz Flugpost – Die Sammlung ‚IKARUS‘<br />
Jetzt Katalog anfordern<br />
Great Britain – The ‘BESANÇON’ Collection (part IV)<br />
oder besuchen Sie<br />
British West Indies – The ‘BESANÇON’ Collection (part III) WWW.CORINPHILA.CH<br />
British West Africa – The ‘BESANÇON’ Collection (part I)<br />
Aden & Kuwait – The ‘BESANÇON’ Collection<br />
Italy, France, European Countries and Overseas – The Ing. Pietro Provera Collection (part IV)<br />
Europa und Alle Welt, inkl. Peru – The ‘ALPACA’ Collection (part II)<br />
Ballon Monté – The Flight of the „Ville d’Orleans“ – The Svein Arne Hansen Collection (part II)
AUKTION<br />
GEGRÜNDET 1919<br />
ÄLTESTES BRIEFMARKENAUKTIONSHAUS<br />
DER SCHWEIZ<br />
ex Philipp von Ferrary (1924)<br />
ex Iwan Bally (1965)<br />
ex «HELVETICUS» (1991/92)<br />
ex Fritz Kirchner (2009)<br />
ex Philipp von Ferrary (1924)<br />
Sonder-Besichtigung<br />
Alle Einzellose der Mai/Juni Auktion <strong>2022</strong> werden<br />
vom 18. bis 22. Mai auf der World Stamp <strong>Exhibition</strong><br />
in Lugano an unserem Stand präsentiert.<br />
CORINPHILA AUKTIONEN AG<br />
WIESENSTR 8 · 8032 ZÜRICH · SCHWEIZ<br />
Telefon +41-(0)44-3899191<br />
www.corinphila.ch<br />
CORINPHILA VEILINGEN BV<br />
AMSTELVEEN ∙ NIEDERLANDE<br />
Telefon +31-(0)20-6249740 · www.corinphila.nl
Deutschlands ältestes Briefmarken-Auktionshaus<br />
Heinrich Köhler – Kompetenz, Tradition, Qualität.<br />
Deutsche und Internationale Philatelie seit 1913<br />
Heinrich Köhler Auktionshaus Wiesbaden<br />
Seit 1913 steht der Name Heinrich Köhler für<br />
herausragende Versteigerungen auf dem Gebiet der<br />
Philatelie. Einzigartige Kenntnis des Marktes, zuverlässige<br />
Abwicklung für Kunden und Käufer, seriöse Präsentation<br />
und Kalkulation sowie Spitzenresultate in den<br />
Versteigerungen.<br />
Zwei große internationale Auktionen jährlich<br />
Einlieferungen von Spezial- und guten Ländersammlungen,<br />
hochwertigen Einzelstücken, ganzen Nachlässen und<br />
Händlerlagern sind uns jederzeit willkommen. Bei<br />
geeigneten Objekten kommen wir gerne zu Ihnen.<br />
Direktankauf von interessanten Objekten jederzeit<br />
möglich.<br />
Der »Baden Fehldruck«<br />
Provenienz: Philipp von Ferrari (1923), Alfred Caspary (1956), John R. Boker, Jr. (1985), Erivan Haub (2019)<br />
AUSRUF: 800.000 € ZUSCHLAG: 1.260.000 €<br />
Altdeutsche Staaten – Die Sammlung ERIVAN – 370. Heinrich Köhler-Auktion (Juni 2019)<br />
EINLIEFERUNGEN ZU UNSEREN AUKTION SIND JEDERZEIT MÖGLICH!<br />
Einzelmarken, Briefe, Länder- und Spezialsammlungen, Nachlässe, Händlerlager.<br />
Auch Direktankauf möglich! Vermittler erhalten Provision.<br />
Heinrich Köhler Auktionshaus GmbH & Co. KG<br />
Hasengartenstr. 25<br />
65189 Wiesbaden<br />
Telefon +49 611 34 14 9-0<br />
WhatsApp +49 172 666 72 45<br />
www.heinrich-koehler.de<br />
info@heinrich-koehler.de
POSTE LOCALE 14II<br />
A first in Swiss philatelist history!<br />
Die Schweizerische Philatelie feiert eine Premiere!<br />
The complete collection with unframed cross<br />
Die vollständige Plattierung ohne Kreuzeinfassung<br />
Ausgeführt von / Realized by<br />
Erich Bärtschi, 1807 Blonay – Switzerland – bae@mediamix.ch
Oberneuhofstrasse 12 · 6340 Baar ZG · Tel.: +41 41 743 02 27<br />
www.sennmb.ch · info@sennmb.ch<br />
Collection Seeland – 10 Jahre Vereinigung<br />
von Schweizer Kulturgut<br />
Sehr geehrte Freunde der Philatelie<br />
Die Collection Seeland entstand 2012 und ist eine der grössten Privatsammlungen<br />
von Schweizer Philatelie im Berner Seeland und umfasst alle Marken<br />
von Altschweiz bis zur Moderne mit Stücken aus allen grösseren legendären<br />
Sammlungen: Alma Lee, Anderegg, Avery, Bally, Burrus, Caspary, Duveen, Erivan,<br />
Ferrari, Helveticus, Hind, Lichtenstein, Luder, Mirabeau, Monte Rosa, Pilatus,<br />
Reuterskiöld, Seebueb u.v.m.<br />
Unter dem Patronat der FORS, der Senn Management und Beteiligungen und der<br />
Future Foundation entsteht in Studen / BE ab 2025 ein Privatmuseum mit Bibliothek.<br />
Der Zugang wird für alle interessierten Kreise offen sein.<br />
Wir forschen in vielen philatelistischen Gebieten und publizieren mit dem gesammelten<br />
Wissen laufend neue Berichte. Am FORS-Stand warten legendäre Stücke<br />
aus der Schweizer Philatelie, eine 1:1 Nachkonstruktion des Zürich 4 / 6-Drucksteins<br />
und exklusive Briefmarkenweine zur Degustation auf Sie.<br />
Collection Seeland – 10 Years Union of Swiss<br />
Cultural Heritage<br />
Dear friends of philately<br />
The Collection Seeland was founded in 2012 and is one of the largest private<br />
collections of Swiss philately in the Bernese Seeland and includes all stamps from<br />
old Switzerland to modern times with pieces from all major legendary collections:<br />
Alma Lee, Anderegg, Avery, Bally, Burrus, Caspary, Duveen, Erivan, Ferrari, Helveticus,<br />
Hind, Lichtenstein, Luder, Mirabeau, Monte Rosa, Pilatus, Reuterskiöld,<br />
Seebueb and many more.<br />
Under the patronage of FORS, Senn Management und Beteiligungen and the<br />
Future Foundation, a private museum with library will be built in Studen / BE from<br />
2025. Access will be open to all interested parties.<br />
We are doing research in many philatelic fields and are continuously publishing<br />
new reports with the collected knowledge. Legendary pieces from Swiss philately,<br />
a 1:1 reconstruction of the Zurich 4 / 6 printing block and exclusive stamp wines<br />
await you for tasting at the FORS booth.
Inhaber: Hertsch & Co<br />
Zeughausgasse 24<br />
Postfach, CH-3011 Bern<br />
Tel. 031 312 00 55, Fax 031 312 23 26<br />
E-Mail: info@briefmarken.ch<br />
<br />
Die Referenz in der Philatelie seit über einem Jahrhundert<br />
Ankauf–Verkauf:<br />
Grösstes Lager:<br />
Fehllistendienst:<br />
Neuheitendienst:<br />
Auswahldienst:<br />
Beratung:<br />
Expertisen &<br />
Schatzungen:<br />
38.--<br />
35.--<br />
Berner Briefmarken<br />
zeitung <strong>2022</strong><br />
SchweizeriSche hotelpoSt<br />
Das klar strukturierte,<br />
reich illustriete Buch enthält neben Bekanntem<br />
eine Vielzahl von neuen Informationen und<br />
einige neue Katalogisierungen. Komplett<br />
überarbeitet und mit neuem Layout. Enthält<br />
neben dem allgemeinen Teil I auch einen<br />
aktualisierten Katalogteil II. 180 Seiten stark.<br />
Letzter Stand der Forschung!<br />
Schweiz – Europa – Übersee<br />
Schweiz – Europa<br />
ganze Welt<br />
ganze Welt; Länder und Motive<br />
Europa nach Ländern und Motiven<br />
Nachlass – Erbschaften sowie in allen philatelistischen Fragen<br />
durch unsere Spezialisten und Experten nach Vereinbarung.<br />
ZuMSTEIN’S ONLINE-SHOP IM INTErNET<br />
...bietet die neusten Trends und Briefmarken-Angebote rund<br />
ums Sammeln www.briefmarken.ch/zshop<br />
Der philatelistische Markt ist ständig in Bewegung!<br />
In der Berner Briefmarken-Zeitung publizieren<br />
wir nicht nur interessante Fachartikel<br />
und Neuheitenberichte, sondern<br />
auch die Preisänderungen, die sich durch<br />
Veränderungen des Marktgeschehens<br />
aufdrängen. Zum Beispiel: Nachträge zu<br />
Katalogen, die umfassende Marktrundschau,<br />
sowie unsere Briefmarken Angebote<br />
sind Teil dieser vielgelesenen<br />
Fachzeitschrift.<br />
Verlangen Sie gratis eine Probenummer.<br />
Jahresabonnement: Schweiz Fr. 55.—,<br />
Ausland Fr. 68.—<br />
Schweiz/liechtenSteinkatalog<br />
<strong>2022</strong><br />
Der Katalog für den Sammler! Über 1070 Seiten,<br />
vierfarbig, deutsch/ französisch, mit den aktuellen<br />
marktgerechten Preisen und den<br />
original Zumstein-Nummern!<br />
Neu mit synoptischer Tafel der Automatenmarken,<br />
vielen neuen Schweiz Abarten und aktuellen<br />
Stempelfälschungen. Handlich dank farbigem<br />
Griffregister und Quick-Search (Schnellsuche).<br />
Seit 1909 die Bibel des Philatelisten.<br />
75.–<br />
55.–<br />
Die beste<br />
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Briefmarken<br />
und Zubehör<br />
Sensationell! Auf Mobile oder<br />
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Auch den neuen Zumstein-Katalog<br />
<strong>2022</strong> mit über 6000 farbigen Abbildungen gibt es wiederum<br />
als Blätterkatalog für das Tablet und Mobile. Dank Inhaltsverzeichnis<br />
oder Volltextsuche findet man auf<br />
über 1000 Seiten schnell zum Ziel. Marken<br />
und Text einfach mit zwei Fingern vergössern.<br />
Erhältlich im Apple «AppStore» für CHF. 25.-.<br />
Spezialkataloge Schweiz<br />
Das berühmte Standard-Werk der Schweizer Philatelie<br />
in zwei Bänden. Mit zahlreichen Preisen ausgezeichnet.<br />
75.–<br />
Die beste<br />
Adresse für<br />
Kataloge<br />
Der zumStein<br />
Schweiz-liechten-<br />
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app. <strong>2022</strong><br />
75.–<br />
Band 2:<br />
Kapitel Flugpost, Pro Juventute,<br />
Pro Patria, Dienstmarken, Portound<br />
Portofreiheitsmarken, Hotelpost,<br />
Eisenbahn, Briefmarken<br />
der Vereinten Nationen in Genf<br />
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25.--<br />
Band 1:<br />
Freimarken<br />
Automatenmarken,<br />
Rollenmarken,<br />
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Tête-bêche,<br />
Zwischenstege<br />
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Pro Patria und<br />
Sportmarken).<br />
www.briefmarken.ch www.briefmarken.ch<br />
Schauen Sie in unserem Laden vorbei – wir freuen uns auf Sie.
Swiss Postal Agencies in<br />
Italy and France<br />
This is the first time that this unusual chapter of Swiss postal history is presented in such a well-founded<br />
manner and with such a wealth of material. A standard work.<br />
Schweizerische Postagenturen in Italien und Frankreich Jvo Bader<br />
Schweizerische Postagenturen<br />
in Italien und Frankreich<br />
Jvo Bader<br />
142 pages, with a stitched binding.<br />
Sale price: CHF 55.00 (excluding postage)<br />
Please address enquiries to:<br />
Jvo Bader<br />
Via Terricole 11<br />
6596 Gordola<br />
Switzerland<br />
or by e-mail to:<br />
jvo.bader@bluewin.ch<br />
Tel.: +41 91 745 32 23<br />
Mob.: +41 79 204 75 70
Visit the Museum of Communication<br />
Communication is similar to love: we all join in but<br />
none of us really know how it works. It is high time,<br />
therefore, to visit the only museum in Switzerland fully<br />
devoted to the subject of communication. The following<br />
three interactive experiences at the Museum<br />
of Communication are not to be missed!<br />
1. Meet a communicator<br />
Award-winning and unique within Switzerland: our<br />
communicators. As hosts, they bring direct communication<br />
to the exhibition and are available at all times<br />
for a spur-of-the-moment game, a short interactive<br />
tour or to answer all your questions. Their activities<br />
change on a daily basis and make each visit feel special.<br />
No more boring museum attendants – make way<br />
for direct human contact! Approach one of our communicators<br />
and benefit from their background knowledge,<br />
talk to them about digitisation or let yourself<br />
be carried away on one of the trails.<br />
www.mfk.ch<br />
2. The story of the 53 million franc post office<br />
raid<br />
Why does the museum have a burnt-out Fiat delivery<br />
van on display? Delve into the exciting story that<br />
unfolded in 1997, when 53 million Swiss francs were<br />
stolen – and another 17 million were left behind. And<br />
along the way you will find out what it is that links<br />
escapes and arrests with love. The story of the robbery<br />
at the Zurich Fraumünster post office will leave<br />
nobody cold.<br />
3. Immortalise yourself on a postage stamp<br />
In the past, only famous people managed to get their<br />
portrait onto a postage stamp. Today, you can avail of<br />
that opportunity yourself. Digitally transpose yourself<br />
onto the speaker’s platform at the National Assembly,<br />
into the stand at a football stadium, or beside a cow<br />
on an Alpine pasture. Use your portrait to make your<br />
own personal postage stamp. Naturally, the stamp<br />
will be valid too, so all you will have to do then is to<br />
decide who you’d like to send a postcard to!
SCHWEIZERISCHE VEREINIGUNG FÜR POSTGESCHICHTE<br />
SOCIÉTÉ SUISSE D’HISTOIRE POSTALE<br />
SOCIETÀ SVIZZERA DI STORIA POSTALE<br />
International magazine with quarterly publication<br />
for postal historians and philatelists<br />
www.postgeschichte.ch
Mendrisiotto.<br />
Fatti emozionare!<br />
@Enrico Cano<br />
Vini Rovio Ronco<br />
L’hotel Coronado di Mendrisio, con le sue 108 camere,<br />
tutte arredate con stile, è il punto di partenza ideale<br />
per scoprire il Mendrisiotto. Suggestivi paesaggi<br />
tra lago e vigneti, fossili preistorici e architettura<br />
contemporanea, escursioni a piedi e in mountain bike.<br />
Un territorio tutto da scoprire e da vivere.<br />
Via Francesco Borromini 10<br />
CH - 6850 Mendrisio<br />
Tel. +41 91 630 30 30<br />
Fax. +41 91 630 30 31<br />
info@hotelcoronado.ch<br />
hotelcoronado.ch
SBZ<br />
Schweizer Briefmarken Zeitung<br />
Journal philatélique suisse<br />
Giornale filatelico svizzero<br />
Seit 134 Jahren:<br />
Informationen aus erster Hand!<br />
SBZ<br />
CHF 6.50/€ 7.80<br />
Schweizer Briefmarken Zeitung<br />
Journal philatélique suisse<br />
Giornale filatelico svizzero<br />
www.vsphv.ch<br />
Nr.9<br />
31. August 2021<br />
Mit der Schweizer Briefmarken<br />
Zeitung SBZ sind Sie stets auf<br />
dem aktuellen Stand …<br />
Ein Sonderfall:<br />
Analyse der 5-Cts.-<br />
Karten UPU 1900<br />
Un cas particulier:<br />
Analyse des cartes<br />
UPU 1900 à 5 Cts.<br />
La lutte contre<br />
Toujours la même<br />
souffrance<br />
Philatélie suisse:<br />
Quelques éléments<br />
pour identifier une<br />
localité sur une<br />
oblitération du<br />
groupe 104, amputée<br />
de la première moitié<br />
de son nom<br />
Postgeschichte:<br />
Begleitformulare und<br />
die Berechnung ihrer<br />
Taxen im Fahrpostverkehr<br />
zwischen der<br />
Schweiz und dem<br />
Kaiserreich Österreich<br />
von 1879 bis 1883<br />
Thematik:<br />
Die Olympischen<br />
Spiele im Altertum<br />
Jetzt erhältlich<br />
in ausgewählten<br />
Filialen und auf<br />
postshop.ch<br />
Philatelie-Weltausstellung <strong>Helvetia</strong> <strong>2022</strong><br />
Sonderblock mit Zuschlag<br />
… was Sammler und Philatelisten bewegt<br />
… über Neuheiten und Fälschungen<br />
… über neue Entdeckungen<br />
… über die Vereinsszene in der Schweiz<br />
… über Daten von Veranstaltungen,<br />
Ausstellungen u.v.m.<br />
Die aktuellsten Informationen<br />
finden Sie stets auf<br />
der Website der SBZ:<br />
www.briefmarkenzeitung.ch<br />
7 612684 002 084<br />
09<br />
Wir freuen uns auf Ihren<br />
Besuch!<br />
21050130_Briefmarken-Zeitung_de.indd 1 24.06.2021 09:25:38<br />
Die SBZ ist die weltweit drittälteste existierende philatelistische Fachzeitschrift!<br />
Abonnementsbestellung:<br />
Schweizer Briefmarken Zeitung<br />
Postfach 2 CH-5022 Rombach/Schweiz<br />
sbz.abo@schwarzpr.ch
PATRONS, PARTNER & SPONSORS<br />
BENEFACTORS & SUPPORTERS<br />
PATRONS<br />
Erich Bärtschi<br />
Karl Louis<br />
Ivo Bader<br />
Dieter Michelson<br />
Adriano Bergamini<br />
Jean-Pierre Senn<br />
Antoine Clavel<br />
Richard Schäfer Sen.<br />
CORONADO<br />
Prestige Philately Club Prague<br />
Rolf Leuthard<br />
Honegger Philatelie AG<br />
Martin Gasser<br />
Robert Wightman<br />
Paolo Bianchi<br />
Consilium Philateliae Helveticae<br />
Swiss Society for Postal History<br />
Valsangiacomo Vini dal 1831<br />
BENEFACTORS<br />
Alfred Bachmann<br />
Ian C. Gibson-Smith<br />
Edgar Wyttenbach<br />
Yoshida Takashi<br />
Hans Häfeli<br />
Auktionshaus Gärtner<br />
Circolo Filatelico Bellinzona<br />
Helmut Joos-Kamm<br />
Jan Huys-Berlingin<br />
Klaus Weis<br />
Pierre Kottelat<br />
Pradip Jain<br />
15
SUPPORTERS<br />
Club philatélique de Bulle<br />
Circolo Filatelico del Mendrisiotto<br />
Schweizerische Motivsammler-Verein /<br />
Société Suisse de Philatélie Thématique<br />
Interessengemeinschaft der Zürcher<br />
Philatelisten-Vereine<br />
Arnold Farnow<br />
Entente Philatélique Valais/Haut-Léman et<br />
Rhône Philatélie<br />
Société philatélique de Renens<br />
Prakob Chirakiti<br />
Paul Sobon<br />
CEPL: Cercle d'étude philatélique du Léman<br />
PARTNER<br />
SPONSORS<br />
16
AT GLANCE<br />
Name:<br />
Organiser:<br />
HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> – Specialized Word Stamp <strong>Exhibition</strong><br />
Organized by the Swiss Federation of Philatelic Societies<br />
in cooperation with the Philatelic Society of Lugano<br />
Dates: Wednesday 18 to Sunday 22 May <strong>2022</strong><br />
Venue:<br />
Website:<br />
Size:<br />
Philatelic Patronage:<br />
Philatelic Recognition:<br />
Participation open to:<br />
Competition Classes:<br />
Padiglione Conza, Lugano, Switzerland<br />
https://www.helvetia<strong>2022</strong>.ch/<br />
App. 2.000 exhibition frames for 16 A-4 pages per frame<br />
More than 350 Philatelic Exhibits<br />
91 Philatelic Literature exhibits<br />
Total size of exhibition halls used is 8,400 m 2<br />
and the floor area occupied by the exhibition frames is 3,100 m 2<br />
Fédération Internationale de Philatélie (FIP)<br />
Académie Européenne de Philatélie (AEP)<br />
Association Internationale des Journalistes Philatéliques (AIJP)<br />
Federation of European Philatelic Associations (FEPA)<br />
All World Federations with Commissioners’ privileges<br />
Non-Competitive Classes: A/ Court of Honour, B/ Invited Exhibits<br />
Competitive Classes: World Stamp Championship, Traditional Philateliy,<br />
Postal History, Postal Stationery, Aerophilately, Thematic Philately,<br />
Philatelic Literature, One Frame Exhibits<br />
AIJP<br />
Patronage<br />
<strong>2022</strong><br />
17
LEGAL NOTICE<br />
Copyright: HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> – all Rights reserved<br />
Editor-in-Chief: Juerg Roth<br />
Layout/Design: Phil*Creativ GmbH, Verlag & Agentur, Schwalmtal/Germany<br />
Print: Meister Print & Media GmbH, Kassel/Germany<br />
18
CONTENTS<br />
Patrons, Partner & Sponsors / Benefactors & Supporters 15<br />
At Glance 17<br />
Map of Lugano / Legal Notice 18<br />
Contents 19<br />
General Information 20<br />
Greetings 21<br />
A brief history of the Post in Switzerland 25<br />
PHILAMOVIE Competition 30<br />
From the Middle Ages to the Second Half of the 19th Century: 33<br />
A Glimpse into the Postal History of the Canton of Ticino<br />
The “Sitting <strong>Helvetia</strong> Perforate” 40<br />
The Universal Postal Union (UPU) Issue of 1900 58<br />
FIP – Fédération Internationale de Philatélie - a brief introduction to the history of the FIP 62<br />
The HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> Organizing Comittee 64<br />
National Commissioners 66<br />
The Jury 70<br />
HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> – Awards, Special Prices and Award Medals 74<br />
The FIP Grand Prix Club 79<br />
Court of Honour – FIP Grand Prix Club Display 80<br />
Invited Exhibits 95<br />
Individual Regulations (IREX) 100<br />
Exhibit Listing by Class 108<br />
Exhibit Listing by Country 138<br />
Exhibit Listing by Name 165<br />
Public Academic Seminar 193<br />
Directory Swiss Stamp Dealers Association 194<br />
Hall Layout and Floor Plan 196<br />
Trade Booth Directories 198<br />
Swiss Post: <strong>Exhibition</strong> Date Stamp and Overprints 201<br />
Post Liechtenstein Souvenir sheet <strong>2022</strong> / Swiss Association of Philatelic Experts 202<br />
19
HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> – GENERAL INFORMATION<br />
Organisation<br />
Location<br />
Information Desk<br />
Swiss Federation of Philatelic Societies in cooperation<br />
with the Philatelic Society of Lugano.<br />
Centro Esposizioni Lugano, Entrance Via Campo Marzio<br />
INFO POINT at the exhibition entrance<br />
- General information, brochures, publications<br />
- Lost Property<br />
- Registration for jury advice to exhibitors for Saturday 21 May.<br />
For more details see jury advice below<br />
Opening hours Wednesday 18 May <strong>2022</strong> 10:00 – 17:00<br />
Thursday 19 May <strong>2022</strong> 10:00 – 17:00<br />
Friday 20 May <strong>2022</strong> 10:00 – 17:00<br />
Saturday 21 May <strong>2022</strong> 10:00 – 17:00<br />
Sunday 22 May <strong>2022</strong> 10:00 – 15:00<br />
Events Wednesday 18 May <strong>2022</strong> RPSL Cocktail (by invitation only)<br />
Thursday 19 May <strong>2022</strong> Club de Monte-Carlo (by invitation only)<br />
Friday 20 May <strong>2022</strong> Boat Tour Lake Lugano (by invitation only)<br />
Saturday 21 May <strong>2022</strong> Palmarès Dinner (by invitation only)<br />
Dealers<br />
Philatelic Experts<br />
MAC 1+2 The philatelic exchange is open during the official hours of the event<br />
MAC 1+2 Swiss Association of Philatelic Experts (*MAC = <strong>Exhibition</strong> hall)<br />
Palmarès Palmarès Dinner Saturday 22 May <strong>2022</strong><br />
Palazzo dei Congressi, Piazza Indipendenza 4, Lugano<br />
Jury advice to exhibitors and commissioners:<br />
Until Friday 17:00 exhibitors can register at the INFO desk to receive a guaranteed time slot for<br />
an individual discussion with the jurors. The jury team will be at the frames at the agreed time.<br />
Slot schedule Saturday: 11:00–13:00 only for exhibitors who registered in advance<br />
15:00–17:00 for exhibitors without previous registration<br />
and for national commissioners<br />
Post Offices<br />
Meals and drinks<br />
Entrance<br />
SWISS POST, Post of Liechtenstein, UN Postal Administration<br />
At the <strong>Exhibition</strong> Restaurant<br />
Free admission<br />
The exhibition catalogue is sold at the INFO-POINT at CHF 10.00 as long as on stock<br />
20
Welcome, <strong>Helvetia</strong> <strong>2022</strong>, to Lugano!<br />
Benvenuta <strong>Helvetia</strong> <strong>2022</strong> a Lugano!<br />
I am delighted to greet the participants and organisers<br />
of <strong>Helvetia</strong> <strong>2022</strong>, the world stamp exhibition<br />
that I am pleased to host in our city. This<br />
event, which I am sure will attract a large national<br />
and international audience, reminds me how<br />
important it is to give space to historical, artistic<br />
and cultural initiatives that evoke historical episodes<br />
and to personalities that left their mark on<br />
an era and therefore were privileged to have a<br />
stamp dedicated to them.<br />
Even if it is an art that arouses the interest of<br />
a niche audience, the beauty and originality of<br />
stamps, the link with the territory, the traditions<br />
and the social context they represent are widely<br />
appreciated.<br />
The opportunity to host, after almost 50 years,<br />
in Switzerland and, in particular, in Lugano, a<br />
universal philatelic exhibition, confirms our city<br />
as a preferred destination for high-level exhibition<br />
activities and able to welcome many visitors.<br />
For this I am grateful to the Philatelic Society of<br />
Lugano, which I thank for the organization and<br />
the effort made to ensure the success of this<br />
world-class event.<br />
Michele Foletti<br />
Mayor of Lugano<br />
Saluto con piacere i partecipanti e gli organizzatori<br />
di <strong>Helvetia</strong> <strong>2022</strong>, esposizione mondiale di<br />
filatelia che ho il piacere di ospitare nella nostra<br />
Città. Questo evento, che sono certo non mancherà<br />
di attirare numeroso pubblico nazionale<br />
ed estero, mi rammenta quanto sia importante<br />
dare spazio alle manifestazioni di carattere storico-artistico-culturale<br />
che rievocano accadimenti<br />
e personalità che hanno segnato un’epoca e per<br />
questo hanno avuto il privilegio di veder loro dedicato<br />
un francobollo.<br />
Anche se si tratta di un’arte che suscita l’interesse<br />
di un pubblico di nicchia, dei francobolli tutti apprezzano<br />
la bellezza ed originalità, il legame con<br />
il territorio, le tradizioni e il contesto sociale che<br />
rappresentano.<br />
L’opportunità di ospitare, dopo quasi 50 anni in<br />
Svizzera e in particolare a Lugano un’esposizione<br />
filatelica universale, conferma la nostra Città<br />
quale meta privilegiata per attività fieristiche di<br />
alto livello in grado di accogliere molti visitatori.<br />
Di questo sono grato al Club Filatelico Lugano<br />
che ringrazio per l’organizzazione e lo sforzo<br />
profuso alla buona riuscita di questo evento di<br />
caratura mondiale.<br />
Michele Foletti<br />
Sindaco di Lugano<br />
21
Greetings from the Presidents<br />
of the Federation and of the<br />
Organising Committee<br />
Adriano Bergamini<br />
Rolf Leuthard<br />
Switzerland, the Federation of Swiss Philatelic<br />
Societies, the Canton of Ticino and the City of<br />
Lugano with its Philatelic Society and the Organising<br />
Committee of HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> are delighted<br />
about this <strong>Exhibition</strong> and offer you all a<br />
hearty welcome to Switzerland.<br />
Switzerland, a dwarf in the global picture, makes<br />
itself available again after almost 50 years as the<br />
venue for an FIP World <strong>Exhibition</strong>, and wishes to<br />
present itself again on the philatelic world-stage<br />
and welcome you in Lugano, in the very south of<br />
Switzerland.<br />
It takes courage and powers of persuasion<br />
to attempt to achieve such an event.<br />
Switzerland was, after Great Britain (“Penny<br />
black” on 6th May 1840), the second country<br />
which issued stamps. The first stamps were issued<br />
before the founding of the Swiss Confederation.<br />
The issues of the Canton of Zurich date<br />
from 1st March 1843; the Canton of Geneva followed<br />
in the same year. Basle followed in 1845<br />
with its famous «Basle Dove». The first issue of<br />
Swiss stamps was made in 1850 as the Swiss<br />
Confederation came into existence first in the<br />
year 1848. Therefore a Federal postal organisation<br />
had first to be created from all the Cantonal<br />
post offices. The first stamp issues were imperforate<br />
and the first perforate issue, the «Sitting<br />
<strong>Helvetia</strong>» stamps, was made in 1862. This is also<br />
a reason for a celebration, HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong>,<br />
because this series of stamps came to the post<br />
office counters exactly 160 years ago and served<br />
for 20 years.<br />
The Federation of Swiss Philatelic Societies<br />
is over 100 years old. At one time it had over<br />
20,000 members. As everywhere else, philately<br />
has declined in status. Today the Federation<br />
encompasses some 120 societies with about<br />
4,000 Members. Our “Swiss Philatelic Journal”<br />
(SBZ), the publication organ of the Federation, is<br />
two years older than the Federation (in its 133rd<br />
year) and enjoys an excellent reputation worldwide.<br />
Visit our stand in the <strong>Exhibition</strong>.<br />
The HELVETIA World <strong>Exhibition</strong> takes place in<br />
Lugano. One may ask why in this exotic location<br />
and not in Berne or Zurich? Basle or Geneva? The<br />
last National Stamp <strong>Exhibition</strong> was in Lugano, in<br />
the year 2018. The Club Filatelico Lugano was<br />
founded in the year 1909 and offered to organise<br />
this World <strong>Exhibition</strong> as it can provide members of<br />
the Organising Committee with experience from<br />
various past exhibitions. This is why you travel<br />
to the south of Switzerland and will in the City of<br />
Lugano at the same time feel as though you are<br />
on holiday – the flair of the South awaits you, with<br />
the lake, palm trees and the many flowers.<br />
Therefore we wish you a pleasant and at the<br />
same time outstanding philatelic and interesting<br />
stay. May you meet old friends again and make<br />
new ones, cherish exchanges in the <strong>Exhibition</strong><br />
or on a seat beside the Lago di Lugano!<br />
Adriano Bergamini<br />
President Organising Committee<br />
Rolf Leuthard, President of the Federation of<br />
Swiss Philatelic Societies<br />
22
HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> World Stamp<br />
<strong>Exhibition</strong><br />
I congratulate the Federation of Swiss Philatelic<br />
Societies and the <strong>Helvetia</strong> <strong>2022</strong> Organising<br />
Committee for preparing and holding the FIP<br />
World <strong>Exhibition</strong> HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong>.<br />
This <strong>Exhibition</strong> will be the second FIP Patronage<br />
<strong>Exhibition</strong> for the year <strong>2022</strong> held on the original<br />
published date. In addition, this will be the first<br />
FIP <strong>Exhibition</strong> held in Basel since 1974, just on<br />
48 years ago; and the first FIP <strong>Exhibition</strong> ever<br />
held in Lugano.<br />
In 1926 Switzerland was one of the seven founding<br />
members of FIP. Since that year four FIP<br />
<strong>Exhibition</strong>s have been held in Switzerland, namely<br />
Zurich (1893), Geneva (1896), Bern (1910)<br />
and Basel (1974).<br />
This is a great opportunity to not only showcase<br />
Swiss philately, but the philatelic treasures of the<br />
World.<br />
You must visit HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong>!<br />
The beauty of the location beside magnificent<br />
Lake Lugano must be seen to appreciate the<br />
area’s unbeatable ambience. This is a really City<br />
that epitomizes the Story Book vista that is Switzerland.<br />
In these troubled times it is important to note that<br />
the Location is only short train or car ride from<br />
Milan in Northern Italy, and only a slightly longer<br />
trip from Zurich.<br />
I extend my very best wishes to all exhibitors. I<br />
do hope that your presence in Lugano will enhance<br />
your excitement on winning your Award.<br />
Once again, my congratulations to the Federation<br />
of Swiss Philatelic Societies for their support<br />
and invaluable contribution to philately.<br />
My wonderful congratulations to the Organising<br />
Committee, the Swiss Post and the Philatelic<br />
Foundation on a job well done.<br />
Switzerland has a long and glorious reputation<br />
as a highly active philatelic Nation.<br />
In addition, the country has been an epicentre for<br />
the Trade for well over one and a half centuries.<br />
On this occasion, the beautiful Lakeside City of<br />
Lugano has been chosen by the organisers. A<br />
marvelous choice of venue to which you will truly<br />
appreciate upon your arrival.<br />
Bernie Beston<br />
President<br />
Federation Internationale de Philatelie (FIP)<br />
23
Greeting to World Stamp <strong>Exhibition</strong><br />
«HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong>»<br />
Ladies and Gentlemen,<br />
Dear Friends of Philately<br />
When television was invented in the 1950s, it<br />
was generally believed that printed newspapers<br />
would disappear. Today has shown us that this<br />
has nevertheless not happened. And how about<br />
the future of the postage stamp?<br />
Like many other leisure activities and hobbies,<br />
stamp collecting too sees itself confronted by<br />
great challenges in the digital present, and probably<br />
more so in the future. Nevertheless, the<br />
numerous reactions of our customers in the post<br />
offices, or the commentaries in our digital socialmedia<br />
channels, show that stamps still move<br />
people and give rise to a palette of positive emotions.<br />
Also, the many applications for the issue<br />
of a stamp, which are received each year by the<br />
Stamp Commission, underline the significance of<br />
stamps as important witnesses of current times.<br />
Stamps are elements of culture, ambassadors of<br />
a country, and keep history alive, therefore still<br />
enjoying high regard.<br />
The Swiss Post is therefore glad that a World Philatelic<br />
<strong>Exhibition</strong> again takes place in Switzerland<br />
after almost 50 years and is pleased to honour<br />
the event with the issue of two special stamps<br />
with surcharge. While the first special block focusses<br />
on the <strong>Exhibition</strong>’s location, Lugano, the<br />
second is dedicated to the 160th Anniversary<br />
of the Sitting <strong>Helvetia</strong> stamps, Switzerland’s<br />
first perforated stamps. The surcharge on the<br />
stamps is for the benefit of the Foundation for<br />
the Promotion of Philately, which thereby makes<br />
a financial contribution to the realisation of HEL-<br />
VETIA <strong>2022</strong>.<br />
Special thanks are due to the members of the<br />
Organising Committee, without whose untiring<br />
efforts such an event would not be possible. This<br />
voluntary work does not go without saying and it<br />
earns our respect.<br />
We wish the organisers a successful exhibition,<br />
the exhibitors good results and the visitors an<br />
exciting and inspiring stay in Lugano.<br />
Thomas Baur<br />
Deputy CEO and Head of PostalNetwork,<br />
Swiss Post / Chairman of Stamp Commission<br />
Kurt Strässle<br />
President of the Foundation for the Promotion<br />
of Philately<br />
24
A brief History of the Post in<br />
Switzerland<br />
Olivia Strasser<br />
The exchange of information over longer distances<br />
– a primeval need – was always of great<br />
relevance for trade and politics. Historical communication<br />
systems in the territory of Switzerland<br />
can be traced back to the time of the Roman<br />
Empire. The cursus publicus, introduced by<br />
Emperor Augustus in the 1st Century BC, was<br />
based on regular postal despatches on the network<br />
of Roman roads covering some 90,000 kilometres.<br />
Today’s term «post» comes from the<br />
catering and overnight accommodation stations<br />
of the couriers, in Latin statio posita.<br />
Communications in the Middle<br />
Ages and the early Modern Times<br />
After the fall of the Western Roman Empire, written<br />
communication was difficult for a long time<br />
and messenger services based on needs were<br />
organised. A communication system covering<br />
the whole of Europe was first re-established<br />
over time through communication connections<br />
between associated monasteries, city states and<br />
principalities. Apart from monastery messengers<br />
– who even enjoyed immunity thanks to their affiliation<br />
to religious orders – also merchants and<br />
travellers undertook the carriage of letters.<br />
The economic upswing in the 12th and 13th<br />
Centuries and the related population growth led<br />
to a flourishing of the towns, which grew in size<br />
and number. The towns with territorial growth, like<br />
Berne and Zurich in particular, were dependent<br />
on good communications for the exercise of<br />
their authority and for the maintenance of<br />
relationships.<br />
Cantonal Messenger of Basle around 1600, walking<br />
with letter and spear, in a smock with breastplate,<br />
breeches and black felt hat, left Basle milestone,<br />
«Courreur de la Ville», reprint from Sheet<br />
No. 4 from “Basler Trachten um 1600”, engraved<br />
by Johann Rudolf Schellenberg, ca. 1770-1790,<br />
coloured etching, 24 x 18 cm, Museum for Communication<br />
[Signature: BS_Post_0003].<br />
As from the 14th Century, so-called “Standesläufer”<br />
(Cantonal Messengers) acted as messengers<br />
when necessary. Duly dressed and equipped<br />
by their employers, these messengers were<br />
25
ecognisable as officials. They were usually footmessengers,<br />
but, in cases of urgency, mounted<br />
messengers, and carried-out their assignments<br />
without fixed routes or timetables. 1<br />
Merchants, the new pioneers of<br />
the Post<br />
own postal organisations. Through leasing – with<br />
payment of rent or with the free carriage of<br />
official mail – the state remained the owner of<br />
the monopoly within its own territory. With this<br />
introduction of fixed postal routes and times, regulated<br />
tariffs and the exercise of monopolies by<br />
secular postal enterprises, the messenger system<br />
of the monasteries lost its importance.<br />
Parallel to the flow of goods, merchants established<br />
postal facilities in places with brisk business<br />
traffic. The first regular trans-Helvetic communication<br />
links developed, for example, between<br />
St. Gall and Nuremberg («Nürnberger Ordinari»)<br />
with further connections in other towns in Switzerland<br />
such as Schaffhausen, Zurich, Basle,<br />
and also to neighbouring countries, for example,<br />
from Lindau via Chur to Milan or to Lyons («Lyoner<br />
Ordinari»).<br />
Routes of the Imperial Post, which operated as<br />
the first supra-regional postal service in the Holy<br />
Roman Empire, also led through Switzerland.<br />
From the end of the 16th Century, the Taxis family<br />
(re-named Thurn and Taxis in 1650) was<br />
officially entrusted with the Imperial postal monopoly.<br />
Plan-drawing postal coach Type Omnibus with<br />
inscription «Neuchâtel-Fleurier», engraved by<br />
Joseph Dinkel, 1842, coloured lithograph, 24.2 x<br />
16.7 cm, Museum for Communication [Signature:<br />
NE_Post_0002].<br />
The Postal Monopoly<br />
The idea of a postal monopoly as a sole right was<br />
unknown up to the end of the 16th Century and<br />
there was basically free competition between<br />
messenger services. During the course of the<br />
17th Century, the states within the Swiss Confederation<br />
began to exercise postal monopolies<br />
in order to standardise the messenger services<br />
and for economic reasons. However, the states<br />
did not at that time have the administrative facilities<br />
necessary for the development of their<br />
1 Messengers of the thirteen old Cantons, the Swiss Cantons,<br />
which from 1513 to 1798 comprised the Old Confederation<br />
were, in alphabetic order: Appenzell, Basle, Berne, Fribourg,<br />
Glarus, Lucerne, Schaffhausen, Schwyz, Solothurn, Unterwalden,<br />
Uri, Zug, Zurich.<br />
The Fischer Post<br />
The largest, and probably the best known of the<br />
first postal networks in the Swiss territory, was<br />
operated by the Fischer Post (1675-1832), established<br />
by the Bernese patrician Beat Fischer,<br />
who took over the postal monopoly of the Cantons<br />
of Berne (1675), Solothurn (1691), Neuchâtel<br />
(1695) and Fribourg (1698). Through agreements<br />
with other republics and competitors, he<br />
obtained transit permits and found confederates<br />
for connecting routes. Fischer had recognised at<br />
an early stage that Berne, as the largest state<br />
in the Confederation, offered a profitable postal<br />
monopoly since the earnings depended on the<br />
length of the transport routes on own territory.<br />
His offer for the lease of the postal monopoly<br />
26
was attractive for the Bernese because it included<br />
the routing of all postal transport via the capital,<br />
the doubling of the postal services and the<br />
delivery of the latest news from Germany and<br />
France. This latter led in the end to the establishment<br />
of newspapers. Already around 1700, the<br />
towns of Basle, Geneva, Zurich, Schaffhausen<br />
and Lucerne were connected by postal services<br />
two to three times per week. The postal network<br />
was extended and intensified during the course<br />
of the 18th Century. From 1735, Berne was linked<br />
to Zurich with postal coach services and further<br />
routes soon followed: from Geneva to St.<br />
Gall and to Basle. The continuing extension of<br />
the transport network between the towns of the<br />
Swiss midland made postal coach services two<br />
to three times per week possible towards the<br />
end of the 18th Century.<br />
Postal connections over passes<br />
Passes like the Gotthard, Simplon and Great St.<br />
Bernhard were not only strategically interesting<br />
for the settlement and utilisation of the alpine regions,<br />
but also for alpine crossing by mule transport<br />
and couriers. There were, for example, first<br />
weekly services between Milan and Lucerne (by<br />
Diego Maderni from Lugano) over the Gotthard<br />
pass from the middle of the 17th Century, and<br />
then, some 50 years later, twice weekly mounted<br />
mail services between Zurich and Milan (by<br />
Muralt from Zurich and Fischer from Berne). Already<br />
in the first half of the 17th Century Kaspar<br />
Stockalper operated transport services over the<br />
Simplon pass for his trading operations and he<br />
also established a weekly messenger service<br />
between Geneva and Milan. After Stockalper<br />
was overthrown in 1678, the importance of the<br />
Simplon pass declined. This importance increased<br />
again with the improvement of the route for<br />
military purposes which was ordered by Napoleon.<br />
A postal coach service was established<br />
shortly after its opening in 1805 and was operated<br />
for almost 150 years in the low season with<br />
horse-drawn coaches and sledges.<br />
One of the last horse-drawn winter-post waggons<br />
passes a Citroen car on the Simplon road, ca.<br />
1953-54, Photograph: Philipp Giegel, Museum for<br />
Communication [Signature: FFF_01373].<br />
Helvetic and Cantonal Post<br />
Military and political pressure from France led to<br />
the collapse of the Old Confederation and the proclamation<br />
of the Helvetic Republic in 1798. This<br />
brought the ideas of nationalisation and unification<br />
also to the postal service: the intention was to<br />
create a postal monopoly controlled by the central<br />
state and establish a central postal administration<br />
in the respective capital of the republic. However,<br />
shortage of financial resources meant that the existing<br />
postal administrations continued to operate.<br />
Post-coach ticket of the Cantonal Post Basle-<br />
Town valid from Basle to [Sonceboz?] on 26th<br />
December 1818 at 10 am, Museum for Communication<br />
[Signature: DOK_00049]<br />
27
The Act of Mediation of 1803 re-established the<br />
autonomy of the cantons and also repealed the<br />
centralisation of the postal service. This constitution<br />
laid the foundation for a federally structured<br />
Switzerland. The postal monopoly, which also<br />
included letter carriage, money transfers and<br />
newspaper distribution as well as passenger<br />
transport, was returned to the cantons. Cantons<br />
such as Aargau, Basle, Lucerne, Zurich, Vaud<br />
and Neuchâtel soon introduced state-run postal<br />
services but other cantons leased their postal<br />
services to the highest bidder. The fact that the<br />
territory of Switzerland was divided among 17<br />
postal administrations in around 1840 was not<br />
conducive to an efficient postal service. 2<br />
The awkwardness and the complicated tariffs<br />
may well have contributed to the fact that<br />
Sir Rowland Hill’s idea of introducing postage<br />
stamps fell onto fertile ground. The first postage<br />
stamps issued within the Swiss territory were<br />
those of the Cantonal post offices of Zurich and<br />
Geneva (1843). These were for two tariff stages:<br />
within the town and within the canton. In 1845,<br />
these stamps were joined by the famous Basle<br />
Dove, the world’s first multicoloured stamp,<br />
which could be used for post within the city of<br />
Basle. The principle, that now the sender of a<br />
letter had to pay the postage, and no longer the<br />
recipient as was usual before, subsequently became<br />
established throughout the world.<br />
2 Cantonal enterprises: Zurich, Berne, Lucerne, Uri, Glarus,<br />
Fribourg, Solothurn, Basle-Town, Basle-Land, St. Gall and<br />
Schwyz, Grisons, Aargau, Ticino, Vaud, Valais, Neuchâtel and<br />
Geneva, Schaffhausen.<br />
Political tensions between the reformed liberal<br />
and the catholic conservative cantons ended in<br />
1847 in the war of the «Staatenbund», the “Sonderbundskrieg”,<br />
which led to the foundation of<br />
Switzerland as a modern Confederation.<br />
Day and night despatches between Zurich - Romanshorn and Zurich - St. Gall of 1852,<br />
PTT-Archive [Signature: PTT-Archiv_PP_00005]<br />
28
Overview of inland postal connections, horse-mail routes, 1853; Extract,<br />
PTT-Archive [Signature: PTT-Archive_ PP_00011]<br />
The Federal Post<br />
With the Federal Constitution of 1848, the Councils<br />
also resolved that the Confederation should<br />
take over the postal service as from 1st January<br />
1849. Until then, the services continued to<br />
be provided by the cantonal posts, already, however,<br />
for the account of the Confederation. The<br />
law covering the uniform tariffs first came into effect<br />
on 1st October of the same year. Switzerland<br />
was divided into 11 postal regions, which – after<br />
the dissolution of the old cantonal postal administrations<br />
– were headed by regional postal administrations<br />
reporting to the Confederation.<br />
A central aspect for efficient operations in the<br />
first decades of the Federal Post was the unification<br />
and reduction of the tariffs, supported by<br />
the uniform Swiss franc currency introduced in<br />
1850. The federal postal monopoly was extended<br />
to the whole area of passenger transport by<br />
timetable – this was at the beginning the most<br />
important business segment: the horse-drawn<br />
coaches for passengers and postal despatches.<br />
It was first the railway, with its greater speed<br />
and capacity, which led to a decline in this segment.<br />
However, at the same time, the railway<br />
provided great support: the fast transport of<br />
the post and the en-route sorting in the railway<br />
post-waggons introduced in 1857 made it possible<br />
to cope rationally with the rapidly increasing<br />
volume of letter post. Further milestones<br />
in the history of the post are the motorisation in<br />
the time of the automobile and the airmail flights<br />
in the early 20th Century.<br />
The merger with the Telegraph and Telephone<br />
Administration to give the «PTT» (1920), the mechanisation<br />
of the post-handling from 1930, the<br />
introduction of the postal codes and the automatic<br />
letter-sorting in the 1960’s were further steps<br />
of the Post in the future. At the time of its dissolution<br />
in 1998, the PTT had grown to become the<br />
largest employer in Switzerland.<br />
29
Right up to today, Swiss Post Ltd. is challenged<br />
to remain flexible and, as a provider of Public<br />
Service, to question, adapt and develop its structures<br />
– whether because of technical requirements<br />
or market and customer demands.<br />
Literature<br />
Kronig, Karl, Museum for Communication (Hg.), Ab<br />
die Post. 150 Jahre schweizerische Post, Berne,<br />
1999.<br />
Wyss, Arthur, Die Post in der Schweiz: ihre Geschichte<br />
durch 2000 Jahre. Berne, 1987.<br />
Poster «Jedesmal – Postleitzahl», 1965, Museum<br />
for Communication [Signature: PLK_01278].<br />
Historisches Lexikon der Schweiz (HLS), https://<br />
hls-dhs-dss.ch/de/, Entries to «Gotthardpass» /<br />
«Simplonpass» / «Post» [last update: 26.11.2021].<br />
PHILA MOVIE COMPETITION<br />
“A video competition based on the themes of Philately and Postal History”<br />
<strong>Helvetia</strong><strong>2022</strong> will launch within the framework of the World Stamp <strong>Exhibition</strong> a video competition<br />
based on the themes of Philately and Postal History. The objective of the competition is to promote<br />
our hobby, especially among young people, and give them the opportunity to present the themes<br />
of Philately and Postal History from their point of view in the form of a short video with a maximum<br />
length not exceeding one minute.<br />
Today’s technology makes possible the creation of new forms of communication that, through the<br />
widening of philately and philatelic collecting, can reach a large number of new potential collectors,<br />
historians or interested persons.<br />
A jury will evaluate and award prizes to the films presented at the exhibition.<br />
30
NEU !<br />
Kantonalmarken Schweiz<br />
Echt – Falsch – Verfälscht<br />
Reuterskiöld Nr. II<br />
Forschung mit Rekonstruktion von Axel de Reuterskiöld, 1907<br />
“The forgeries of the “Cantonal” Stamps of Switzerland”<br />
Ergänzt mit Ausgabe der späteren Fälschungen.<br />
von Richard Schäfer<br />
BUCHVERÖFFENTLICHUNG<br />
BEI DER HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong><br />
BUCHVERKAUF AM<br />
CORINPHILA-STAND<br />
CHF 125.-<br />
Preis zuzüglich Porto und<br />
Verpackung<br />
RICHTEN SIE IHRE BESTELLUNG AN:<br />
CORINPHILA<br />
AUKTIONEN AG<br />
WIESENSTR 8<br />
8032 ZURICH · SWITZERLAND<br />
TEL +41-44-3899191 · FAX +41-44-3899195<br />
INFO@CORINPHILA.CH · WWW.CORINPHILA.CH
From the Middle Ages to the second half of the 19th century<br />
A Glimpse into the Postal History of<br />
the Canton of Ticino<br />
Kurt Baumgartner – Marcello Coluccia<br />
Historical context<br />
The Canton of Ticino has been part of the Swiss<br />
Confederation since 1803. It is the only Swiss<br />
canton located entirely south of the Alps and<br />
extends for about one hundred kilometers from<br />
the Alps to the edge of the Po Valley. Due to its<br />
rugged, mountainous landscape, Ticino was not<br />
well suited to the development of large settlements,<br />
but only to medium, small, and even minimal<br />
size communities, some even built at high<br />
altitudes.<br />
and permanent. Families split up; villages emptied.<br />
Typical destinations were Italy and France<br />
and starting from the second half of the 19 th century<br />
many people migrated overseas, typically to<br />
Australia and California to participate in the gold<br />
rush or to South America to work as farmers.<br />
The Canton of Ticino today is a predominantly<br />
north-south transit canton, and it can certainly<br />
be said that the postal history of this canton has<br />
been influenced by the development of transit<br />
corridors, in particular the Gotthard.<br />
Convoy of porters near Andermatt in front of the<br />
Uri Hole, the “first Gotthard tunnel”. Engraving by<br />
Rothe from a drawing by Jenatzsche, approximately<br />
1800<br />
Until the end of the 19 th century, Ticino remained<br />
a predominantly rural canton, with meager agricultural<br />
productivity. This situation, on top of poverty<br />
and lack of work caused the development<br />
of significant migratory flows, both temporary<br />
Map of Ticino with the main locations mentioned<br />
in the article<br />
33
From the Middle Ages to the end of<br />
the 18th century<br />
In Roman times and for most of the Middle Ages,<br />
the transit of people, goods, and news on the<br />
north-south axis in the central area of the Alps<br />
took place mainly through passes such as the<br />
Septimer, Julier, Splügen, San Bernardino and<br />
the Great St. Bernard. The main reason for the<br />
lack of attention towards the St. Gotthard was<br />
due to the difficult morphology of the territory<br />
on both sides. Improvements to infrastructure<br />
which were implemented starting from the 13th<br />
century (the construction of the Devil’s Bridge<br />
in 1218-1226, the construction of the Uran mule<br />
track in the 16th century and the construction<br />
of the Uri Hole in 1708), the Gotthard became<br />
one of the most popular routes. Starting from<br />
the 15th century, the valleys to the north and<br />
south organized and developed the transport<br />
of goods and passengers on a corporate basis<br />
through guilds. In Ticino there were the porter<br />
guilds of Airolo, Faido, Giornico, Biasca and<br />
Bellinzona.<br />
From Bellinzona the traffic continued south towards<br />
Lake Maggiore and towards Lugano also<br />
on a corporate basis through guilds, using the<br />
two lakes as transit routes. It is believed that the<br />
members of these guilds were also entrusted<br />
with the transport of the few letters and correspondence<br />
that were sent at the time. Until the<br />
end of the 16th century, in Bellinzona, Lugano,<br />
Magadino and Mendrisio there were support locations<br />
and rest points for the transmission of<br />
correspondence. In Capolago, the items in transit<br />
from Milan to early Switzerland and vice versa<br />
were loaded onto barges for transport across<br />
Lake Lugano. Messengers on foot or on horseback<br />
also passed through the St. Gotthard, for<br />
the exclusive benefit of ruling houses, guilds of<br />
merchants or monasteries.<br />
In the 16th century, under the domination of the<br />
Swiss cantons, the postal service in Ticino was<br />
in the hands of a few people. It was used almost<br />
exclusively for the transport of letters between<br />
the bailiffs and the sovereign cantons and for<br />
the relations between those and the Dukes of<br />
Milan and was organized with relays on horseback.<br />
Starting in 1600, the few main centers of<br />
the canton located on the main road to the St.<br />
Gotthard (Airolo, Bellinzona, Lugano, Mendrisio)<br />
and on the route to the Kingdom of Sardinia<br />
through Lake Maggiore (Locarno), had an embryonic<br />
postal service with a semblance of organization,<br />
managed by the post offices of Zurich,<br />
Basel and Bern, and also with the approval<br />
of the sovereign cantons. Until the outbreak of<br />
the French Revolution (1789), this transit traffic<br />
was constantly bitterly disputed by the corporations<br />
of Zurich, Basel and Bern.<br />
One might wonder what was the participation of<br />
the people from Ticino until the early decades<br />
of the 17th century. Very little or almost nothing.<br />
However, the local contribution was considerable<br />
with respect to hospitality offered to messengers<br />
(hospice on the St. Gotthard), transport services<br />
provided by mountaineers, by the entire network<br />
of rest points offered to messengers to lodge or<br />
to change horses, to the post offices of Bellinzona<br />
and Lugano which would have had no reason<br />
to exist without transit traffic.<br />
As for the local postal traffic, the tasks could also<br />
be entrusted to local contractors. The volume of<br />
this traffic was much lower than that of transit. It<br />
can be argued that the correspondence to and<br />
from Ticino was minimal and only a few made<br />
use of the existing services except for traders,<br />
members of important families, authorities,<br />
and their employees. Also, not to be forgotten<br />
are the serious problems and the long delivery<br />
times of correspondence destined for the inhabitants<br />
of the valleys situated outside of the 3 or<br />
4 centers where the post offices were located.<br />
Finally, the high cost (at that time) of the transport<br />
of letters negatively affected the quantity of<br />
correspondence.<br />
34
Lugano Messaging Office<br />
By virtue of particular privileges received from<br />
the Dukes of Milan, the Community of Lugano<br />
already had its own Messaging Office from the<br />
16 th century. It was organized for the particular<br />
benefit of that community; messengers were<br />
sent by horse and was of great use to both inhabitants<br />
of Lugano and Milan. This privilege was<br />
still confirmed in 1731 and we still have news of<br />
it from the audit of the accounts of the bailiff of<br />
Lugano done on August 24 th , 1762. This Office<br />
employed Lugano messengers alternating with<br />
those from Milan. The activities of the Lugano<br />
Messaging Office was flourished particularly<br />
under the direction of the Maderni family of<br />
Lugano. The best-known proponent was Diego<br />
Maderni, a prominent figure from Lugano (public<br />
prosecutor and mayor of the Community). He<br />
was a man of great ability, culture, and ambition.<br />
With a strong sense of organization, he tried to<br />
bring together in his hands all the postal traffic<br />
in transit through Ticino from the Italian states to<br />
the Northern countries and vice versa. In 1653<br />
he organized a regular postal service between<br />
Milan and Lucerne with his own messengers. It<br />
took them 4 days to travel between these two<br />
cities.<br />
The shaping of the Canton of<br />
Ticino (1798–1830)<br />
On April 12th, 1798, with the birth of the Helvetic<br />
Republic, the emancipation of the bailiffs led to<br />
the creation of the cantons of Lugano and Bellinzona,<br />
which the Swiss authorities then sought to<br />
unify with the name of Ticino. Local communities,<br />
alien to each other and faithful to the fragmented<br />
model of autonomous neighborhoods, were reluctant<br />
to form a single political body based on a<br />
modern state conception. Indifferent to the principles<br />
proclaimed by the Helvetic Republic, the<br />
population was hostile to the obligations imposed<br />
by the new state (taxes and military service)<br />
and to any innovation in the religious domain, including<br />
freedom of worship. The rejection of the<br />
revolutionary principles also explains the opposition<br />
to a possible aggregation to the Cisalpina.<br />
Hostility to the new regime manifested itself in<br />
1799 with disturbances and violence in Lugano<br />
and an anti-French insurrection in Leventina.<br />
The period of the Helvetic Republic was thus<br />
marked by a great institutional instability, especially<br />
in the South of the canton due to difficulties<br />
of the institutions to exercise an effective control<br />
of the territory.<br />
It was the Act of Mediation (1803) that sanctioned<br />
the birth of the Canton of Ticino, endowed by<br />
the will of Napoleon Bonaparte with a Constitution<br />
like that of the other recently formed cantons.<br />
The canton was divided into eight districts and<br />
into ca. 250 municipalities, born from existing<br />
communities. The exercise of sovereignty was<br />
delegated to the Grand Council (110 members),<br />
which however limited itself to voting on the laws<br />
proposed by the executive (a Council made up<br />
of nine members, elected by the Grand Council).<br />
During the Mediation, the government, in which<br />
the figure of Vincenzo Dalberti stood out, worked<br />
to give an organic cohesion to the State structures<br />
and to spread a public spirit that would make<br />
the canton recognized as the common homeland<br />
of the Ticinesi.<br />
The postal service under the<br />
Helvetic Republic until the takeover<br />
by the Swiss Confederates<br />
(1798–1834)<br />
The first decisive turning point in the organization<br />
of the post service dates back to 1798, when<br />
the obvious and growing benefits connected to<br />
the possession of postal rights, lead the Direction<br />
of the newly created unitary republic (resulting<br />
from the French invasion and the dissolution<br />
of the old Confederation) to declare, on August<br />
35
31 st , 1798, the postal service to be “owned by<br />
the Helvetic Republic one and indivisible” and to<br />
issue on November 15 th , a law “on the organization<br />
of the postal services”, which established<br />
single rates for the whole country, divided into<br />
districts with one centralized governance.<br />
But soon afterwards, on September 3 rd , 1800,<br />
due to conflicts with the previous operators as<br />
well as a state of general insecurity, the reform<br />
was suspended. The presence of foreign troops<br />
and civil conflicts affected the postal services in<br />
the form of repeated interruptions, the seizure of<br />
postal bags and the violation of the privacy of<br />
correspondence for the purpose of censorship<br />
and espionage. In 1803, as soon as the Napoleonic<br />
Act of Mediation came into force, the Federal<br />
Diet decided that “the administration of the<br />
postal services will temporarily be offered to the<br />
cantons of Bern, Basel, Zurich, Schaffhausen<br />
and St. Gallen”. The attribution of the management<br />
of postal services to the cantons decided<br />
by the Federal Diet created many problems for<br />
the newly established Canton of Ticino. The<br />
lack of skills in the postal sector as well as a<br />
whole series of more urgent problems to be solved<br />
(roads and bridges to be built, non-existent<br />
schooling, public administration to be established,<br />
...) lead the Ticino government to contract<br />
out the service to another canton. Competing<br />
for the contract were emissaries from Lucerne<br />
and Zurich. Zurich was the winner with the convention<br />
that was endorsed by the Grand Council<br />
on May 30 th , 1804. Later, after Lucerne secured<br />
the contract in 1809, the powerful Lucerne and<br />
Zurich cantons allied themselves at the expense<br />
of weak Ticino by securing the conventions of<br />
1815, 1821 and 1827.<br />
In addition to the very important transit traffic in<br />
place for centuries, the definition of “postal service”<br />
in the canton was documented in Article 1<br />
of the “General Regulations for the post offices<br />
of the canton of Ticino in the new postal plan of<br />
1805” published on December 28 th ,1804:<br />
Art.1. In Ticino there will be a head office in<br />
Lugano, five offices linked with it in direct correspondence,<br />
which will be Airolo, Biasca, Bellinzona,<br />
Locarno and Mendrisio and four postal<br />
agencies, namely Faido, Ambrì, Giornico and<br />
Dazio Grande which will be called “stradale” and<br />
will have their correspondence with the offices<br />
of Airolo and Bellinzona to which they will send<br />
their letters and effects.<br />
The location of the offices decided by the Confederate<br />
administrators demonstrates a focus solely<br />
toward transit traffic. The connection of the<br />
valleys and countryside with the most important<br />
localities was taken care of by “pedestrian-couriers”<br />
who made trips with weekly frequencies or<br />
at best two trips a week. In the first decades of<br />
the 19 th century, it was therefore very difficult for<br />
most Ticino residents to receive or send letters<br />
or transfer money.<br />
Meanwhile, starting from 1799, still in the period<br />
of the Helvetic Republic, the first prephilatelic linear<br />
hand-stamps used in the canton’s post offices<br />
appeared on the letters. The first of these<br />
are reproduced here:<br />
Wi. Nr. 130 – used from 1799 until 1808<br />
Wi. Nr. 147 – used from 1799 until 1803<br />
Wi. Nr. 148 – used from 1799 until 180?<br />
36
Letter from Giacomo Buonvicini, National Prefect of the Canton of Lugano, addressed to the Citizen<br />
and President, and members of the Mendrisio District Court. Lugano, February 19th, 1799<br />
Starting from 1805, the new administration provided the most important post offices in the canton with<br />
new framed hand-stamps. Note the lack of attention of the Confederates to spelling (Loccarno with two<br />
Cs and the inverted S of Mendrisio).<br />
Wi. Nr. 3660<br />
Wi. Nr. 3713<br />
Wi. Nr. 3672<br />
Wi. Nr. 3705<br />
Wi. Nr. 3681<br />
Wi. Nr. 3739<br />
37
Letter from Carlo Sacchi,<br />
president of the Administrative<br />
Chamber of the Canton<br />
of Bellinzona, addressed to<br />
the Administrative Chamber<br />
of the canton Waldstädten<br />
in Zug, (Uri, Schwyz, Unterwalden,<br />
Zug), with handwritten<br />
indication for exemption<br />
from postage “Camera<br />
Amm.va Cant. Bellinzona”<br />
Bellinzona, April 26 th , 1801<br />
Letter from the delegates of the<br />
postal administrations of Zurich<br />
and Lucerne, addressed to<br />
Mr. Pierre Guinoni of Lugano.<br />
Bellinzona, 18 settembre 1815.<br />
“The cross of St. Andrew” =<br />
postage-free<br />
The postal service managed by the<br />
Canton of Ticino (1835–1848)<br />
The financial situation of the canton, due to the<br />
huge expenses incurred for the construction<br />
of the main road (Airolo-Chiasso and the main<br />
branches) between 1804 and 1830, imposed extremely<br />
unfavorable conditions for the renewal<br />
of the 1827 agreement, always with Zurich and<br />
Lucerne. Thus, it began to develop the idea of <br />
taking over itself the management of the postal<br />
service which took place in June 1834 by decision<br />
of the Grand Council. In the following years,<br />
the first agreements were also signed with<br />
Austria, the Canton of Grisons and the Sardinian<br />
States. Franchino Rusca was appointed director<br />
of the Ticino postal services, and would occupy<br />
this position until 1848, when he joined the<br />
Council of State. The first years of activity of the<br />
cantonal postal services were marked by difficulties<br />
of all kinds and from the beginning, the<br />
38
The first hand-stamp ...<br />
... the northernmost ...<br />
... and the southernmost<br />
Single weight letter from San Gottardo to Liège. The rate was 30 Cent<br />
as per treaty of July 1st, 1869.Oval hand-stamp ST GOTTARDO, type<br />
II, in use from 1864 to1877, here used 8.9.1871<br />
performance was far below expectations. Despite<br />
all this, considerable efforts were made to improve<br />
the service including: the increase in the<br />
frequency of the stagecoach, the reduction of<br />
travel times, the extension of the network of post<br />
offices on the north-south axis and the opening<br />
of several post offices in the Blenio and Maggia<br />
valleys. In 1843 following the initial experiences,<br />
the structure of the service was revised, with legislative<br />
provisions that would govern the postal<br />
service until the moment it was taken over by<br />
the federal direction. From October 1 st , 1849, all<br />
cantonal postal services were revoked, and the<br />
Confederation assumed the control of the Federal<br />
Postal Services.<br />
The envy of all of Switzerland:<br />
oval hand-stamps of Ticino<br />
It was not long after the resumption of the postal<br />
services by the Confederation that the new director<br />
of the postal district of Bellinzona, Andrea<br />
Fanciola, had the great idea of giving a voice to<br />
postal agencies (offices without accounting), the<br />
number of which grew exponentially until 1880-<br />
85, providing them with hand-stamps unique in<br />
from. Starting in 1852, 79 postal agencies were<br />
equipped with an oval hand-stamp.<br />
Bibliography<br />
Archive of the Circolo Filatelico del Mendrisiotto<br />
Guido Marazzi, Profilo di storia dei servizi postali in<br />
Ticino fino alla seconda metà dell’Ottocento, Direzione<br />
di Circondario Postale Bellinzona, 1995<br />
Note di storia postale del canton Ticino 1798-1848 e<br />
studi filatelici, Circolo filatelico Bellinzona, 1985<br />
Jean J. Winkler, Handbuch der Schweizer Vorphilatelie<br />
1695-1850, Verband Schweizerischer Philatelisten-Vereine,<br />
Zürich, 1968<br />
Web pages: Wikipedia, Dizionario storico della<br />
svizzera<br />
The documents reproduced on pages 4 and 5 are<br />
from the collection of Kurt Baumgartner.<br />
The document reproduced on page 6 is from the<br />
collection of Adriano Bergamini.<br />
39
The “Sitting <strong>Helvetia</strong> Perforate”<br />
Claude Montandon<br />
“Sitting <strong>Helvetia</strong> perforate” is the somewhat<br />
clumsy name used in the stamp catalogues<br />
to designate the postage stamp issue which<br />
was valid between 1862 and 1883 and is the<br />
“godchild” of the <strong>Exhibition</strong> HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong>.<br />
This name was intended to differentiate the issue<br />
from the earlier imperforate issue which was to<br />
be replaced.<br />
The Zumstein Handbook of 1924 comments as<br />
follows:<br />
Much later than originally intended by the<br />
Postal Administration, the new series of stamps<br />
could finally be issued towards the end of the<br />
summer in 1862. It thanks its existence in part to<br />
the proclamation of the new Law on Postal Rates<br />
of 6 February 1862, which came into effect on<br />
1 July 1862 together with the Postal Agreement<br />
with Italy of 8 August 1861.<br />
The new issue differs in a number of respects<br />
from the previous issue, and the reasons for<br />
the change are of general interest. The correspondence<br />
in the official files contains the following<br />
considerations and conclusions:<br />
“Although the printing method used for the 1854<br />
issue was already significantly cheaper than the<br />
lithographic production of the first stamps of the<br />
Confederation, the production costs were still too<br />
high in comparison with those of other countries.<br />
Whilst the costs in the surrounding countries<br />
amounted to 30 – 90 cents per 1000 stamps,<br />
they were 1.25 francs in Switzerland, so that the<br />
desire for a reduction was very obvious.<br />
This significant difference in price results primarily<br />
from the fact that the manufacture of the<br />
silk-thread paper was very expensive, and that<br />
the stamps had a fairly large format. Since this<br />
expensive paper nevertheless provided only an<br />
inadequate protection against forgery, something<br />
cheaper could well be chosen.”<br />
In addition, the beauty of the old stamps appears<br />
not to have justified their expensive production<br />
process, since they received relatively little<br />
applause in comparison with those of other<br />
countries. According to official documents, the<br />
public found that the figure of <strong>Helvetia</strong> had horns<br />
(“horned <strong>Helvetia</strong>”), the eyes are closed (because<br />
the facial features were not recognisable), the<br />
figure should be visible in profile like on the<br />
coins, etc.; reasons enough to make a change in<br />
the production and design.<br />
The production costs were probably more significant<br />
for the decision than the beauty, as there<br />
was a maximum potential saving of 19,000<br />
francs in total for the 19.938 million stamps sold<br />
in the year 1863. This was an enormous sum<br />
in those times. The wishes of the customers for<br />
more easily separable (perforated) stamps had<br />
also to be taken into account. This in particular<br />
because similar efforts were in progress, or already<br />
realised, in the surrounding countries. As<br />
the manufacture of a perforating machine was<br />
expensive, this process was also propagated as<br />
an additional security measure against forgeries.<br />
The Royal Coin-engraver, J.P Riess in Munich,<br />
was entrusted with the drafting and manufacture<br />
of the original dies. The preliminary sketch shown<br />
40
in Illustration 1 demonstrates three changes very<br />
clearly. The figure of <strong>Helvetia</strong> is presented in profile<br />
and the drawing is finer, the designation of<br />
the currency is omitted and, for the first time, the<br />
country name is given as HELVETIA. This is also<br />
the only aspect of this issue, which has survived<br />
over time, as this name still appears today on all<br />
stamps of the Swiss Post.<br />
Illustration 1<br />
As shown by the proof of the original engraving<br />
by Orell Füssli & Cie presented as Illustration 2,<br />
alternative offers were also obtained from competitors.<br />
The background-shading is significantly<br />
finer than in the engraving from Munich which<br />
was finally selected.<br />
The Postal Administration further decided to<br />
utilize a control-mark as an additional security<br />
measure against forgery. This mark, a cross<br />
in a double-oval, was dry-impressed into the<br />
400-stamp paper sheet already in the Papermill<br />
on the Sihl. Since relief-printing was retained, the<br />
paper had to be gummed before printing. The<br />
printing was finally done in the Federal Mint in<br />
Berne. As the process was rather complicated,<br />
the cost-reduction finally achieved was probably<br />
modest.<br />
This stamp-issue falls into a time of relatively<br />
strong expansion of the postal service, both within<br />
Switzerland and also in international traffic.<br />
This, together with the relatively long period of<br />
validity, leads to a wide availability for philately<br />
and therefore also to moderate prices.<br />
Trial prints<br />
The trial prints of this stamp issue are a rich<br />
treasure chest for the specialist. They contain unanticipated<br />
possibilities for the collector, but, in<br />
view of the rarity of various items, there is also a<br />
certain potential for frustration. Many years ago,<br />
Felix Winterstein tried to bring logical classification<br />
to the multiplicity and differentiate between<br />
various categories. One must mention that the<br />
year of production is not clear for most of these<br />
trial prints. For some colours it can be assumed<br />
that they were first prepared for the colour-change<br />
of 1867/75. The same applies to trials on granite<br />
paper, which was first used in 1881. One differentiates<br />
between imperforate and perforate trial prints.<br />
1. Imperforate<br />
Illustration 2<br />
1.1 Trial prints<br />
These are black prints on card or paper,<br />
which were made with a hand-press. There are<br />
three different items with various nominal values<br />
and 9 items with nominal values between 2 cents<br />
and one franc.<br />
41
1.2 Colour trials<br />
Trial prints on paper without control-marks in<br />
colours which were not ultimately used for the<br />
definitive nominal values. Here alone there are<br />
30 items. Then there are 14 various items in the<br />
colours which were ultimately used for the definitive<br />
stamps.<br />
Illustration 3 shows a block of 12 of a black-brown<br />
2 cent stamp. One stamp has a red double-circle<br />
date-stamp “Weissenbach 6 VI 79”. This postmark<br />
is also recorded on a 40 cent green stamp.<br />
Is this a simple mis-perforation of the block or<br />
does this also represent a trial?<br />
Trial prints on original paper with control-marks in<br />
colours which were not ultimately used for the definitive<br />
nominal values (9 different items). A further<br />
4 trials on unperforated original paper are in the<br />
colours which were ultimately used for the issued<br />
stamps. The 60 cent value included here is a special<br />
case because the colour for this stamp was<br />
given as sulphur-yellow in the announcement of<br />
the new stamps in the Post Office Bulletin of 7 August<br />
1862. No conclusive explanations for the later<br />
change to the copper-bronze colour are available.<br />
1.3 Paper trials<br />
19 different trial prints on coloured or metallised<br />
paper without control-mark paper. These include<br />
among others the prints on collodion skin (also<br />
known as goldbeater skin). This paper is soaked<br />
in a special resin solution making it like parchment<br />
paper and is very sensitive.<br />
1.4. Cancellation and washing trials<br />
Cancellation and washing trials were important before<br />
the definitive utilization. This also concerned<br />
the avoidance of double usage to the detriment of<br />
the Post. Here, 15 different items are known.<br />
2. Perforated 11 3/4 : 11 1/2<br />
2.1 Colour trials<br />
11 different items for prints on paper without<br />
control-marks in colours, which were not used<br />
for the definitive stamps. 12 different items are<br />
recorded for the values and colours which were<br />
used for the definitive stamps.<br />
A further 3 items are recorded on original paper<br />
with control-marks in colours, which were not<br />
used for the definitive stamps.<br />
2.2 Colour and paper trials<br />
7 different trials on horizontally or vertically ribbed<br />
paper with control-marks. Effectively a combination<br />
of colour and paper trials.<br />
A further 12 trials are printed in various colours,<br />
or in the definitive colour, on coloured or metallised<br />
paper without control-marks. And finally<br />
there are 4 different trial prints in non-definitive<br />
colours on the granite papier which came into<br />
use as from 1881.<br />
3. Cancellation trials<br />
Illustration 3<br />
Cancellation trials with various date-stamps are<br />
recorded on 6 different values in fantasy or original<br />
colours. One must also mention here that<br />
an imperforate sitting <strong>Helvetia</strong> stamp with an impressed<br />
control-mark has also been found. To<br />
my knowledge, this is so far the only example.<br />
42
The stamps<br />
As already mentioned, the sale to the public<br />
commenced on 1 October 1862 with a delay<br />
of 3 months. And then it was only 4 values as<br />
shown in the table below. Philatelists may thank<br />
the so-called Italy provisional for this. The postage<br />
of 3 cents for printed matter to Italy could only<br />
be paid with one and one half 2 cent stamps of<br />
the sitting <strong>Helvetia</strong> imperforate issue - a postally<br />
ordered bisection of stamps.<br />
The table below shows in summary form the<br />
quantities issued, the date of issue or early date<br />
and the primary utilization of the individual values.<br />
The period of validity was up to the end of<br />
September 1883. Comments to the individual<br />
stamps are given below where appropriate.<br />
2 cents olive<br />
There are a large number of different shades of<br />
colour. The red-brown stamp, to which the above<br />
early date also applies, is particularly popular.<br />
There are repeated uncertainties concerning the<br />
attributions of the pale brown and light yellowishbrown<br />
shades.<br />
10 cents<br />
The colour change from blue to red in the year<br />
1867 was probably made with a view to adjusting<br />
to the colours used for the inland rate in the<br />
German-Austrian Postal Union.<br />
Value Colour Quantity Date of issue Early date Utilizations<br />
millions Early date Granite paper<br />
2 ct. grey 45 01.10.1862 Inland printed matter<br />
2 ct. olive 80 05.02.1874 03.07.1881 Inland printed matter<br />
3 ct. black 6 01.10.1862 Printed matter to Italy<br />
5 ct. brown 210 08.12.1862 23.07.1881 Local letters<br />
10 ct. blue 55 01.10.1862 Inland letters<br />
10 ct. red 240 04.03.1867 22.06.1881 Inland letters<br />
15 ct. yellow 7 01.01.1875 01.09.1881 C.O.D.<br />
20 ct. orange 50 05.03.1863 11.10.1881 Inland regd. letters<br />
25 ct. green 50 01.09.1868 18.10.1881 C.O.D., UPU<br />
30 ct. vermilion 5 01.10.1862 France, Italy<br />
30 ct. ultramarine 18 18.03.1867 France, Italy<br />
40 ct. green 5 30.06.1863 France, Germany/Austria<br />
40 ct. grey 10 05.04.1878 12.09.1881 Court docs., Overseas<br />
50 ct. lilac 8 08.03.1867 29.09.1881 GB, Spain, USA<br />
60 ct. copper-bronze 1 18.05.1863 France, Italy<br />
1 fr. golden 5 18.5.1863 20.9.1881 Overseas<br />
43
30 cents blue<br />
The colour change was necessitated by the colour<br />
change of the 10 cent stamps. As a result of<br />
the establishment of the General Postal Union<br />
and the adjustment of the international postage<br />
rates, this value was practically no longer used<br />
after 1 July 1875 (France 1 January 1876) and<br />
the deliveries discontinued completely in 1879.<br />
40 cents green<br />
As a result of the changed postage rates to<br />
France and the German-Austrian Postal Union,<br />
this value saw very little use after 1869 and the<br />
deliveries discontinued completely in 1874.<br />
1 franc golden<br />
The Collectors recognise here three different<br />
shades. In order to differentiate between them<br />
it is important to be familiar with the above print<br />
process. The stamp which appeared in the year<br />
1863, and which is designated as “reddish goldbronze”<br />
in the catalogues, has a red-brown<br />
background colour. Illustration 4 shows a block<br />
of 10 of these stamps, which are only seldom<br />
seen unused condition. During the course of<br />
time the background print became lighter and<br />
lighter, finally ending up with a watery yellow for<br />
the “golden” stamps.<br />
60 cents copper-bronze<br />
In the instruction of 7 August 1862 concerning<br />
the issue of the new postage stamps, this stamp<br />
war announced as being in sulphur yellow colour.<br />
It appeared in May 1863 in copper bronze.<br />
The printing of the stamps in bronze colours was<br />
first made in the same way as the other stamps.<br />
The printing of the brown ones began with a red<br />
background colour and that for the yellow ones<br />
with a yellow background colour. Immediately after<br />
they came out of the press and the printing<br />
ink was still fresh, the bronze powder was sprinkled<br />
on top. The superfluous bronze powder was<br />
then removed.<br />
This process was unsatisfactory in that the bronze<br />
powder could easily be wiped away and the<br />
surface appeared grainy. The background colour<br />
ink was later rubbed-on with a significantly thicker<br />
varnish. After the bronze powder had been<br />
applied, the plate was carefully cleaned after 80<br />
to 100 prints and the sheets were laid on again in<br />
the same sequence. With this second dry print,<br />
the grainy bronze layer became smooth and<br />
strongly applied and a shine was created.<br />
Illustration 4<br />
44
In 1879 the Postal Administration<br />
resolved to order a new series of<br />
stamps. A new kind of paper, into<br />
which red and blue fibres were mixed<br />
as protection against forgery, was to<br />
be used for this issue. Since delays<br />
in the production and printing again<br />
arose and the stocks of stamps were<br />
depleted, the Post saw itself compelled<br />
to print a new issue of the “sitting <strong>Helvetia</strong><br />
perforate” stamps on the so-called granite paper<br />
in the year 1881. The transition to the 9 new values<br />
was fluid. Since the new issues, “number<br />
design” and “standing <strong>Helvetia</strong>”, appeared already<br />
in April 1882, the higher values in particular<br />
are difficult to find in used condition.<br />
At the end of September 1883, when the “sitting<br />
<strong>Helvetia</strong> perforate” stamps lost their validity, the<br />
Post still had available considerable quantities of<br />
the stamps on granite paper, and also of individual<br />
values on white paper; it was resolved to<br />
sell these at lower prices for collection purposes.<br />
100 sets with a nominal value of Fr. 267 were<br />
sold for only Fr. 28.50. Collectors could therefore<br />
acquire unused stamps cheaply. Since there was<br />
at the same time a shortage of used stamps on<br />
granite paper, the market was in consequence<br />
flooded with stamps with false and subsequent<br />
cancellations. A circular was sent to the post-offices<br />
already in 1896, instructing them to no longer<br />
fulfil requests from the public for subsequent<br />
cancellations.<br />
specialized catalogues. In this summary article<br />
we limit ourselves to a few special items.<br />
The reason for the prominent unprinted area on<br />
the stamp shown in Illustration 5 was a controlmark<br />
impressed too heavily. Through this, an<br />
oval piece of paper from the stamp above in the<br />
stack of paper could fall out and stick firmly. The<br />
printing went over the firmly stuck piece of paper,<br />
which also remained there during cancellation. A<br />
philatelist’s water bath then brought the irregularity<br />
to light.<br />
As we have already seen with the trial prints,<br />
mis-perforations can arise. It is probably rare<br />
that one so extreme as that in Illustration 6 was<br />
not taken out based on the optical check.<br />
The non-perforated “sitting <strong>Helvetia</strong> perforate”<br />
stamp (Illustration 7) was not yet mentioned in<br />
the Zumstein Handbook of 1924. It is one of the<br />
great rarities of this collecting area. We know of<br />
about 20 cancelled examples and a letter with a<br />
pair of these stamps.<br />
Illustration 5, 6 and 7<br />
Varieties and plate-flaws<br />
Because of the relatively large numbers printed<br />
and the demanding printing process, we see a<br />
large number of examples of plate and frame<br />
defects, double embossing and double print, plus<br />
random print varieties and very many shades<br />
of colour. Although these formerly attracted the<br />
interest of philatelists, this is today focussed<br />
increasingly on spectacular individual items.<br />
Interested collectors are therefore referred to the<br />
Cancellations<br />
The long period of validity and the expansion of<br />
the postal traffic during this time has resulted in<br />
an almost infinite variety of cancellations. This<br />
is in particular also because in Switzerland the<br />
Directorates of the Postal Regions were relatively<br />
independent, contrary to in France, where the<br />
Central Authorities regulated everything and<br />
introduced uniformity. The cancellation handbook<br />
of Andres and Emmenegger gives a good insight<br />
45
into this area. Boxed markings, straight-line<br />
markings, oval markings, single-circle markings,<br />
double-circle markings and many more. With<br />
these hundreds of possibilities, every selection<br />
is arbitrary. We therefore show just two attractive<br />
covers.<br />
A good example of a decision by the Regional<br />
Postal Directorate is provided by the oval markings<br />
with a cross in an aureole, which came into<br />
use in 79 postal agencies in Canton Ticino and in<br />
the part of Mesocco in the Grisons. These were<br />
all in Postal Region VIII and hand-made by the<br />
metalwork firm of Salvatore Torriani in Mendrisio.<br />
Illustration 8 shows the marking of the most<br />
northerly postal agency in Canton Ticino on the<br />
Gotthard pass. Postage 10 cents for a single inland<br />
letter.<br />
The marking OHMSTALL-NIEDERWIL is an<br />
exotic example from Canton Lucerne (Illustration<br />
9). A registered letter from 23 February<br />
1881 from the Parish Council of Ohmstall-<br />
Niederwil to the Parish Council of Ebersecken.<br />
These two places lie about 2.2 kilometres apart<br />
so this is a local registered letter correctly<br />
franked at 25 cents including the 20 cents registration<br />
fee. There is only one other example of<br />
a double-circle marking with the place-name in<br />
“elzevier” type and with the two dotted lines in<br />
the inner circle, and this also comes from Canton<br />
Lucerne.<br />
Illustration 8<br />
Illustration 9<br />
46
Bisects<br />
As mentioned above, the Post ordered the use<br />
of one and a half imperforate 2 cent stamps<br />
for the franking of printed matter to Italy in the<br />
period from 1 July to 31 September 1862. We<br />
usually find this combination on examples of the<br />
“Gazzetta Ticinese”.<br />
Afterwards, bisects were no longer allowed. But<br />
there was clearly a generous tolerance margin.<br />
Thus, at least 10 letters with bisected blue<br />
10 cent stamps are known from the Chiasso<br />
area alone. It was theoretically possible that no<br />
5 cents stamps were available in an office and<br />
that one had to reach for the scissors to solve<br />
the problem. One sees some examples from the<br />
1860’s. Later there are more and more attempts<br />
to use bisects to the detriment of the Post, and<br />
also philatelists who manufactured a cover.<br />
About 20 years ago, there was much discussion<br />
under philatelists concerning the bisects, respectively<br />
their correct definition. Some rejected<br />
taxed letters, others decried non-taxed bisects<br />
as curiosities. This is not of interest to us here as<br />
the question appears rather academic to us. It<br />
would be more important to examine whether all<br />
these bisects are also actually genuine. Doubts<br />
may be appropriate for a number of the examples<br />
on offer.<br />
Illustrations 10 and 11 show two letters from the<br />
same correspondence with a bisected stamp.<br />
Yes, you are reading this correctly, this is one and<br />
the same stamp, which was cut with scissors.<br />
The letters are from Bellevue and addressed to<br />
Petit Saconnex. One was sent on 5 August and<br />
the other on 6 August 1868. The distance between<br />
the places was about 6 kilometres, so the<br />
postage of 5 cents was correct. Each letter was<br />
subjected to 5 cents postage due. Up to September<br />
1871, unfranked local letters cost only<br />
5 cents. No additional charge was raised. The<br />
recipient was probably disappointed at the outcome<br />
of this experiment, but it was a good deal<br />
for the Post office.<br />
Illustration 11<br />
Illustration 10<br />
47
Mixed frankings<br />
Mixed frankings between two different<br />
stamp issues are attractive<br />
because they were usually only<br />
possible during a short period of time.<br />
Certain combinations are even<br />
only seldom found. Already in the<br />
year 1978, an attempt to catalogue<br />
the possible mixed frankings of the<br />
“Sitting <strong>Helvetia</strong> perforate” was published<br />
for the first time in the Berner<br />
Briefmarkenzeitung. A system was<br />
developed and the tables are shown<br />
in the Zumstein Spezialkatalog.<br />
Illustration 12<br />
Illustration 12 shows the 2 and 5<br />
cent stamps in combination with a<br />
3 cent stamp of the perforate issue.<br />
This gives the postage of 10 cents<br />
for a simple inland letter. An unusual<br />
combination in ideal condition.<br />
As regards Illustration 13, a number<br />
of questions will arise as to whether<br />
this is in fact a mixed franking. But<br />
these are effectively not simply<br />
brown shades of the 5 cent stamp.<br />
They are actually one stamp on<br />
white paper and one stamp on granite<br />
paper, i.e. a mixed franking between<br />
two different stamp issues.<br />
Effectively, no great attention is normally<br />
given to this for the “Sitting<br />
<strong>Helvetia</strong> perforate” issue. But, with<br />
stamps of the same nominal values,<br />
these are rarities.<br />
Illustration 14 again shows a mixed<br />
franking with stamps of the same<br />
nominal values. But here there<br />
are two stamps of the “cross and<br />
number” issue together with the<br />
“Sitting <strong>Helvetia</strong> perforate” stamp.<br />
This colour combination on this registered<br />
letter is a real eye-catcher.<br />
Illustration 13<br />
Illustration 14<br />
48
This post-wagon cover from Unterhallau<br />
to Schaffhausen (Illustration 15) is<br />
again one of the great rarities of this<br />
collecting area. Combinations of the<br />
three issues “Sitting <strong>Helvetia</strong> perforate”,<br />
“Cross and number” and “Standing<br />
<strong>Helvetia</strong>” are generally scarce.<br />
But the 40 cent stamp on this cover is<br />
in addition one of the rare stamps on<br />
granite paper.<br />
Utilization<br />
For this stamp issue too, the primary<br />
interest up until the 1970’s was to<br />
collect loose stamps. This was also<br />
thanks to the many pre-printed stamp<br />
albums available on the market, whose<br />
spaces had to be filled. The stamps<br />
had to be removed from the disturbing<br />
paper which adhered to them. This<br />
changed when, in 1974 the “Schweiz<br />
Spezialsammler-Vereinigung” published<br />
a booklet “About the frankings<br />
of the sitting <strong>Helvetia</strong> perforate” for its<br />
50th Anniversary. One of the authors,<br />
Felix Winterstein, then achieved at<br />
the National <strong>Exhibition</strong> in Lausanne<br />
in 1978 the highest award for his exhibit<br />
of frankings, the first time for such<br />
a “modern exhibit”. With this the breakthrough<br />
was achieved and postal history collecting took<br />
its course. The development of the postal services<br />
within Switzerland, and in particular also<br />
the many simplifications and price reductions in<br />
the international traffic up to the Universal Postal<br />
Union, made their contribution to the massive increase<br />
in the postal traffic.<br />
The examples shown here give an indication of<br />
the multiplicity of the possibilities. There can be<br />
no attempt at completeness as this would go beyond<br />
all bounds.<br />
Inland<br />
Illustration 15<br />
Illustration 16<br />
Parcels and insured items had to be sent by the<br />
wagon-post. Since the franking of post-wagon<br />
items was originally not allowed because concerns<br />
arose as to the adhesion of the stamps on<br />
the packets, we find relatively few such items.<br />
This restriction was first lifted with an instruction<br />
in 1878. In Illustration 16 we see a letter with a<br />
declared value of 220 francs franked with a 50<br />
cent stamp on granite paper. This amount comprised:<br />
postage of 40 cents for the wagon-post<br />
and 3 cents insurance fee per 100 francs. The<br />
sum of 49 cents was rounded up to 50 cents.<br />
49
The express delivery of inland letters<br />
was introduced on 1 January 1868.<br />
Already after eight months, it was extended<br />
to other letters and wagon-post<br />
items. Such despatches had to bear<br />
the indication “By Express”. Up to a distance<br />
of 1.2 kilometres from the postoffice,<br />
the express fee on top of the letter<br />
postage amounted to 30 cents. Beyond<br />
that, it was 50 cents per half-hour<br />
(2.4 km). For a distance of more than<br />
2 hours, the price was one franc per<br />
half-hour. As from 1 September 1868,<br />
it was decreed that this additional fee<br />
had to be paid with stamps affixed to an<br />
express delivery slip („Express-Bestellzettel“).<br />
For this reason, we only find<br />
express fees on letters in exceptional<br />
cases. Usually, only the remaining traces<br />
of the slip, which had been stuckon<br />
are to be seen, as in the case of Illustration<br />
17. For this example, we can<br />
see from the address that the express<br />
fee amounted to 30 cents.<br />
Post-cards with imprinted stamps were<br />
introduced in Switzerland on 1 October<br />
1870. The imprints were first in red and<br />
then, from January 1874, in brown.<br />
Since they cost only 5 cents, they<br />
were quickly popular with the public for<br />
short messages. Since the cards could<br />
also be used for other postal services,<br />
such as C.O.D., which cost extra, they had to<br />
be supplemented with stamps. Such examples<br />
are significantly less easy to find, in particular in<br />
the local delivery area. However, this registered<br />
postcard to Geneva is really rare (Illustration<br />
18). As from 1 September 1871, the registration<br />
fee was 10 cents. This also applied to postcards.<br />
When it was handed-in at the post-office<br />
in Dottikon, the “CHARGÉ” handstamp was<br />
applied, but the underpayment probably not<br />
noticed, and the card was sent on its way. At<br />
the latest in Geneva, 5 cents postage due was<br />
noted. This is interesting in that the postage rate<br />
Illustration 17<br />
Illustration 18<br />
law of 1871 provided for an additional penalty<br />
charge of 5 cents for underfranked letters.<br />
However, only the single missing amount was<br />
charged. This had a certain logic in that the<br />
postage for the card was covered and only a<br />
portion of the registration fee was missing. The<br />
registered postcard had further been handed-in<br />
at the post-office counter. Thus, it was actually<br />
the post-office’s mistake and the customer was<br />
not charged a penalty. This procedure was also<br />
used in the other cases of insufficiently franked<br />
registered letters that I have seen.<br />
50
Private postcards without an<br />
imprinted stamp were first permitted<br />
after 1874. As the item<br />
in Illustration 19 shows, hotels<br />
used this possibility for advertising.<br />
The Hotel Bienenberg<br />
above Liestal, which still exists<br />
today, praises itself in the highest<br />
tones with words and a<br />
picture. An interesting testimony<br />
from the heyday of the spa<br />
culture. This card to Basle was<br />
handed-in in at the post-office<br />
in Niederschönthal, the nearest<br />
one to the hotel.<br />
The Federal Law on the postal monopoly of<br />
4 June 1849 made the transport of money<br />
despatches up to a weight of 10 pounds subject<br />
to the monopoly. Since it was not permitted<br />
to supplement the first money-transfer cards<br />
bearing value imprints of from 20 to 60 cents of<br />
1867 and 1869 with stamps, the change in the<br />
law in 1876 brought a change with the increase<br />
in the maximum amount to 1000 francs. Through<br />
Illustration 19<br />
the increase in the rates by 10 cents, there was<br />
no longer a possibility to use the 20-cent-forms.<br />
The Post therefore resolved that in future all<br />
charges could with immediate effect be covered<br />
with supplementary stamps. The money-transfer<br />
card bearing a value of 60 cents for a moneytransfer<br />
in the maximum amount of 1000 francs<br />
(Illustration 20) therefore had to be additionally<br />
franked with stamps to the value of 60 cents.<br />
Illustration 20<br />
51
Illustration 21<br />
Illustration 22<br />
Postage due stamps were introduced in Switzerland<br />
on 1 July 1878. There were 33 different<br />
issues with the same design, which was a record<br />
for Switzerland. These stamps were affixed to<br />
un- or underfranked postal items as a receipt for<br />
the amount still to be paid. Their use in combination<br />
with the “Sitting <strong>Helvetia</strong> perforate” stamps<br />
was possible for almost 5 years but examples<br />
are not often seen.<br />
The example in Illustration 21 was not accepted<br />
as printed matter and was taxed. As from<br />
1 September 1876, double the postage less<br />
the stamps used was charged for unfranked or<br />
underfranked letters. In the case of this local<br />
letter, this meant 2 times 5 cents minus 2 cents.<br />
This gave the 8 cents which are here represented<br />
by blue postage due stamps.<br />
Very few collectors are aware of the special rate<br />
for the return of printed matter received on approval<br />
which was resolved in 1873 and came into<br />
effect on 1 January 1874.<br />
Weight<br />
Rate for return<br />
up to 50 grams 2 cents<br />
50–100 grams 3 cents<br />
250–500 grams 5 cents<br />
500–1000 grams half the postal-wagon rate<br />
In the example shown in Illustration 22, Mr.<br />
Battaglia in Feldis returned the Teachers’<br />
Calendar promptly unfranked. The Post then<br />
charged the bookseller in Chur only the reduced<br />
rate of 3 cents. This procedure reminds one<br />
somehow of all the many Internet orders, which<br />
can also be returned unfranked.<br />
52
International<br />
The Swiss Confederation concluded new postal<br />
agreements with a large number of countries<br />
between 1862 and 1874. These brought simplifications<br />
in the bilateral postal traffic and usually<br />
a reduction in the rates, which led to larger volumes.<br />
The postal transit to more distant territories<br />
was often made using neighbouring countries.<br />
This resulted in a fascinating multiplicity of<br />
possible routings and tariffs. The establishment<br />
of the General Postal Union in the year 1874<br />
brought significant changes. For the founder<br />
members, this Agreement came into effect on<br />
1 July 1875 (for France 1 January 1876). The<br />
new uniform tariffs and the discontinuation of the<br />
mutual billing simplified enormously the postal<br />
traffic between the countries. This example,<br />
which is cited in the Jubilee publication of the<br />
SSV, could not be more impressive.<br />
A sender, who in the year 1876 intended to send a 15 gram letter to Peru, was offered the following alternatives by the<br />
Post Office:<br />
Routing via Prepayment to: Rate:<br />
France a) through the Magellan Strait Port of landing 105 cents<br />
b) via Colon and Panama Port of landing 135 cents<br />
Germany a) via Hamburg Destination 125 cents<br />
b) other routes Destination 150 cents<br />
England Port of landing 195 cents<br />
United States Port of landing 120 cents<br />
Antwerp Port of landing 85 cents<br />
Three years later the same sender could simply frank his letter with 40 cents….<br />
Illustration 23<br />
53
The examples given here serve to illustrate the<br />
multiplicity possible.<br />
According to the postal agreement with the Kingdom<br />
of Italy of 1862, a letter up to 10 gr. cost 30<br />
cents. The weight of 17 gr. noted at the top right<br />
in red crayon indicates the second weight stage.<br />
The registration fee of 30 cents had to be added<br />
to the postage of 60 cents. The sender apparently<br />
had a large stock of 3 cent stamps which<br />
he wanted to use up. Supplemented with 2 x 2<br />
cent and 2 x 30 cent stamps, a total of 91 cents<br />
resulted, i.e. 1 cent too much (Illustration 23).<br />
In view of the cost of printing stamps, the Postal<br />
Administration wanted to avoid the use of large<br />
quantities of low-value stamps on postal items<br />
and issued an instruction on 18 November 1876<br />
regarding the stocks of stamps at the postoffices<br />
and the use of the stamps. This was naturally<br />
irrelevant for private persons.<br />
As from 15 August 1859, the postage for a<br />
single weight letter to France was set at 40<br />
cents. The sender of the letter in Illustration 24<br />
then tried to cover these 40 cents with French<br />
and Swiss stamps. Quite correctly, this attempt<br />
was not accepted by the Post because foreign<br />
stamps were not valid in Switzerland. The letter<br />
was therefore marked „Insuffisant“. The handstamp<br />
“4”, which had been provided by the<br />
French postal administration, shows in décimes<br />
the amount to be paid by the addressee. Since<br />
insufficiently franked letters to and from France<br />
were at this time treated like unfranked letters,<br />
i.e. without taking the franking into account, and<br />
as there was currency parity between France<br />
and Switzerland thanks to the Latin Currency<br />
Union, the amount due was 40 centimes.<br />
According to Article 12 of the implementation<br />
rules to the postal agreement with France, repayment<br />
of the franking, for which no credit had<br />
been given, could be demanded from the Swiss<br />
Postal Administration within six months by the<br />
sender or by the addressee. However, the postal<br />
item had then to be handed over at the post office<br />
counter, which for folded lettersheets with<br />
business correspondence, would probably only<br />
occur in exceptional cases.<br />
Illustration 24<br />
54
Illustration 25<br />
Illustration 26<br />
Before 1 January 1873, postcards sent abroad<br />
were tolerated, but the Post treated them like<br />
letters. The frontier zone with Germany extended<br />
to 7 geographic miles (52.5 kilometres) in a<br />
direct line from one post-office to the other. This<br />
card from Zurich to Thiengen near Waldshut was<br />
therefore stamped “RL” (Rayon Limitrophe) and<br />
was correctly franked with 10 cents (Illustration<br />
25). The printed back of the card is an interesting<br />
exception to the norm (Illustration 26).<br />
Letters from Switzerland to the USA weighing<br />
up to 7.5 grams cost 110 cents if they were sent<br />
via France. One finds such items relatively frequently.<br />
Underfranked letters are much scarcer<br />
and of greater interest. The letter from the<br />
District Court in Martigny shown in Illustration<br />
27 weighed 9 grams (note in ink at top left) and<br />
was therefore in the second weight stage. The<br />
postage should therefore have been 220 cents.<br />
It was, however, franked in error at only at 160<br />
cents and marked with the “PD” handstamp.<br />
The error was noticed in the railway post-office<br />
from Neuchâtel to Pontarlier, which here functioned<br />
as the exchange office with France. The<br />
“PD” was over-stamped with the small oval obliterator<br />
used only in this postoffice and the marking<br />
“AFFR.INSUF.” was applied. The French<br />
frontier-office of Pontarlier confirmed the receipt<br />
with its characteristic handstamp.<br />
55
The accountancy mark “24”<br />
(cents) shows the amount due<br />
to France. Finally, the recipient<br />
in New York had to pay 60 U.S.<br />
cents (in notes). This amount<br />
was the equivalent of 42 U.S.<br />
cents in gold, which equalled 210<br />
gold centimes. The relationship<br />
between the gold- and papercurrency<br />
of the USA varied from<br />
day to day. As already mentioned<br />
for Illustration 25, the franking was<br />
also here not taken into account in<br />
calculating the postage due.<br />
Illustration 27<br />
Universal Postal Union<br />
As already explained, the postage<br />
rate for a letter up to 15 grams was<br />
standardized at 25 cents as from<br />
1 July 1875 for the countries of the<br />
Universal Postal Union. Illustration<br />
28 shows how such a franking can<br />
also be attractive. If the addressee<br />
in Stockholm was a philatelist, he<br />
would certainly have been very<br />
pleased with this envelope.<br />
Illustration 28<br />
The new UPU tariff of 1 April 1879<br />
reduced to rate for 15 gram letters<br />
to overseas member countries from<br />
50 to 40 cents. This excluded the<br />
USA and Canada, for which the rate<br />
remained at 25 cents. Illustration<br />
29 shows a letter of this period to<br />
a wellknown address in Yokohama.<br />
The postal money transfer service<br />
to foreign countries began with Sardinia<br />
in the year 1861. Subsequently, there were<br />
bilateral agreements with many countries. Here<br />
too, the UPU stepped in. At the 2nd World Post<br />
Congress in Paris, an agreement concerning<br />
Illustration 29<br />
money transfers was reached, which came into<br />
effect on 1 April 1879. Illustration 30 shows an old<br />
form from 1875, which could also be used up for<br />
Germany and Austria after 1 April 1879.<br />
56
The money transfer of Fr. 256.25 went<br />
to Blowitz in Bohemia. The fee is comprised<br />
as follows: the first 50 francs<br />
cost 50 cents. There then came 25<br />
cents for each further 25 francs. The<br />
9 times 25 cents for the remaining Fr.<br />
206.25 rounded-up to Fr. 225.00 gives<br />
the supplementary franking of Fr. 2.25<br />
- so all is correct.<br />
Illustration 30<br />
The 10 x 2 cent stamps plus a 5<br />
cent stamp are accurately affixed<br />
at an angle of 45% (Illustration 31).<br />
As we have already seen above,<br />
a franking comprising so many<br />
stamps was not quite what the<br />
Post desired as it was concerned<br />
with the cost of producing the<br />
stamps. Imagination knows no<br />
limits – an attractive curiosity.<br />
Illustration 31<br />
Illustrations<br />
All the illustrations in this article were generously made available to us by the Museum for Communication,<br />
<strong>Helvetia</strong>strasse 16, 3000 Berne 6. We wish to express our hearty thanks to them.<br />
57
The Universal Postal Union (UPU)<br />
Issue of 1900<br />
Roberto Lopez, CPhH<br />
With the industrial revolution, communications<br />
both inland and abroad increased constantly<br />
as from the middle of the 19th Century. In consequence,<br />
the letter traffic also increased massively<br />
and the need for a better organised international<br />
postal service became more and more<br />
pressing. Unsuccessful attempts were started in<br />
1841 by the German economist J. v. Herrfeldt.<br />
The idea lay fallow until the year 1863.<br />
Montgomery<br />
Blair 1813-1883<br />
In August 1862, Montgomery<br />
Blair, the Postmaster General<br />
of the United States,<br />
drew attention to the difficulties<br />
in the international letter<br />
traffic and trading of various<br />
American enterprises (there<br />
were bilateral agreements,<br />
every country had a different<br />
tariff, etc.).<br />
Blair was supported by the then President, Abraham<br />
Lincoln, and an international conference with<br />
15 participants from European and American<br />
countries was organised in May 1863. The objective<br />
was to work out common modalities and<br />
introduce simplified postal tariffs. The desired<br />
success was unfortunately<br />
not achieved, although the<br />
tariffs were subsequently<br />
simplified somewhat.<br />
Heinrich Von Stephan<br />
1831-1897<br />
On 15th September 1874,<br />
Heinrich von Stephan,<br />
Postmaster General of the<br />
North German Confederation<br />
at the time, organised<br />
an international conference with the objective of<br />
founding an international postal union. The invitation<br />
was by the Swiss Federal Councillor Eugène<br />
Borel (Federal Councillor from 1873 to 1875,<br />
Head of the UPU from 1875 up to his death). The<br />
conference took place in Berne and received 22<br />
representatives from 22 different countries.<br />
This conference was the<br />
foundation stone for the<br />
Berne Agreement of 9th<br />
October 1874, which made<br />
possible the establishment<br />
of the “Union générale des<br />
postes”. It unified the whole<br />
of Europe, the United States<br />
of America and Egypt. The<br />
“frontiers” between these<br />
Eugène Borel<br />
1835-1892<br />
united countries fell in order to make place for an<br />
extended postal confederation. The tariffs were<br />
to be unified and reduced.<br />
The City of Berne was selected as the domicile<br />
of the UPU. The official language is French and<br />
English was introduced as a working language<br />
as from 1994.<br />
The new simplified tariffs came into effect on 1st<br />
July 1875, except for France, also a founding<br />
member, which introduced the tariffs first on 1st<br />
January 1876. At the Paris Conference in 1878,<br />
the name of the organisation was changed to<br />
“Union Postale Universelle (UPU)”.<br />
58
The following basic international postal rates between UPU signatory states were established as from<br />
1st July 1875:<br />
Printed matter Postcards Letters (to 15 grams)<br />
5 centimes 10 centimes 25 centimes<br />
Eugène Ruffy (Federal Councillor from 1893 to<br />
1899) became the Director of the UPU in 1899. In<br />
April 1900 he motivated the Federal Councillors<br />
and former colleagues to organise a celebration<br />
on 2nd July 1900 for the 25th Anniversary of the<br />
UPU. Three stamps with the nominal values of<br />
5, 10 and 25 centimes, plus two postal stationery<br />
cards of 5 and 10 centimes, were issued for this<br />
occasion. The validity of these stamps extended<br />
from 2nd July 1900 up to 31st December 1900.<br />
The three values of the first plate (SBK 1 77A-79A)<br />
As already mentioned, two postal stationery<br />
cards of 5 and 10 centimes, with the same validity<br />
period as the stamps, were prepared for this<br />
event. The green 5 centime card was intended<br />
for inland use and the red 10 centime card for<br />
international use.<br />
As with the postage stamps, these cards also<br />
show numerous varieties, which constitute a<br />
special area.<br />
Swiss Federal Council 1900<br />
These stamps were designed by Eugène Grasset<br />
(Lausanne/Paris) and were engraved by Florian<br />
Frédéric in Paris, whose real name was Frédéric<br />
Rognon. The printing from the copper plates was<br />
entrusted to Max Girardet, who had printed the<br />
standing <strong>Helvetia</strong> issues among others.<br />
The face values of 5, 10 and 25 centimes correspond<br />
to the basic rates and the colours green,<br />
red and blue correspond to the new requirements<br />
which had been in force since 1896. One<br />
can differentiate between three different plates,<br />
which specialists have also plated in full (Literature<br />
reference 1).<br />
Postcard (PK 033; Literature reference 2) from<br />
Berne to Paris. First date of issue with a razorblade<br />
date stamp (4.02; Literature reference 5).<br />
1 SBK stands for Schweizerischer Briefmarken Katalog (Swiss<br />
Stamp <strong>Catalogue</strong>)<br />
59
The card illustrated below (PK 032) with a supplementary<br />
franking of 5 centimes (SBK 77A)<br />
sent from Interlaken to Wetzlar shows the variety<br />
“Sun in textband” and was further used on the<br />
first day of use, 2nd July 1900.<br />
This canceller was only used for three days, from<br />
2nd to 4th July 1900.<br />
Philatelic documents with this canceller are naturally<br />
very sought after by collectors, especially<br />
when they are not selfmade. The following registered<br />
letter from Berne to New York fulfils the<br />
collecting criteria entirely.<br />
PK 032.P07, socalled “Sun in text-band”<br />
Although the validity period of 6 months, from<br />
2.07.1900 up to 31.12.1900, is very limited, many<br />
collecting possibilities remain open. One can,<br />
for example, make a traditional collection, which<br />
covers the three stamp issues, essays, a wide<br />
variety of postmarks, colour varieties and usages<br />
on letters. A postal history collection with<br />
many different destinations is also possible. One<br />
can also specialise in the varieties or even make<br />
a plating collection.<br />
Registered letter from Berne to New York with<br />
the special postmark of 2nd July 1900<br />
The more unusual a letter is, the more interesting<br />
it becomes. It naturally takes much patience, and<br />
also the knowledge, to recognise such items and<br />
sometimes one needs luck too.<br />
Special first day postmark from Frédéric de<br />
Coppet for the 25th Anniversary of the UPU<br />
Naturally, a special canceller was made for the<br />
25th Anniversary of the UPU. This was manufactured<br />
by Frédéric de Coppet, Lausanne.<br />
R.S/& Co (R19, Literature reference 3) Robert<br />
Schwarzenbach & Co, Ferggerei, Thalwil; in use<br />
from 1899 to 1931.<br />
60
The next document shows an unusually high<br />
franking, one for the 8th weight-stage, with postage<br />
of 2 francs (6x79B and standing <strong>Helvetia</strong>,<br />
74D) for the despatch of a heavy item from Thalwil<br />
to London. All the stamps were perforated<br />
(“perfins”).<br />
Enlargement of one of the perforated<br />
stamps;<br />
R, S = Robert Schwarzenbach,<br />
below<br />
& Co = and Company<br />
The UPU expanded more and more and continually<br />
improved its services. The stages of this<br />
continuous development are characterised by<br />
numerous Conferences and Congresses (Paris<br />
1878, Lisbon 1885, Vienna 1891, Washington<br />
1897, Rome 1906, Madrid 1920, Stockholm<br />
1924, London 1929, Cairo 1934, just to mention<br />
the first).<br />
The Washington Congress of 1897 brought a<br />
further change, under which the stamps of all<br />
member states for the three basic international<br />
rates had to have the same colours:<br />
Printed matter Post-cards Letters<br />
(to 15 grams)<br />
Green Red Blue<br />
As the last, I would like to introduce to you a registered<br />
first day postcard with Yokohama as its<br />
destination. Attractive and unusual frankings to<br />
foreign countries are not everyday items after<br />
the simplification of the rates from 1st July 1875.<br />
However, finds can be made at stamp shows<br />
and in auctions.<br />
For Switzerland this had the consequence that<br />
the stamps of the number design and the standing<br />
<strong>Helvetia</strong> stamps had to be changed.<br />
You can see that there are various ways to have<br />
fun and enjoyment with the stamps of this issue<br />
in spite of their modest period of validity.<br />
Literature<br />
Schweiz UPU - Die Ausgabe zum 25jährigen Jubiläum<br />
der Gründung des Weltpostvereins, René Gees,<br />
Kottelat & Cie, Bern.<br />
Schweizer Ganzsachen-Handbuch 1846-1906,<br />
Martin Baer, 2019.<br />
Swiss Perfin, Marin Baer, 2014.<br />
Registered postcard from Seewen via San Francisco<br />
to Yokohama from 2nd July 1900.<br />
www.lopez-phila.ch/wa_files/exposition_(1).pdf,<br />
Roberto Lopez, 2018.<br />
Handbuch “Rasierklingenstempel” der Schweiz,<br />
Hans J. Zinken et al., 2015.<br />
Congresso Filatelico Internazionale, Lugano,<br />
Giugno 1934.<br />
61
FIP – Fédération Internationale de Philatélie<br />
- a brief introduction to the history of the FIP<br />
Bernard Beston, FIP President<br />
In the year 2025 the Federation Internationale<br />
de Philatelie will be 100 years old. It was founded<br />
on 18 June 1926 when seven Nations joined<br />
together in to form the body colloquially known<br />
as FIP. At <strong>Helvetia</strong> <strong>2022</strong> where the body is honoured<br />
by its own day it will have its 97th Birthday.<br />
The founding countries who assembled in Paris<br />
were:<br />
– Switzerland<br />
Willy Bigwood<br />
(Belgium)<br />
Dr. Jules Suter<br />
(Switzerland)<br />
– France<br />
– Germany<br />
– Netherlands<br />
– Austria<br />
– Czechoslovakia<br />
– Belgium<br />
The original concept was to call the Body “The<br />
Bureau Internationale de la Philatelie” (International<br />
Bureau of Philately), but this name was not<br />
adopted by the inaugural Congress. Interestingly,<br />
the French spelling of the name, in an Anglo<br />
world, has survived. The new body was registered<br />
in Switzerland under Swiss law and remains<br />
so today.<br />
The founding President was Willy Bigwood (Belgium)<br />
and a key founding member was the Swiss<br />
Dr. Jules Suter, who held various important philatelic<br />
positions.<br />
Dr. Suter was among others 1926 founding<br />
member and first president of the Swiss Spezialsammler-Vereins<br />
and OC member and Jury<br />
member of NABA 1934 in Zurich. In addition, he<br />
was a Jury member of the IPOSTA 1930. In 1945<br />
he signed as founding member of the Consilium<br />
Philateliae Helveticae in the meaning of a council<br />
for Swiss philately. His business friend Iwan<br />
Bally was elected in 1946 as a dedicated collector<br />
at the the first elections for admission to the<br />
then 10-member Consilium at that time.<br />
The current President is Bernard Beston, Australia.<br />
Other major European stamp collecting<br />
countries, Italy, Hungary and Greece joined in<br />
the year 1927. At this time, it is estimated that<br />
the member Nations comprised over 40,000 active<br />
collectors who held membership of Societies<br />
and clubs. By 1938 these were joined by Poland,<br />
Denmark, Yugoslavia, Luxembourg, Bulgaria,<br />
Finland, Spain, Latvia and Sweden.<br />
The first nations from the new world joined in<br />
1936 (Brasil) and 1938 (United States of Ameri-<br />
62
ca); followed by Netherlands Indies (Indonesia)<br />
in 1938. FIP now enjoyed a membership of 22.<br />
One of the first actions of the new body was to<br />
establish Regulations for the Exhibits entered<br />
into international <strong>Exhibition</strong>s recognised by the<br />
new International Federation of Philately. These<br />
have been a revised and amended from time to<br />
time.<br />
The FIP Congress held every two years is the<br />
Supreme Governing body. The Board is now<br />
comprised of 7 Directors, and no Country may<br />
have more have one Director. This year the FIP<br />
will hold its 76th Congress in Jakarta, Indonesia.<br />
By opening date of <strong>Helvetia</strong> <strong>2022</strong> there will be 92<br />
members of FIP.<br />
The aims of F.I.P. are:<br />
• to promote stamp collecting and philately<br />
• to maintain friendly relations and friendship<br />
among all peoples.<br />
• to establish and maintain close relations<br />
with the philatelic trade and postal administrations.<br />
• to define at the highest level the characteristics<br />
of consistency and quality for<br />
international philatelic exhibitions and<br />
competitions.<br />
• to promote philatelic exhibitions by granting<br />
Patronage and Recognition<br />
The hobby of Stamp Collecting has occupied for<br />
over a century maintained the first place among<br />
all hobbies and it earned the distinction of being<br />
nicknamed “The King of the Hobbies and the<br />
Hobby of Kings”. Whilst Kings and Kingdoms are<br />
mostly an historical event, stamp collecting has<br />
maintained its special attraction, and philately is<br />
alive and well!.<br />
Stamp shows and Philatelic <strong>Exhibition</strong>s are the<br />
best platform to promote philately and were introduced<br />
two centuries ago as “Salons of Stamps”<br />
and have grown to exhibitions with an area of<br />
more than 100’000 m 2 . At the beginning these<br />
shows were organised and financed by local<br />
stamp collector’s clubs for their immediate public<br />
and developed to World affairs as joint ventures<br />
between the host country’s Postal Administration,<br />
National Philatelic Federation and members<br />
of the Stamp Trade.<br />
Seminars for beginners and senior collectors<br />
as well as for philatelic jurors (national and international)<br />
are being organised at all the above<br />
<strong>Exhibition</strong>s under the supervision of the different<br />
FIP Commissions. Many of these are now being<br />
made available on the Internet.<br />
In the third millennium, F.I.P. launched new type<br />
of philatelic competitions:<br />
Starting in 2004 – The WORLD STAMP<br />
CHAMPIONSHIP (the Olympiad of stamp<br />
collectors) in Singapore. The second one<br />
took place in Tel Aviv, Israel, in 2008, the third<br />
one in Jakarta, Indonesia, in 2012, the fourth<br />
in Taipei, Chinese Taipei, in 2016. The fifth in<br />
Jerusalem, Israel, in 2018.<br />
One Frame, Open Philately and Modern Philately<br />
Exhibits are now well integrated in FIP<br />
exhibitions. Picture Post Cards are now an<br />
accepted entrant.<br />
Virtual Stamp <strong>Exhibition</strong>s<br />
This year there are 5 International FIP <strong>Exhibition</strong>s<br />
with FIP Patronage; plus 2 FIP Recognised<br />
<strong>Exhibition</strong>s. A world record for the sheer number.<br />
FIP is convinced that postage stamps will always<br />
maintain their status as “little ambassadors” of a<br />
Nation and therefore also stamp collecting and<br />
philately, the study of stamps and their use will<br />
weather any storms that come their way.<br />
63
The HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong><br />
ORGANIZING COMITTEE<br />
ADRIANO BERGAMINI<br />
Chairman & Sponsoring<br />
FIP Contact<br />
ROLF LEUTHARD<br />
Deputy Chairman<br />
President of the<br />
Federation of Swiss<br />
Philatelic Societies<br />
JÜRG ROTH<br />
<strong>Catalogue</strong> & Advertising<br />
JEAN VORUZ<br />
Secretary<br />
JEAN-MARC SEYDOUX<br />
Commissioner General<br />
GIAN FRANCO BELLINI<br />
Deputy Commissioner<br />
General & Swiss National<br />
Commissioner<br />
64
PIERRE SCHULTHESS<br />
Finance<br />
KURT KIMMEL<br />
Member<br />
DAMIAN LÄGE<br />
Member<br />
HELMUTH AVI<br />
Booth Sales & Liaison<br />
ROBERTO LEBER<br />
Philamovie Contest<br />
BERNARD JIMENEZ<br />
FIP Consultant<br />
YVAN DE CARLI<br />
Logistics<br />
LORENZO LEGGERI<br />
Deputy Secretary &<br />
Reception<br />
FRANÇOIS BERNATH<br />
Legal Affairs<br />
65
Commissioner General<br />
Jean-Marc Seydoux<br />
Switzerland<br />
Email: commissioner@helvetia<strong>2022</strong>.ch<br />
National Commissioners<br />
Daniel Hugo Mello Teggia<br />
Argentina<br />
Suren Simonyan<br />
Armenia<br />
Geoffrey Kellow<br />
Australia<br />
Horst Horin<br />
Austria<br />
Layla Abdulla Mahdi<br />
Dohrab, Bahrain<br />
Mohammed Monirul Islam<br />
Bangladesh<br />
Koenraad Bracke<br />
Belgium<br />
Ygor Pradella Chrispin<br />
Brazil<br />
Orlin Todorov<br />
Bulgaria<br />
Christian Mouat<br />
Chile<br />
Santiago Cruz<br />
Colombia<br />
Alfonso Molina<br />
Costa Rica<br />
66
Julije Maras<br />
Croatia<br />
Vít Vaníček<br />
Czech Republic<br />
Per Friis Mortensen<br />
Denmark<br />
Salam Hany<br />
Egypt<br />
Dr. Seija-Riitta Laakso<br />
Finland<br />
Jean-Pierre Gabillard<br />
France<br />
Günther Korn<br />
Germany<br />
Costas Chazapis<br />
Greece<br />
Sergio Bendeck<br />
Honduras<br />
István Glatz<br />
Hungary<br />
Anil Suri<br />
India<br />
Sukirman Mahpudi<br />
Indonesia<br />
Nader Saad<br />
Iraq<br />
Menachem Lador<br />
Israel<br />
Claudio Ernesto Manzati<br />
Italy<br />
Takashi Yoshida<br />
Japan<br />
67
Yong Sang Yoo<br />
Korea (Rep. of)<br />
Jan Huys<br />
Liechtenstein<br />
Guy Jungblut<br />
Luxembourg<br />
Huo Jhuixiao<br />
Macau<br />
Jean Voruz<br />
Monaco<br />
Hans Wilderbeek<br />
Netherlands<br />
Muhammad R. Kodwavwala<br />
Pakistan<br />
Krzysztof Piwko<br />
Poland<br />
Raul Leitão<br />
Portugal<br />
Hussain R. Al-Ismail<br />
Qatar<br />
Romeo Minca<br />
Romania<br />
Sharyln Neo<br />
Singapore<br />
Igor Pirc<br />
Slovenia<br />
José Pedro Gómez-<br />
Agüero Jiménez<br />
Spain<br />
Fredrik Ydell<br />
Sweden<br />
Gianfranco Bellini<br />
Switzerland<br />
68
Phairot Jiraprasertkun<br />
Thailand<br />
Atadan Tunaci<br />
Turkey<br />
Dmitry Frenkel<br />
Ukraine<br />
Ali Abdulrahman Ahmad<br />
United Arab Emirates<br />
Chris King<br />
United Kingdom<br />
Mark Banchik<br />
United States of<br />
America<br />
Walter Britz<br />
Uruguay<br />
Knut Heister<br />
Venezuela<br />
69
The HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> Jury<br />
Honorary President<br />
President<br />
Secretary to the Jury<br />
Bernard Beston<br />
(AUS)<br />
Kurt Kimmel<br />
(CH)<br />
Damian Läge<br />
(CH)<br />
Vice Presidents<br />
Peter McCann<br />
(USA)<br />
Senior Consultant<br />
Ajeet Raj Singhee<br />
(IND)<br />
Asst. Jury Secretary<br />
Turhan Turgut<br />
(TUR)<br />
Bernard Jimenez<br />
(FRA)<br />
Kelly Ong<br />
(SIN)<br />
70
Jury<br />
Boncho Bonev<br />
(BUL)<br />
Prakob Chirakiti<br />
(THA)<br />
Dénes Czirók<br />
(HUN)<br />
Erik Hamberg<br />
(SWE)<br />
Bedrich Helm<br />
(CZE)<br />
Gerald Heschl<br />
(AUT)<br />
Muhammed Javaid<br />
(UAE)<br />
Seong Kwon Kim<br />
(KOR)<br />
Eddie Leibu<br />
(ISR)<br />
Joachim Maas<br />
(GER)<br />
Reinaldo Macedo<br />
(BRA)<br />
Jean-Pierre Magne<br />
(FRA)<br />
71
Jury<br />
Jari Majander<br />
(FIN)<br />
Giancarlo Morolli<br />
(ITA)<br />
Yigal Nathaniel<br />
(ISR)<br />
José Manuel Rodriguez<br />
(SPA)<br />
Jürg Roth<br />
(CH)<br />
Aldo Samamé y Samamé<br />
(PER)<br />
Everaldo Santos<br />
(BRA)<br />
Emanoil Savoiu<br />
(ROM)<br />
Peter Suhadolc<br />
(SLO)<br />
Chee Hui Tan<br />
(MYS)<br />
Raymond Todd<br />
(AUS)<br />
Ross Towle<br />
(USA)<br />
72
Filip van der Hagen<br />
(BEL)<br />
Charles Verge<br />
(CAN)<br />
Jean Voruz<br />
(CH)<br />
Eliahu Weber<br />
(ISR)<br />
Experts<br />
Robert Wightman<br />
(CH)<br />
Jean-François Brun<br />
(FRA)<br />
Richard Gratton<br />
(CAN)<br />
Till Neumann<br />
(GER)<br />
Jury Apprentices<br />
Fabien Barnier<br />
(FRA)<br />
Sébastien Matry<br />
(FRA)<br />
Angelo Teruzzi<br />
(ITA)<br />
73
HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> – AWARDS<br />
World Stamp Champion Grand Prix International Grand Prix National<br />
Crystal vase made by Lalique<br />
Donated by Corinphila Auctions<br />
Crystal vase made by Lalique<br />
Donated by F.I.P. Fédération<br />
Internationale de Philatélie<br />
Crystal vase made by Lalique<br />
Donated by Swiss Federation of<br />
Philatelic Societies<br />
First Runner Up World Stamp Champion<br />
Second Runner Up World Stamp Champion<br />
Medal ‘’Victory’’ inserted in a wooden base<br />
Donated by www.tillard-spm-philatelie.fr<br />
Medal ‘’Victory’’ inserted in a wooden base<br />
Donated by www.tillard-spm-philatelie.fr<br />
74
HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> – SPECIAL PRICES<br />
Armenian Philatelic Association<br />
Handmade wooden Armenian Khachkar<br />
Association of Singapore Philatelist<br />
Singapore Landmarks<br />
Bund Deutscher Philatelisten BDPh<br />
SAFE Microscope<br />
Bulgarian Philatelic Academy<br />
Bronze statue<br />
Danish Philatelic Federation<br />
Georg Jensen Bowl in mirror-<br />
finished stainless steel<br />
Emirates Philatelic Association<br />
Falcon in a velvet box<br />
Federation of Italian Philatelic Societies<br />
Society Special award for <strong>Helvetia</strong> <strong>2022</strong><br />
Hellenic Philatelic Society<br />
Book on the “1906 Olympics”<br />
Israel Philatelic Federation<br />
Statue of a harpist<br />
75
Dr. Jan Huys-Berlingin (LIE)<br />
Book "Destination Etrangères<br />
au départ de la Belgique durant<br />
le règne de Leopold"<br />
Dr. Jan Huys-Berlingin (LIE)<br />
Book “Fürstentum Liechtenstein –<br />
Die schönsten Bilder<br />
und Briefmarken»<br />
Philatelic Federation of Korea<br />
«Mother-of-Pearl» Jewelry Box<br />
Clube Philatélica de Macau<br />
Ceramic plate<br />
Jean Voruz, Monaco<br />
Book "Oblitérations Suisses<br />
1843-1854"<br />
Bernard Beston,<br />
Original Aboriginal Oil Painting<br />
Philatelic Federation of Japan<br />
Japanese hand fan with motifs<br />
Philatelic Federation of Spain<br />
Porcelain figure on bench<br />
Polish Philatelic Association<br />
Relief silver plated figure<br />
of F. Chopin<br />
76
Portuguese Philatelic Federation<br />
Sextant for navigation<br />
Royal Philatelic Society London<br />
The RPSL London <strong>Exhibition</strong><br />
Medal<br />
Slovenian Philatelic Association<br />
Painted beehive pane<br />
Swedish Philatelic Association<br />
Wine decanter bottle<br />
Turkish Academy of Philately<br />
Ceramic plate<br />
Turkish Philatelic Federation<br />
Ceramic bowl<br />
Federaciòn Uruguaya de Filatelia (F.U.F.)<br />
Painted artistic box by the workshop of<br />
Joaquin Torres Garcia<br />
American Philatelic Society<br />
“The Bronco Buster»<br />
by Frederic Remington<br />
Verband Österr. Philatelistenvereine<br />
Book «100 Jahre VÖPh» mit Mappe<br />
Belege Jubiläumssammlung<br />
77
HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> – AWARD MEDALS<br />
The award medal design depicts the Official Logo of the <strong>Helvetia</strong> <strong>2022</strong> World Stamp <strong>Exhibition</strong>.<br />
Limited edition of Honor-Medals, mounted on marble<br />
with a plaque for the name of the person honored<br />
<strong>Exhibition</strong> plaque with engraved name<br />
(without woodbase)<br />
Each exhibitor and commissioner will receive a specially<br />
engraved Swiss Army knife as a gift.<br />
78
THE FIP GRAND PRIX CLUB<br />
Introduction<br />
In every FIP World Stamp <strong>Exhibition</strong>, three Grand Prix Winners bill be born, namely,<br />
Grand Prix National (GPN) is for the best exhibit in the National Class.<br />
Grand Prix International (GPI) is for the best exhibit in the other Classes.<br />
Grand Prix d’Honneur (GPH or Champion of the Champions) is for exhibit having earned three<br />
Large Gold medals in three separate years to compete in the FIP Championship Class.<br />
In addition:<br />
Grand Prix d’Exposition – the best exhibit awarded at a FIP Specialized World Stamp <strong>Exhibition</strong>.<br />
World Stamp Champion – the best exhibit in the World Stamp Championship Class in a World Stamp<br />
Championship <strong>Exhibition</strong> (WSC) such as Singapore 2004, Israel 2008, Indonesia 2012, Chinese Taipei<br />
2016 and <strong>Helvetia</strong> <strong>2022</strong>.<br />
FIP Grand Prix Club<br />
FIP Grand Prix Club (GPC) was formed in May 1979. It is a great honour for an exhibitor to be awarded<br />
a Grand Prix in his/her lifetime and to be a member of the FIP Grand Prix Club then.<br />
As long as you are the winner of a GP, you are automatically invited to become a member of the GPC.<br />
It was agreed in 2011 that all GPC members are invited to show one philatelic item from their GP Collections<br />
or from their other treasure boxes whenever there is a FIP Stamp <strong>Exhibition</strong>.<br />
The Presidents<br />
1979-1982 Miroslav A. Bojanowicz RDP<br />
1982-1986 Gary S Ryan RDP<br />
1996-1989 John H Levett RDP<br />
1994-1996 Rolf-Dieter Jaretzky RDP<br />
1996-2000 Capt Robert P Odenweller RDP<br />
2000-2011 David J Springbett RDP<br />
1989-1992 Dott Prof Saverio Imperato<br />
1992-1994 Christian C Sundmann RDP<br />
2011-present<br />
Tay Peng Hian RDP<br />
79
COURT OF HONOUR<br />
FIP GRAND PRIX CLUB DISPLAY<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Name Country Title of Exhibit Past FIP Grand Prix<br />
Awards Achieved<br />
CH01<br />
Reim,<br />
Pablo Alejandro<br />
Argentina Don Pedro Issues 1866-1878<br />
Brazil<br />
GPN BRASILIA 2017<br />
CH02<br />
Castro-Harrigan,<br />
Alvaro<br />
Costa Rica<br />
Costa Rica: The Major Varieties<br />
of the 1907 Official Issue<br />
GPH NEW YORK 2016<br />
CH03 Vanicek, Vit Czech<br />
Republic<br />
Postal History of Czech Lands<br />
- From Beginning until 1867<br />
GPN PRAGA 2018<br />
CH04 Wittsten, Peter Denmark Coat of Arms I -<br />
Skilling Banco - 1855-58<br />
GPH THAILAND 2018<br />
CH05 Nathaniel, Yigal Israel Japan: The Boinville Cover GPH PHILAKOREA 2002<br />
CH06 Hian, Tay Peng Singapore Netherlands East Indies:<br />
Mixed Issues Frankings<br />
CH07 Tan, Richard Singapore Straits Settlements Stamps<br />
Used In Borneo<br />
CH08 Voruz, Jean Switzerland Via Switzerland to bypass<br />
the Italian War Zones<br />
CH09 Kimmel, Kurt Switzerland Ceylon: the 3/3 cover<br />
to Scotland<br />
GPH CHINA 2009<br />
GPI PHILAKOREA 2002<br />
GPI THAILAND 2018<br />
GPI PHILAKOREA 2014<br />
GPI ISRAEL 2018<br />
CH10<br />
Gongvatana,<br />
Surajit<br />
Thailand<br />
Siam: First Issue<br />
used on Cover<br />
WSC SINGAPORE 2004<br />
GPH PACIFIC 1997<br />
GPI PHILAKOREA 1994<br />
GPN BANGKOK 1993<br />
CH11<br />
Chirakiti,<br />
Prakob<br />
Thailand<br />
Siam: The Tical Surcharge<br />
used on Cover<br />
WSC PHILATAIPEI 2016<br />
GPH PHILAKOREA 2014<br />
GPI ST PETERSBURG 2007<br />
GPN BANGKOK 2003<br />
CH12<br />
Karnasuta,<br />
Charnchai<br />
Thailand<br />
The Earliest Known<br />
Newspaper Wrapper<br />
Mailed from Siam<br />
GPI CHINA 2009<br />
CH13 Britz, Water Uruguay Uruguay: Ship‘s Register<br />
Cover<br />
GPI BRASILIANA 2013<br />
GPI BRASILIA 2017<br />
* Abbreviations: GPN = Grand Prix National / GPI = Grand Prix International / GPH = Grand Prix d‘Honneur / WSC = World Stamp Champion<br />
80
COURT OF HONOUR<br />
FIP GRAND PRIX CLUB DISPLAY<br />
Brazil<br />
Don Pedro Issues 1866 – 1878<br />
ABN Co. – 1877 – Barba Branca 50 Reis, Blue<br />
Block of 40 unused. The largest unused block known.<br />
In 1865 the Imperial authorities decided to print new stamps, with the Emperors portrait due to the new<br />
postal rates to replace the domestically printed “numeral” stamps. This issue was printed by the American<br />
Bank Company in the United States of America in sheets of 100 stamps. This is the third issue of<br />
Don Pedro, (the first called “Barba Preta” in 1866, the second in 1876 but perce), this issue in 1877 is<br />
called “Barba Branca”.<br />
Exhibitor<br />
Year of FIP Grand Prix Award<br />
Pablo Alejandro Reim Grand Prix National – BRASILIA 2017<br />
Argentina<br />
81
COURT OF HONOUR<br />
FIP GRAND PRIX CLUB DISPLAY<br />
Costa Rica<br />
The major varieties of the 1907 Official Issue<br />
This issue was overprinted by Waterlow Brothers & Layton on 1907 issue stamps with a plate of 100,<br />
in black. All in perforation 14. Below, there are the major varieties of this issue. All of them are unique.<br />
2c “Official”<br />
center inverted<br />
4c “Official”<br />
double overprint<br />
4c “Official”<br />
double overprint<br />
with broken “F” variety<br />
4c “Official”<br />
double printing of Vignette<br />
Exhibitor<br />
Year of FIP Grand Prix Award<br />
Alvaro Castro-Harrigan Grand Prix d’Honneur – NEW YORK 2016<br />
Costa Rica<br />
82
COURT OF HONOUR<br />
FIP GRAND PRIX CLUB DISPLAY<br />
Czech Lands Postal History<br />
From Beginning Until 1867<br />
Certificated, the only letter as such<br />
Registered letter sent from Rokitzan via Prague<br />
to Vienna multiple franked with 10 x 9 kr.<br />
Straightline cancellation “ROKITZAN 27 Nov.”<br />
(Vot. A.5-h) and postmark “Recommandiert”.<br />
Rate: 90 kr for the letter up to 10 loth sent<br />
over 20 miles. Registration fee 6 kr and arrival<br />
and transit postmarks on the reverse.<br />
Distance: Weight: Rate:<br />
Over 20 postal miles Up to 1 Loth 9 kr<br />
Over 20 postal miles Up to 10 Loth 90 kr<br />
Registration fee<br />
6 kr<br />
Exhibitor<br />
Year of FIP Grand Prix Award<br />
Vít Vaníček Grand Prix National – PRAGA 2018<br />
Czech Republic<br />
83
COURT OF HONOUR<br />
FIP GRAND PRIX CLUB DISPLAY<br />
Sweden<br />
1. Coat of Arms I – Skilling Banco – 1855-58<br />
3 Skilling Banco – Shade b and c, and quantities issued:<br />
Shade a – light bluish green: 40,000<br />
Estimated surviving stamps: 70-80 unused; 1,360 used<br />
Shade b – bluish green: 40,000<br />
Shade c – blue-green: 10,000 Estimated surviving stamps: 70-80 unused; 20 used<br />
Shade b - bluish green<br />
STOCKHOLM 11.11.185x (E)<br />
Shade c -<br />
blue-green (*) (E)<br />
Shade b - bluish green<br />
CARLSCRONA 18.4.1858 (E)<br />
Shade b on cover to Germany – single postage rate (21 sk bco)<br />
Shade b – bluish green with 4 sk. b:co<br />
(shade e), 6 sk. b:co (shade c) and 8 sk.<br />
b:co (shade g) on coverfront to Berlin,<br />
Germany, cancelled CARLSCRONA<br />
4.12.1857. 21 skill. b:co - correct postage<br />
rate 1.7.1855 – 30.6.1858 to places<br />
in Germany not more than 210 km from<br />
Stettin, Stralsund or Hamburg. The Swedish<br />
part of the share was 15 sk. b:co<br />
(sea postage incl.). One of three recorded<br />
coverfronts to Germany with this<br />
combination and one of four four-colour<br />
covers with a 3 skill. b:co. (E)<br />
Exhibitor<br />
Year of FIP Grand Prix Award<br />
Peter Wittsten Grand Prix d'Honneur – THAILAND 2018<br />
Denmark<br />
84
COURT OF HONOUR<br />
FIP GRAND PRIX CLUB DISPLAY<br />
Japan<br />
1873 Cherry Blossom Issue on Native Paper<br />
France – Japanese combination cover<br />
Japan 1873 “Overseas Mail Procedure”<br />
(kaigaitezoku) cover “Double letter<br />
envelope” sent from Tokyo to England.<br />
No outer envelope or additional Japanese<br />
domestic postage was necessary if<br />
posted from Tokyo or Yokohama.<br />
Postal rates: Japanese foreign postage<br />
”Overseas Mail procedure”: letter to<br />
England 24 sen per 4 momme (15g), tariff<br />
period 1873.4.1 to 1873.12.31 French p.<br />
o. foreign postage: letter prepaid 1.20<br />
Fr. per 10g, tariff period 1871.8.1 to<br />
1875.12.31. Japanese marking: Tokyo<br />
double circle type NIBI Meiji 6.5.27<br />
(May 27,1873). Paper slip part with part<br />
writing “Application for (sc.Overseas<br />
Mail Procedure). French marking: “5118”<br />
and “Yokohama Bau Français 3 Juin<br />
73”, transits of French mail steamers<br />
“Menzaleh” (from Yokohama”, and “Pei-<br />
Ho” (from Hong Kong). English arrival<br />
marking “St.Albans June 24 73”.<br />
The earlier of two recorded entires of the 1872/75 foreign mail “double envelope system”.<br />
The earliest known overseas mail cover with Japanese stamps paying foreign postage.<br />
Exhibitor<br />
Year of FIP Grand Prix Award<br />
Yigal Nathaniel Grand Prix d´Honneur – PHILAKOREA 2002<br />
Israel<br />
85
COURT OF HONOUR<br />
FIP GRAND PRIX CLUB DISPLAY<br />
Netherlands East Indies<br />
Mixed Issues Frankings<br />
Second Issue (1868) used with Third Issue (1870)<br />
Type I: “M” wide<br />
letters are well spaced<br />
Type II: “M” slim & tall<br />
letters are closed to each other<br />
Mixed issues franking to Amsterdam<br />
60 cents overseas by landmail rate from Samarang to Amsterdam (October 2, 1870)<br />
Samarang Halfround Franco datestamps Type I<br />
Exhibitor<br />
Year of FIP Grand Prix Award<br />
Tay Peng Hian Grand Prix d´Honneur – CHINA 2009<br />
Singapore Grand Prix International – PHILAKOREA 2002<br />
86
COURT OF HONOUR<br />
FIP GRAND PRIX CLUB DISPLAY<br />
Straits Settlements Stamps Used in Borneo<br />
Straights Settlements 1882 "EIGHT CENTS" and North Borneo 1886 "2 CENTS"<br />
7 July 1889 North Borneo via Singapore to Colombo, Ceylon<br />
Straits Settlements stamps were sold and used in North Borneo before she joined UPU on the first day of<br />
1891. This combination cover consists of North Borneo 2 CENTS cancelled by "Vertical of Bars” paying<br />
for postage to Singapore. Straits Settlements EIGHT CENTS stamp was required to pay for the rest of<br />
the journey to Colombo and this was cancelled in Singapore by an undated double ring "SINGAPORE<br />
P.O." datestamp. Combination covers bearing North Borneo and Straits Settlements are rare.<br />
Probably the ONLY KNOWN mixed franking cover from<br />
North Borneo to Colombo, Ceylon<br />
Exhibitor<br />
Year of FIP Grand Prix Award<br />
Richard Tan Eng Chuan Grand Prix International – THAILAND 2018<br />
Singapore<br />
87
COURT OF HONOUR<br />
FIP GRAND PRIX CLUB DISPLAY<br />
Switzerland<br />
Via Switzerland to Bypass the Italian War Zones<br />
6 May 1859 - Letter from the Lombardy war zones to a Sardinian cavalry soldier in<br />
Saluzzo, Piedmont. The letter was privately forwarded to Chiasso, the nearest Swiss<br />
town at the border, where it was posted and specified via di Ginevra (via Geneva). Double<br />
weight franking 80c, the left stamp being folded over the edge.<br />
Exhibitor<br />
Year of FIP Grand Prix Award<br />
Jean Voruz Grand Prix International – PHILAKOREA 2014<br />
Switzerland<br />
88
COURT OF HONOUR<br />
FIP GRAND PRIX CLUB DISPLAY<br />
Ceylon<br />
The Only Two Shillings of the Perkins Bacon Printings on Cover<br />
Only 1440 of the TWO SHILLINGS printed by Perkings Bacon in February 1859 were perforated between<br />
November 17, 1860 and January 26, 1861, when the perforating machine was in the intermediate<br />
to clean cut state. Until 1980 not one cover was known with a TWO SHILLINGS of any Ceylon issue.<br />
Since I discovered this letter in 1987 in London no other TWO SHILLINGS of any Perkins Bacon Printing<br />
neither imperforate nor perforated has been found. Furthermore this is the only known four colour<br />
franking of the Perkins Bacon printings of Ceylon paying the unusual rate of three shillings and three<br />
pence being the via Marseilles rate to the UK for 1 – 1 ¼ oz (2/- British and 5x 3d French rate).<br />
This letter was dispatched in Colombo on July 1st 1863 (red handstamp PAID on the back) and sent<br />
from Galle only on July 12th by P&O packet steamer “Mooltan” sailing delayed by repair works to Suez<br />
arriving July 28th and then from Alexandria by P&O packet steamer “Vectis” to Marseilles arriving August<br />
4th and reaching the destination in Scottland on August 7th 1863.<br />
The only known Four-colour franking of The Perkings Bacon printings of Ceylon<br />
and the only recorded 2/- wmk Star on cover. Illustrated “Monaco 2002”, page 102<br />
Exhibitor<br />
Year of FIP Grand Prix Award<br />
Kurt Kimmel RDP Grand Prix International – ISRAEL 2018<br />
Switzerland<br />
89
COURT OF HONOUR<br />
FIP GRAND PRIX CLUB DISPLAY<br />
Siam<br />
First Issue – The Only Recorded Example<br />
5 April 1886. Registered cover from Bangkok to Louisville, Kentucky, USA,<br />
via Hong Kong then redirected to St. Louis, Missouri, franked with 2 pairs<br />
of Salung for double registered rate, tied by Bangkok/P/Paid 5 April 1886,<br />
red oval Louisville registered 10 June 1886, with Hong Kong transit date<br />
stamp 14 April 1886, San Francisco registered transit date stamp 9 May<br />
1886 and St. Louis arrival date stamp 17 June 1886.<br />
Exhibitor<br />
Year of FIP Grand Prix Award<br />
Surajit Gongvatana World Stamp Champion – SINGAPORE 2004<br />
Thailand Grand Prix d´Honneur – PACIFIC 1997<br />
Grand Prix International – PHILAKOREA 1994<br />
Grand Prix National – BANGKOK 1993<br />
90
COURT OF HONOUR<br />
FIP GRAND PRIX CLUB DISPLAY<br />
Siam<br />
The First Issue – The Tical Surcharges of 1885 on Cover<br />
1886 COVER FROM BANGKOK TO ST. GALLEN, SWITZERLAND<br />
The cover franked with a single 1 Tical surcharge of 1885 (Type 2, Plate 1), tied by Bangkok P<br />
Paid C.D.S. dated 22 November 1886 with violet “Les Succ de Malherbe, Jullien & Cie Jucker,<br />
Sigg & Co. Bangkok, Siam” forwarder handstamp, ambulant Transit C.D.S. and St. Gallen<br />
arrival C.D.S. dated 25 December 1886 on the back.<br />
THE ONLY RECORDED SAMPLE WITH PLATE 1 TICAL SURCHARE ON COVER<br />
Exhibitor<br />
Year of FIP Grand Prix Award<br />
Prakob Chirakiti World Stamp Champion – PHILATEIPEI 2016<br />
Thailand Grand Prix d´Honneur – PHILAKOREA 2014<br />
91
COURT OF HONOUR<br />
FIP GRAND PRIX CLUB DISPLAY<br />
Siam<br />
The earliest known Newspaper Wrapper mailed from Siam<br />
1885 Newspaper Wrapper from Bangkok to USA, showing rate usage of the Hong Kong stamp in Siam,<br />
cancelled by the British Consulate Bangkok c.d.s. dated 10 January 1885.<br />
Hong Kong stamps were accepted and used on letters sent from the British Consulate Post Office in<br />
Bangkok on the Eastern route going through the Hong Kong Office and on to China, Japan and America.<br />
No records of formal postal arrangements between the Consulate and Hong Kong post office exist.<br />
It is assumed, that the mails were tolerated by Hong Kong postal authorities.<br />
Hong Kong stamps were accepted in Bangkok until 30 June 1885.<br />
Exhibitor<br />
Year of FIP Grand Prix Award<br />
Charnchai Karnasuta Grand Prix International – CHINA 2009<br />
Thailand<br />
92
COURT OF HONOUR<br />
FIP GRAND PRIX CLUB DISPLAY<br />
Uruguay<br />
Ship's register cover<br />
Ship`s register cover from the “Saetia Española N.S. de la Misericordia”, dated<br />
in Montevideo May 19th, 1779, and shows the “MONT.V.º” mark type 1<br />
without frame in black. Signed by the maritime postmaster of Montevideo,<br />
with the date of dispatch at base. Most of these covers before 1784 have no<br />
indication of tariff.<br />
Earliest Uruguayan mail known with a postmark.<br />
Unique ship´s register cover known from the present territory of Uruguay.<br />
Earliest ship´s register cover recorded from South America.<br />
Exhibitor<br />
Year of FIP Grand Prix Award<br />
Walter Britz Grand Prix International – BRASILIANA 2013<br />
Uruguay Grand Prix International – BRASILIA 2017<br />
93
WORLD STAMP CHAMPIONSHIP<br />
HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong><br />
Switzerland<br />
One of the five known stripes of 4 Poste Locale 2½ Rappen<br />
on letters to foreign countries<br />
5.12.1850. Single weight letter from Locarno to Livorno (Grand Duchy of Tuscany). It was franked<br />
with stripe of 4 Poste Locale 2 ½ Rappen, paying only the internal Swiss rate to the border with<br />
Lombardy. The addresse had to pay 10 Crazie.<br />
Exhibitor: Adriano Bergamini, Switzerland<br />
Exhibit: Postal relations between Ticino and foreign countries before UPU<br />
94
INVITED EXHIBITS<br />
PATRONS, SPONSORS & BENEFACTORS<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Name Country Number of<br />
Frames<br />
Title of Exhibit<br />
01 Lugano Schools<br />
Contest<br />
Switzerland 6 Stamp designs from local schoolchildren<br />
02 CORONADO Switzerland 1 Historical documents of Canton<br />
Ticino<br />
03 Jvo Bader Switzerland 1 Swiss Postal Agencies in Italy and<br />
France<br />
04 Adriano Bergamini Switzerland 1 8th June 1913: Flight Lugano–<br />
Mendrisio by Attilio Maffei<br />
05 Circolo Filatelico<br />
Bellinzona<br />
06 Vini Valsangiamo<br />
dal 1831<br />
Switzerland 1 Mail carried by Rocket – European<br />
Day Bellinzona 5 November 1961<br />
Switzerland 1 Wine Labels and Stamps –<br />
both track emotions<br />
07 Honegger Philatelie Switzerland 1 55 Years of Swiss Classic Philately<br />
08 Selection from<br />
various collectors<br />
Switzerland 5 Sitting <strong>Helvetia</strong> Stamps –<br />
A Variety of uses on the basis<br />
of a selection of covers<br />
09 Roberto Lopez Switzerland 5 UPU – 25th anniversary<br />
10 Richard Schäfer Switzerland 10 Cantonal stamps of Switzerland –<br />
Genuine – False – Falsified<br />
11 Juerg Roth* Switzerland 8 The postal history of the Wynental,<br />
Switzerland, 1813–1908<br />
12 Jean Voruz* Switzerland 8 Geneva from the Cantonal to<br />
Federal Post 1839–1862<br />
13 Jean Voruz* Switzerland 8 Swiss Postal Service Development<br />
1862–1900<br />
* with display page in exhibtion catalogue<br />
95
INVITED EXHIBITS<br />
PATRONS, SPONSORS & BENEFACTORS<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Name Country Number of<br />
Frames<br />
Title of Exhibit<br />
14 Yoshida Takashi Japan 1 Early Mails from Switzerland to<br />
Japan<br />
15 Alfred Bachmann Switzerland 1 Reminiscences of Winterthur<br />
16 Pierre Kottelat Switzerland 1 Hotel Posts of Switzerland – A consise<br />
overview<br />
17 Helmut Avi Switzerland 1 The Post mail reaches everyone<br />
18 Edgar Wyttenbach Switzerland 1 Business correspondence from the<br />
Swiss Oberaargau, ca. 1850–1950<br />
19 Rolf Leuthard Switzerland 1 Above all, Postal History<br />
20 Martin Gasser Switzerland 1 The Philatelist, researcher and author<br />
Martin Gasser<br />
21 Prestige Philately<br />
Club<br />
Czech Rep. 11 A selection of Rarities of members of<br />
the Club<br />
22 Paolo Bianchi Monaco 8 Lettres Grande Armée<br />
23 Paolo Bianchi Monaco 1 The use of the French Aigle stamps<br />
in Assinie and Gabon<br />
24 Rafael Nagapetiants Armenia 1 Armenia 1836-1923<br />
25 Pradip Jain FRPSL<br />
& Pragya Kothari<br />
Jain FRPSL<br />
India 1 ESSAYS / Colour Trials of India<br />
1948 Mahatma Gandhi issue printed<br />
by Helios COURVOISIER S.A.<br />
96
INVITED EXHIBITS DISPLAY<br />
HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong><br />
Switzerland<br />
Franking with “Ortspost” block of four,<br />
cancelled with red Aargau rhombus of Kulm<br />
One of only three known frankings with “Ortspost” blocks recorded to date<br />
23.03.1851. Kulm - Dürrenäsch. Explanation of rate: 5 Rp for a single weight letter for a distance up to 10<br />
hours plus 5 Rp C.O.D. fee. The C.O.D. amount of 11.5 Batzen (Bz) was converted into 46 Kreuzer by the<br />
postal official. (1 Bz = 10 Rp, 11.5 Bz = 115 Rp : 2.5 (1 Kreuzer) = 46 Kreuzer). This is still visible at the right<br />
as a trace in red crayon. - Rare item.<br />
Exhibitor: Juerg Roth, Switzerland<br />
Exhibit: Postal history of the Wynental 1813-1908<br />
97
INVITED EXHIBITS DISPLAY<br />
HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong><br />
Geneva – Switzerland<br />
The birth of the Swiss Franc in Geneva was one of the most amazing processes in European postal<br />
history. The subject has been studied by several philatelists for the last hundred years but remains understood<br />
only with some difficulty.<br />
Until 1849 Switzerland was a very fragmented country. 22 cantons had a total sovereignty, 17 independent<br />
postal services worked separately, and more than 450 currencies were used throughout the<br />
country. The common unit of currency used by cantons for mail exchange was the Kreuzer. But the<br />
latter did not exist as change for the population.<br />
The new federal state decided postal and monetary unification. The standard was to be the Franc of<br />
France which had already been used in Geneva since 1831.<br />
Starting status (1849) Goal to reach (1852)<br />
100 Rappen = 1 Swiss £ = 1.43 Franc of Geneva<br />
(2 Kreuzer = 5 Rappen)<br />
100 Rappen = 1 former Franc of Geneva<br />
= 1 new Swiss Franc<br />
From 1 Oct. 1849, Genevan rates were adjusted as close as possible to the first federal tariff<br />
1st Oct. 1849 – 1st day of transitional system. Local letter franked<br />
with a 5c stamp (sold 4c) and 3c charged postage due, total 7c.<br />
Exhibitor: Jean Voruz, Switzerland<br />
Exhibit: Geneva from the Cantonal Post to the Swiss Federal Post 1839-1862<br />
98
INVITED EXHIBITS DISPLAY<br />
HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong><br />
Switzerland – France<br />
“Boule de Moulins” transportation for letter from Switzerland<br />
Geneva was the cradle of the Red Cross and played a prominent role in the Franco-Prussian conflict<br />
This letter to besieged Paris bears Swiss postage at the normal rate for France,<br />
plus French postage to cover transport in a Boule de Moulins.<br />
Exhibitor: Jean Voruz, Switzerland<br />
Exhibit: Swiss Postal Service Development 1862-1900<br />
99
INDIVIDUAL REGULATIONS (IREX)<br />
Article 1<br />
PURPOSE OF EXHIBITION<br />
1.1 HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> is a specialized World Stamp Championship exhibition with the FIP patronage and<br />
the FEPA recognition, held on the occasion of the 160 th anniversary of the Sitting <strong>Helvetia</strong>, the first perforate<br />
Swiss stamp and the first to bear the appellation HELVETIA still used nowadays.<br />
The objective of the exhibition is to promote philately, to develop mutual relations and philatelic culture,<br />
to maintain cooperation amongst philatelists throughout the world, to present creativity and innovation<br />
when treating exhibits.<br />
Article 2<br />
ORGANIZATION, DATE AND VENUE<br />
2.1 HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> is organized by the Swiss Federation of Philatelic Societies in cooperation with the<br />
Philatelic Society of Lugano.<br />
2.2 The exhibition will open on 18 May <strong>2022</strong> and close on 22 May <strong>2022</strong>.<br />
2.3 The exhibition will be held at the Padiglione Conza in Lugano, Switzerland. Approximately 2,000<br />
exhibition frames will be available.<br />
Article 3<br />
PATRONAGE, RECOGNITION AND APPLICABLE REGULATIONS<br />
3.1 HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> is a specialized World Stamp Championship exhibition with the official patronage<br />
of the Fédération Internationale de Philatélie (FIP) provisionally granted by the 130th Board Conference<br />
that was held on 2 April 2020.<br />
HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> will also be held with the FEPA recognition granted by the FEPA Board Conference<br />
that was held on 2 May 2020.<br />
100
The AIJP (Association internationale des journalistes philatéliques) and the AEP (European Academy<br />
of Philately) also granted patronage to HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong>.<br />
3.2 The following regulations shall be applicable to HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong>:<br />
• The General Regulations of the FIP for <strong>Exhibition</strong>s (GREX),<br />
• The General Regulations of the FIP for the Evaluation of Competitive Exhibits at FIP <strong>Exhibition</strong>s<br />
(GREV),<br />
• The Special Regulations for the Evaluation of Competitive Exhibits at FIP <strong>Exhibition</strong>s (SREVs),<br />
• The Individual Regulations of HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> (IREX) (Article 3.10 of GREX).<br />
• Where IREX deviates from GREX, GREV or SREV’s, IREX shall apply.<br />
Article 4<br />
CONDITIONS OF PARTICIPATION<br />
4.1 Competitive <strong>Exhibition</strong> Classes:<br />
Exhibitors who are members of national federations of the Fédération Internationale de Philatélie (FIP)<br />
are eligible for participation.<br />
4.2 The following exhibits can be accepted: For class 1 - exhibits that have been awarded at least one<br />
large gold medal at exhibitions with FIP patronage or an FIP Grand Prix (Grand Prix National, Grand<br />
Prix d’Honneur or Grand Prix d’Exposition). The ten-year time frame restriction stated in GREX 9.1 or<br />
GREX 9.5 does not apply in this class. For Class 2 to 6 – exhibits that received at least a vermeil award<br />
at a national exhibition. For Class 8 (one frame exhibits) – exhibits that received at least 70 points at a<br />
national exhibition. No qualification is required for the class 7.<br />
4.3 Non-Competitive Classes:<br />
Entries in non-competitive classes (including Court of Honour) shall be by special invitation at the discretion<br />
of the Organizing Committee.<br />
Article 5<br />
EXHIBITION CLASSES<br />
5.1 Non-Competitive Classes:<br />
A/ Court of Honour<br />
B/ Invited Exhibits<br />
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5.2 Competitive Classes:<br />
Class 1. World Stamp Championship<br />
Exhibits entering this class will NOT be awarded Large Gold Awards (hence are NOT counted in any<br />
totals towards FIP Championship Class). A Certificate of participation will be issued.<br />
Class 2. Traditional Philately<br />
A/ Switzerland – National Class<br />
B/ Europe<br />
C/ America<br />
D/ Asia, Oceania and Africa<br />
Class 3. Postal History<br />
A/ Switzerland – National Class<br />
B/ Europe<br />
C/ America<br />
D/ Africa, Asia and Oceania<br />
Class 4. Postal Stationery<br />
Class 5. Aerophilately<br />
Class 6. Thematic Philately<br />
A) Nature<br />
B) Culture<br />
C) Technology<br />
The exhibitor is obliged to identify the exhibit exactly in the application form, in which the sub-class that<br />
the exhibit is entering (A, B or C) shall be designated.<br />
Class 7. Philatelic Literature<br />
A/ Philatelic books and research papers (published after 1st January 2017)<br />
B/ Philatelic magazines and periodicals (published after 1st January 2020)<br />
C/ <strong>Catalogue</strong>s (published after 1st January 2020)<br />
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Exhibitors entering an exhibit in the Philatelic Literature Class are requested to fill in the separate “Philatelic<br />
Literature Exhibit Information Form” in addition to the “Exhibit Application Form”.<br />
Class 8. One Frame Exhibits<br />
Exhibits in this class should be based on a narrow philatelic subject corresponding to the scope of<br />
one exhibition frame. An extract from a past International award winning multiple frame exhibit (5 or 8<br />
frames) is not allowed.<br />
Evaluation shall be performed on the basis of awarded points (60 – 100) and the exhibitor shall receive<br />
only a certificate without a medal. The Certificate of Participation will be given to exhibits attaining less<br />
than 60 points.<br />
Exhibits shall only be evaluated in the classes 2 to 6.<br />
The exhibitor is obliged to identify the exhibit exactly in the application form, in which the Class (2 to<br />
6) and the sub-class (A to D for classes 2 & 3; A to C for class 6) that the exhibit is entering shall be<br />
designated.<br />
Article 6<br />
JUDGING OF EXHIBITS AND AWARDS<br />
6.1 Exhibits in the Competitive Classes will be judged by the appointed and accredited FIP judges in<br />
accordance with the principles laid down in the GREV and SREVs. Any deviation in the judging system<br />
has to have the prior approval of the FIP Board.<br />
Article 7<br />
FRAME SIZE AND ALLOTMENT OF FRAMES<br />
7.1 The exhibition frames at HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> shall be 97 cm x 120 cm. Each frame shall have a capacity<br />
for 16 (four sheets in four rows) album pages, 23 cm x 30 cm each in size (maximum) including their<br />
protective mount. Album pages slightly exceeding the said size shall be accepted if the pages can be<br />
overlapped in the frame, in which case, the Organizing Committee shall not be responsible for any loss<br />
of, or damage to, the pages.<br />
In addition, the other FIP recommended allowable exhibit sheet sizes will be accepted, namely:<br />
- A3 or 46 x 30 cm: 8 sheets (two sheets in four rows)<br />
- 32 x 30 cm: 12 sheets (three sheets in four rows)<br />
103
7.2 All exhibits must be mounted on white or light coloured sheets. No exhibit mounted on dark-coloured<br />
or black sheets will be accepted.<br />
7.3 The original copy of Expertizing certificate must be placed at the disposal of the Jury by inserting it<br />
at the back of the page. A small letter © is to be denoted near the relevant item.<br />
7.4 Every exhibit shall be allotted 5 to 8 exhibition frames (with the exception of Classes 7 and 8) in<br />
accordance with Articles 6.3 and 6.4 of GREX.<br />
Five frames shall be allotted to exhibits that obtained at least a vermeil award at the national level.<br />
Eight frames shall be allotted to exhibits that obtained at least a large vermeil award at previous FIP<br />
exhibitions. If for valid reasons such as limited philatelic material available on the market, the exhibit<br />
concerned cannot be expanded to 8 frames, it would then be allowed to show 5, 6 or 7 frames.<br />
Article 8<br />
APPLICATIONS AND ACCEPTANCE<br />
8.1 Exhibitors shall fill in one Exhibit Application Form for each exhibit and submit it through the National<br />
Commissioner of their respective countries, as provided for in Articles 11 and 21 of GREX.<br />
8.2 The Organizing Committee, after consulting the matter with the FIP Consultant, shall have the authority<br />
to accept or reject the application without specifying the reason.<br />
8.3 Electronic Exhibit Application Forms duly filled shall be submitted, together with a copy of the<br />
introductory page, in one of the FIP’s official languages, through the National Commissioners to the<br />
Commissioner General no later than 30 September 2021. A synopsis supporting the exhibit is recommended.<br />
National commissioners shall send the electronic applications to the general commissioner,<br />
together with the Excel spreadsheet duly filled in order to ensure accurate data transcription.<br />
8.4 Exhibitors may enter exhibits under a pseudonym. However, their true identities must be notified to<br />
the Organizing Committee (Article 16 of GREX).<br />
8.5 Notification of acceptance or rejection, together with the number of allotted frames, shall be sent to<br />
the exhibitor through the respective Commissioner no later than 15 November 2021.<br />
8.6 The National Commissioners shall collect the participation fees from the exhibitors and remit them<br />
to the Organizing Committee by 15 January <strong>2022</strong> by transfer to Postfinance, Bern, Switzerland<br />
BIC/SWIFT: POFICHBEXXX International Bank Account No (IBAN): CH69 0900 0000 1538 4682 1<br />
8.7 Entrants may revise the introductory page or synopsis through the national commissioners by 31<br />
January <strong>2022</strong>. Each exhibit shall be listed in the exhibition catalogue as stated in the application form.<br />
104
8.8 When the title of the exhibit differs from the original title (irrespective of minor or major changes),<br />
the previous title of the exhibit must be also stated in the Exhibit Application Form. Furthermore,<br />
the exhibit identity number created by FIP must be stated. This ID number can be obtained from the<br />
secretary of the respective Federation. The FIP Secretariat circulates annually a list of Awards and ID<br />
numbers to the National Federations together with the annual membership fees due.<br />
8.9 All data submitted through the exhibit application form shall be kept strictly confidential by the Organizing<br />
Committee and shall not be disclosed to third parties.<br />
Article 9<br />
PARTICIPATION FEE<br />
9.1 There is no fee for Non-Competitive Class entries.<br />
9.2 The participation fee for Competitive Classes (except for Classes 7 and 8) is CHF 80 per frame.<br />
9.3 The participation fee for Philatelic Literature (Class 7) is CHF 100 per exhibit.<br />
9.4 The participation fee for One Frame Exhibit (Class 8) is CHF 100.<br />
Article 10<br />
HANDLING OF EXHIBITS<br />
10.1 In the event an exhibit is delivered late or the carrier fails, or in the event the sheet size does not<br />
comply with the provisions of Article 7.1, the exhibit will not be judged and the participation fee shall not<br />
be refunded.<br />
10.2 Each exhibit sheet shall be placed in a transparent protective cover and numbered in the lower<br />
right hand corner.<br />
10.3 The Organizing Committee shall certify the receipt of the exhibits to the exhibitors through the<br />
National Commissioner.<br />
10.4 The Organizing Committee shall distribute exhibit envelopes and exhibit inventory forms through<br />
the National Commissioner to the exhibitors.<br />
10.5 Each and every exhibit shall be delivered in the official envelope (one envelope per frame). The<br />
exhibit inventory form shall be put in the envelope for the first frame.<br />
10.6 The Organizing Committee requires, without exception, that all exhibits be delivered by the National<br />
Commissioners. Personal delivery of the exhibit by the exhibitor (or by a person authorized by<br />
the exhibitor) shall not be accepted.<br />
105
10.7 Exhibitors in the Philatelic Literature Class (Class 7A, 7B and 7C) must send one copy of each title<br />
or volume no later than by 31 January <strong>2022</strong> in order that preliminary judging may take place. None of<br />
these copies are returnable. Periodicals may be exhibited as a complete volume only. The exhibits will<br />
be kept by the Federation of Swiss Philatelic Societies.<br />
Literature sending address: Gianfranco Bellini, Via Ronchetto 12, 6900 Lugano, Switzerland<br />
Article 11<br />
MOUNTING AND DISMOUNTING OF EXHIBITS<br />
11.1 The Organizing Committee shall provide in due time mounting and dismounting directions and<br />
conditions.<br />
11.2 The National Commissioner shall pay for the costs of<br />
(a) delivering exhibits to the <strong>Exhibition</strong> site as well as<br />
(b) collecting exhibits at the close of the <strong>Exhibition</strong> from the <strong>Exhibition</strong> site and returning to his<br />
country.<br />
11.3 Dispatching exhibits to the Organizing Committee and returning of exhibits by means of Air Cargo<br />
are not allowed. Any transport by a third provider (secured valuables) shall be settled by contacting in<br />
due time the general commissioner.<br />
11.4 No complaints after the dismounting and return of the exhibit to the exhibitor or Commissioner will<br />
be entertained by the Organizing Committee.<br />
11.5 Requests for return, dismounting etc. of the exhibits during the <strong>Exhibition</strong> period shall not be accepted.<br />
Article 12<br />
CUSTOMS REGULATIONS<br />
12.1 The Organizing Committee shall make all reasonable effort in order to secure simplified customs<br />
procedures for entry of the exhibits to Switzerland through Zurich Airport with the Customs Federal<br />
Administration of Switzerland. Details of the customs procedures and possible requirements shall be<br />
communicated to all exhibitors through the respective National Commissioners.<br />
Article 13<br />
SECURITY MEASURES<br />
13.1 The Organizing Committee shall take all appropriate measures to ensure the security of the exhibits from<br />
arrival to return thereof. However, the Organizing Committee shall not be liable for any loss or damage to an<br />
106
Exhibit that might occur during the transportation to and from the exhibition, from receipt to return of the Exhibit<br />
and during the exhibition.<br />
13.2 After the exhibit is mounted by the Organising Committee, the National Commissioner is required to<br />
check that all pages and philatelic items are intact. In the event of any missing items, the National Commissioner<br />
must inform the Organising Committee immediately. A confirmation form shall be signed by the<br />
National Commissioner to be returned to the Organising Committee to confirm that the exhibit is mounted<br />
properly. This procedure is to be executed prior to the Opening day of the exhibition, except where an<br />
Exhibit is received after the Opening day when such report shall be made at the soonest opportunity.<br />
13.3 Every exhibitor has to insure his or her exhibit at own expense (GREX Article 50.2).<br />
Article 14<br />
EXPERT GROUP (Article 45 of GREX)<br />
14.1 An Expert Group will be appointed by the Organizing Committee after consultation with the FIP<br />
Consultant.<br />
Article 15<br />
RIGHTS OF ORGANIZING COMMITTEE<br />
15.1 Every exhibitor applying to exhibit at HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong> is deemed to have accepted the stipulations<br />
of the IREX.<br />
15.2 The Organizing Committee shall have the right to adjudicate any matters arising that are not covered<br />
by FIP Regulations or by this IREX, and its decisions shall be final.<br />
15.3 The Organizing Committee shall have the right to revise the IREX after consultation with the FIP<br />
Consultant. In such case, exhibitors shall be promptly notified of any such revision either directly or<br />
through the National Commissioner.<br />
Article 16<br />
ACCEPTANCE OF THESE REGULATIONS<br />
16.1 By signing the Exhibit Application Form, the exhibitor shall be deemed to accept the stipulations of<br />
the IREX, GREX, GREV and SREVs.<br />
16.2 In the event of any discrepancies in the text arising from translation, the English text shall prevail.<br />
16.3 Any legal cases shall be governed by the legal regulations of Switzerland and settled by the relevant<br />
courts in Switzerland.<br />
107
Exhibit Listing by Class<br />
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
1 – World Stamp Championship<br />
Austria 1-01 0001-0008 Spieler, Rudolf AAA - All About Automobiles<br />
Colombia 1-02 0009-0016 Arbelaez, Jorge<br />
Enrique<br />
Pre-Philatelic letter with content from<br />
Colombia 1531-1859<br />
Egypt 1-03 0017-0024 Salam, Hany Egypt: Maritime Mail Routes,<br />
19th Century<br />
France 1-04 0025-0032 Tillard, Jean-<br />
Jacques<br />
The overprints of St. Pierre et Miquelon<br />
in the 19th century<br />
Italy 1-05 0033-0040 Morani, Vittorio "Tuscany 1836 to GPU<br />
(up to 30th June 1875)"<br />
Letter mail in, from and to Tuscany:<br />
routes, rates and charges"<br />
Italy 1-06 0041-0048 Jaquard "Souvenir du Siège de Paris 1870/1871<br />
Private mail transported by Ballons-<br />
Montés during the Prussian Siege "<br />
Monaco 1-07 0049-0056 Bianchi, Paolo Portuguese East Africa (Mozambique)<br />
Sweden 1-08 0057-0064 Storckenfeldt,<br />
Douglas<br />
Switzerland 1-09 0065-0072 Bergamini,<br />
Adriano<br />
Iceland until 1901<br />
Postal relations between TICINO<br />
(Switzerland) and foreign countries<br />
before the UPU<br />
Uruguay 1-10 0073-0080 Britz, Walter Uruguay: Early Issues of the XIX<br />
Century (1856-1862)<br />
Venezuela 1-11 0081-0088 Heister, Knut Venezuela: First "Escuelas" Issue<br />
(1871-1878)<br />
Czech<br />
Republic<br />
1-12 0837-0844 Vaníček, Vít Postal History of Czech Lands<br />
(From the Beginning until 1867)<br />
108
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
2 – Traditional Philately<br />
2A – Traditional Philately – Switzerland – National Class<br />
Denmark 2A-01 0089-0093 Mortensen,<br />
Per Friis<br />
Japan 2A-02 0094-0098 Ariyoshi,<br />
Nobuto<br />
Japan 2A-03 0099-0106 Yoshida,<br />
Takashi<br />
Switzerland, The First Meter Stamp -<br />
The Oval type 1924-1962<br />
Switzerland postage due stamps<br />
1883-1910<br />
Classic Switzerland<br />
Switzerland 2A-04 0107-0111 Brand, Ruedi Perfins Switzerland and its Postage<br />
Control Systems (up to the Machine<br />
Frankings)<br />
Switzerland 2A-05 0112-0116 Farnow, Arnold Switzerland - Imperforate Sitting<br />
<strong>Helvetia</strong> "Strubel" 1854-1863<br />
Switzerland 2A-06 0117-0121 Huwiler, Joe Cross & Numeral / Standing <strong>Helvetia</strong><br />
1882-1907<br />
Switzerland 2A-07 0122-0126 Keller,<br />
Hansruedi<br />
Portrait of William Tell<br />
Switzerland 2A-08 0127-0131 Lopez, Roberto Proofs and tests of standing <strong>Helvetia</strong>s<br />
Switzerland 2A-09 0132-0136 SwissPhila The Swiss cantonal stamps and their<br />
cancellations<br />
United<br />
Kingdom<br />
2A-10 0137-0144 Hackmey,<br />
Joseph<br />
Classic Switzerland<br />
2B – Traditional Philately – Europe<br />
Bulgaria 2B-01 0145-0152 Todorov, Orlin Small lion issues (1889-1901)<br />
Croatia 2B-02 0153-0160 Gubijan, Željko Albania 1913-1920<br />
Denmark 2B-04 0166-0173 Malm, Torben Service Stamps of Denmark 1871-1924<br />
Finland 2B-06 0179-0183 Olli, Marcus Helsinki Citypost 1866-1891<br />
109
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
France 2B-07 0184-0190 Gontier, Jean-<br />
Claude<br />
France 2B-08 0191-0195 Peroche,<br />
Bernard<br />
Germany 2B-09 0196-0200 Avramidis,<br />
Pandelis<br />
Germany 2B-10 0201-0208 Reinhold,<br />
Henke<br />
French commemoratives for Paris 1924<br />
Olympic games set issue and postal use<br />
0,50 F Marianne de Béquet stamp:<br />
design, manufacture and production<br />
Greece small Hermes Heads<br />
Berlin victim and housing imprint<br />
(Notopfer Berlin und Wohnungsbau<br />
Aufdrucke)<br />
Germany 2B-11 0209-0213 Steinbach, Willi Greece large Hermes Heads<br />
Germany 2B-12 0214-0221 Wilhelms,<br />
Georg<br />
Czechoslovakia, 'The Hradcany Issue'<br />
Germany 2B-13 0222-0226 Wirges, Werner The II. Kontrollratsausgabe 1947/1948,<br />
printing idiosyncrasies and the variety<br />
of uses up to the currency reform as<br />
tenfold franking<br />
Iraq 2B-14 0227-0231 Naji, Abdulnasir<br />
Hilal<br />
Italy 2B-15 0232-0239 Melone,<br />
Francesco<br />
Italy 2B-16 0240-0244 Perricone,<br />
Giulio<br />
Portraits of The Three Kings of Iraq and<br />
their Surcharges<br />
Naples<br />
Kingdom of Sicily 1859-1860<br />
Japan 2B-17 0245-0249 Saito, Tamaki Lombardy Venetia the 1850 Issue<br />
Liechtenstein<br />
2B-18 0250-0257 Huys-Berlingin,<br />
Jan<br />
Belgium's first issue, the EPAULETTES<br />
Romania 2B-19 0258-0265 Iordache, Victor Romania 1872-1889<br />
Romania 2B-20 0266-0273 Milu, Constantin The stamps for first Olympic Games<br />
Slovenia 2B-21 0274-0278 Petauer,<br />
Boštjan<br />
Spain 2B-22 0279-0283 Consejo,<br />
Eduardo<br />
Charity overprints on Bosnian definitive<br />
1914-1915<br />
The stamps of the Atogiro flying over<br />
Seville<br />
110
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Sweden 2B-23 0284-0288 Arnrup, Claes Adhesive Postage Stamps of the World<br />
1840-1860. From countries that issued<br />
their first stams up to 1 July 1852<br />
Sweden 2B-24 0289-0293 Järnum, Lennart Sweden The Coat-of Arms Stamps<br />
1855-1872<br />
Sweden 2B-25 0294-0301 Ljungh, Jan-<br />
Olof<br />
The first stamps of the German Empire,<br />
the Eagle shield stamps and the values<br />
10 and 30 groschen<br />
Sweden 2B-26 0302-0309 Rietz, Ake Great Britain: Line engraved issues<br />
1840-1870<br />
Sweden 2B-27 0310-0314 Stommendal,<br />
Peter<br />
Classic Sweden 1855-1872<br />
Switzerland 2B-29 0323-0327 Brack, Max Denmark 4 skilling 1854-1863<br />
Switzerland 2B-30 0328-0332 Klausner,<br />
Werner<br />
Day of the postage stamp in various<br />
European countries with a focus on<br />
Switzerland<br />
Switzerland 2B-31 0333-0337 Kraner, Gerhard The special stamps and special<br />
postcards from Federal Republic of<br />
Germany from 1949-1953.<br />
Switzerland 2B-32 0338-0345 Werner, Eric The stamps of the Italian Kingdom<br />
issued during the Kingdom of Victor<br />
Emanuel II<br />
Switzerland 2B-33 0346-0350 Carlo Rossi Papal States 1852-1870<br />
Switzerland 2B-34 0351-0355 Valdisera Roman States 1852-1870<br />
Switzerland 2B-35 0356-0360 Fjället Sweden's definitive issue 1920-1939<br />
Switzerland 2B-36 0361-0365 Andi's<br />
Briefmarken<br />
Turkey 2B-37 0366-0373 Erhan, Mehmet<br />
Yamaç<br />
Turkey 2B-38 0374-0381 Kamil Serdar,<br />
Yazgan<br />
Kingdom Yugoslavia<br />
Specialized Turkey 1920-1928<br />
From the Ankara Government to the<br />
Turkish Republic (1920-1928)<br />
Ukraine 2B-39 0382-0386 Frenkel, Dmytro Stamps of RSFSR 1918-1923.<br />
USA 2B-40 0387-0394 Zulueta, Alfonso Bosnia-Herzegovinia: Double Eagle<br />
Definitive Issues, 1879-1905<br />
111
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
2C – Traditional Philately – America<br />
Argentina 2C-01 0395-0402 Casielles,<br />
Miguel<br />
Argentina 2C-02 0403-0410 Moscatelli,<br />
Jorge Eduardo<br />
Brazil 2C-03 0411-0415 Benchimol,<br />
Jacques<br />
San Martin in Oval 1908<br />
Argentina Definitive Issues 1923-1935<br />
"Dom Pedro II - Emperor of Brazil<br />
American & Continental Bank Note<br />
issues - 1866-1878"<br />
Chile 2C-04 0416-0420 Mouat, Cristian Chile: The Peso Bronce Issue<br />
1904-1909. Includes the overprinted<br />
issue "Islas de Juan Fernandez"<br />
from 1910<br />
Colombia 2C-05 0421-0428 Cruz, Santiago Colombia - The Perkins 1917 Issue<br />
Colombia 2C-06 0429-0433 Frohlich, Alfredo Colombia - The Last classic issue of<br />
1866<br />
Costa Rica 2C-07 0434-0438 Castro-<br />
Harrigan, Alvaro<br />
Costa Rica 2C-08 0439-0443 Diaz, Luis<br />
Fernando<br />
Germany 2C-11 0454-0458 Jaretzky, Rolf-<br />
Dieter<br />
Honduras 2C-12 0459-0465 Diaz, Maria<br />
Beatriz<br />
Costa Rica: The Classic Period<br />
1863-1883<br />
Costa Rica: Coat of Arms Issue of 1892<br />
Confederate States of America<br />
Honduras 1865-1899<br />
India 2C-13 0466-0470 Suri, Anil Stamps of Uruguay, The Waterlow<br />
Issues 1889-1954<br />
Switzerland 2C-14 0471-0478 Aebi, Fritz Mexico: The Hidalgo in Profile Issue<br />
1872-74<br />
Switzerland 2C-15 0479-0483 Cordier, Jean-<br />
Louis<br />
Switzerland 2C-16 0484-0491 Sotty, Jean-<br />
François<br />
Mexican Revolution – SONORA, The<br />
White and Green Seal Postage Stamps<br />
Peru Classic<br />
112
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
United<br />
Kingdom<br />
2C-17 0492-0496 Harman,<br />
Christopher G.<br />
The Early Issues of Peru - From the<br />
Pacific Steam Navigation Company<br />
until the UPU<br />
Uruguay 2C-18 0497-0504 Boido, Eduardo Uruguay - "Escuditos" issues<br />
1864-1866<br />
USA 2C-19 0505-0509 Banchik, Mark Vera Cruz Occupation (1914)<br />
Traditional Study of Revenue Stamps<br />
USA 2C-20 0510-0514 Erichson,<br />
Jeffrey<br />
USA 2C-21 0515-0519 Reddington,<br />
Stuart<br />
Venezuela 2C-22 0520-0527 Borberg,<br />
Eduardo<br />
Engraved Perforated Royal Portraits<br />
Issued in Hawaii 1864-1893<br />
Canada Small Queens; 1870-1897<br />
Venezuela: The First American Bank<br />
Note Co. Issues<br />
2D – Traditional Philately – Asia, Oceania and Africa<br />
Australia 2D-01 0528-0535 Kellow, Geoffrey The 2d Bell Design of Victoria,<br />
1873-1880<br />
Bangladesh 2D-02 0536-0540 Rahman,<br />
A.H.M. Faizur<br />
Postage stamps of Bangladesh<br />
on the United Nations<br />
Denmark 2D-03 0541-0545 Møller, Klaus The New Zealand Chalon Issues<br />
1855-1873<br />
Egypt 2D-04 0546-0553 Bassyouny,<br />
Hisham<br />
Finland 2D-05 0554-0558 Weber,<br />
Reinhard<br />
Germany 2D-06 0559-0566 Bornmann,<br />
Johannes<br />
India 2D-07 0567-0571 Kedia,<br />
Om Prakash<br />
India 2D-08 0572-0576 Mahalingan,<br />
Ramachandran<br />
British Forces in Egypt Stamps<br />
Issued 1932-1939<br />
Straits Settlements Sultanat Johor<br />
1885-1940<br />
Nepal, Pre-Philately and Classic<br />
Litho Stamps of Bhopal State<br />
1871-1908<br />
Kingdom of Cochin<br />
India 2D-09 0577-0581 Mohan, K S Study of Service Stamps of Cochin<br />
India 2D-10 0582-0586 Ramachandran,<br />
Madhav<br />
British India<br />
113
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Japan 2D-11 0587-0591 Kato, Shigeki Japan Chrysanthemum Stamps<br />
1899-1910<br />
Japan 2D-12 0592-0596 Kido, Yusuke Ryukyu Dollar Currency Conversion<br />
Provisional Series<br />
Pakistan 2D-15 0607-0614 Balgamwala,<br />
Muhammad Arif<br />
Pakistan 2D-16 0615-0619 Nanjee, Afzal<br />
Hussain<br />
AFGANISTAN ABDUL RAHMAN<br />
1888-1890 (Circular series)<br />
Ottoman Empire (Turkey): The Study of<br />
Arms Issue<br />
Rep. of<br />
Korea<br />
2D-17 0620-0624 Kim, Heon Sik The Second Regular Stamps in<br />
Korea(1951-1953)<br />
State of<br />
Qatar<br />
2D-18 0625-0629 Al-Ismail,<br />
Hussain<br />
Qatar First Definitive Issue<br />
Switzerland 2D-19 0630-0634 Meyerhoff,<br />
Daniel<br />
The stamp issues of Mauritius under<br />
Queen Victoria 1847-1897<br />
Switzerland 2D-20 0635-0642 Emerald Imperforate Classics of the World<br />
in Green<br />
Thailand 2D-21 0643-0650 Utensute, Ukris Thailand; King Bhumibol’s 2nd<br />
definitive issue<br />
United Arab<br />
Emirates<br />
United Arab<br />
Emirates<br />
2D-22 0651-0655 Ahmad, Omar A Glance on Stamps used in Dubai<br />
2D-23 0656-0660 Alserkal, Nasser Dubai Stamps<br />
United<br />
Kingdom<br />
2D-25 0666-0673 Martin-Redman,<br />
Simon<br />
Sarawak - The first forty years<br />
1858-1898<br />
United<br />
Kingdom<br />
2D-26 0674-0678 Sarian, Atif Egypt - The Third Issue 1872-1879<br />
USA 2D-27 0679-0683 Nassre-<br />
Esfahani,<br />
Behruz<br />
The Dual Currency Issues of Persia,<br />
1881-1885<br />
114
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
3 – Postal History<br />
3A – Postal History – Switzerland – National Class<br />
Austria 3A-01 0684-0688 Blaickner,<br />
Gerhard<br />
Schweizer Auslandfrankaturen zur Zeit<br />
der Rayonmarken 1850-1854<br />
Switzerland 3A-02 0689-0693 Bader, Jvo Swiss postal agencies in Italy and<br />
France<br />
Switzerland 3A-03 0694-0698 Balimann,<br />
Giovanni<br />
Switzerland 3A-04 0699-0703 Bellini, Gian<br />
Franco<br />
Bulk Mail in Switzerland<br />
(Massensendungen in der Schweiz)<br />
Collection of prephilatelic documents of<br />
the county of Ticino<br />
Switzerland 3A-05 0704-0708 Berger, Thomas Switzerland in the First World War<br />
Switzerland 3A-06 0709-0713 Bernath,<br />
François<br />
The Postal History of the "Alte<br />
Eidgenossenschaft" till the period of<br />
the "Helvetic Republic" (1798-1803)<br />
Switzerland 3A-07 0714-0718 Budel, Alvise SWITZERLAND The Postal rates<br />
since 1850<br />
Switzerland 3A-08 0719-0723 Gamma,<br />
Claudio<br />
Switzerland 3A-09 0724-0728 Geissmann,<br />
Christian<br />
Oval radiation postmarks of the Canton<br />
Ticino<br />
Restrictions in Switzerland's<br />
International Postal Connections due to<br />
the Second World War 1939-1945<br />
Switzerland 3A-10 0729-0733 Häfeli, Hans Postal History of the Town of Zurich<br />
1602-1900<br />
Switzerland 3A-11 0734-0738 Kuhlmann,<br />
René<br />
Lettermail: Switzerland to Foreign<br />
destination 1862-1883<br />
Switzerland 3A-12 0739-0743 Lachat, Bernard Early oval meter stamps from<br />
Switzerland<br />
Switzerland 3A-13 0744-0748 Leggeri,<br />
Lorenzo<br />
Oval stamps of Ticino and Mesolcina<br />
Switzerland 3A-14 0749-0753 Leuthard, Rolf History of Swiss Army (from the downfall<br />
of the Old Confederation to 1880)<br />
115
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Switzerland 3A-15 0754-0758 Roggo, Diego Postal history of the Lake district<br />
(Canton Fribourg)<br />
Switzerland 3A-16 0759-0763 Sägesser,<br />
Stefan<br />
Switzerland 3A-17 0764-0771 Schaefer,<br />
Richard<br />
Postal history Canton Zug from<br />
1700-1900<br />
SWISS LETTER MAIL DURING THE<br />
FIRST FEDERAL PERIOD 1849-1854<br />
Cantonal- and Transitional Stamps,<br />
Locals and rayon I, II and III<br />
Switzerland 3A-18 0722-0776 Valesia Valais 1850-1863<br />
Switzerland 3A-19 0777-0781 Totentanz Postal History of Cantonal Lucerne<br />
1850-1910<br />
3B – Postal History – Europe<br />
Australia 3B-01 0782-0786 Lewis, Geoffrey Mail Routes in the Atlantic, Pacific and<br />
Indian Oceans, plus the routes between<br />
the oceans<br />
Austria 3B-02 0787-0794 Horin, Horst<br />
Erich<br />
Field- and military mail under the double<br />
eagle in the German Confederation<br />
1815-1866<br />
Austria 3B-03 0795-0802 Lind, Armin Money- and Value-Letters in Austria<br />
Austria 3B-04 0803-0810 Stepniczka,<br />
Heinrich<br />
Kingdom of Lombardy-Venetia<br />
(1815-1866)<br />
Belgium 3B-06 0816-0823 Selis, Luc Ocean Letters<br />
Bulgaria 3B-07 0824-0828 Barneva,<br />
Lyudmila<br />
Bulgaria. Post offices of Royal Palaces<br />
& Royal Mail (1886-1946).<br />
Czech<br />
Republic<br />
3B-08 0829-0836 Červinka, Miloš Development of postal services in<br />
Decin region<br />
Finland 3B-10 0845-0849 Muhonen, Ari Finland special agreements 1922-1945<br />
Finland 3B-11 0850-0854 Nikkanen,<br />
Janne<br />
France 3B-12 0855-0859 Bonnefoy,<br />
Laurent<br />
The Development of Espoo Municipality<br />
Post 1760-1918<br />
The 5 F Merson-Type<br />
(Metropolitan France 1900-1932)<br />
116
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
France 3B-13 0860-0864 Kaminski,<br />
Philippe<br />
British registered mail 1850-1886<br />
France 3B-14 0865-0869 Trinquier, Alain Use of Mouchon type stamps on mail<br />
from France (1900-1906)<br />
France 3B-15 0870-0874 Banette French Electric Telegraphy in the<br />
Metropolis and in the World from<br />
1850 to 1900<br />
Germany 3B-16 0875-0879 Camerer, Martin Letter mail between the Old Italian and<br />
the Old German States 1850-1870<br />
Germany 3B-17 0880-0887 Günnewig,<br />
Franz Josef<br />
Germany 3B-18 0888-0895 Krauss,<br />
Karlfried<br />
Germany 3B-19 0896-0903 Krug,<br />
Hansmichael<br />
Germany 3B-20 0904-0908 Liebermann,<br />
Hartmut<br />
Norway-German postal history on<br />
mail transport et vice versa up to the<br />
foundation of the UPU<br />
Prussia as the Main Link of the<br />
Russian-Polish Mail with the West<br />
(from the beginning until 1875)<br />
Postal traffic between the area of the<br />
Deutsche Reichspost and the United<br />
States of America 4.5.1871-1875<br />
Postmarks in Bohemia and Moravia<br />
during the post-war period after WW II<br />
Germany 3B-21 0909-0913 Martens, Sven German Imperial Post - Postal rates for<br />
foreign destinations from 1875 and the<br />
development into the UPU tariffs<br />
Germany 3B-22 0914-0920 Schädlich,<br />
Klaus<br />
Postmark in the principality<br />
Liechtenstein<br />
Germany 3B-23 0921-0925 Selig, Heinz Postal History of the hamlet Lauenau<br />
Germany 3B-24 0926-0933 Siebert, Werner History of the postal service in<br />
German Southwest Africa<br />
Germany 3B-25 0934-0938 Soll, Hans-<br />
Joachim<br />
The postal infrastructure of German<br />
East Africa 1890-1917<br />
Germany 3B-26 0939-0943 Weis, Klaus The Development of the Local<br />
Postmarks in the Later Grand Duchy<br />
Baden 1723-1871<br />
Greece 3B-27 0944-0951 Arvanitis,<br />
Thomas<br />
The Prephilatelic period of the<br />
Hellenic Postal Service<br />
117
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Greece 3B-28 0952-0956 Chazapis,<br />
Costas<br />
Greece: The 4th of August regime<br />
(1936-41)<br />
Hungary 3B-29 0957-0964 Glatz, István Foreign Frankings from Hungary<br />
1900-1918<br />
Hungary 3B-30 0965-0969 Homonnay,<br />
Géza<br />
Hungarian Consular Post Offices in<br />
Romania, 1 May 1867-31 March 1869<br />
Israel 3B-31 0970-0977 Tsachor, Yacov France - The Perforated Ceres:<br />
Routes & Postmarks, 1871-1878<br />
Italy 3B-32 0978-0982 Mathà, Thomas Postal relations between Papal States<br />
and Lombardy Venetia 1815-1852<br />
Italy 3B-33 0983-0987 Nembrini,<br />
Giovanni<br />
The Postal Relationship between Italy<br />
and France 1850-1875<br />
Italy 3B-34 0988-0995 Rigo, Franco Venice, the contagion, the quarantine,<br />
the disenfection, the quarantine<br />
hospitals (postal history of the health<br />
office from xvi to xix century)<br />
Italy 3B-35 0996-1000 Veneri, Aniello Postal services in Italy 1945-1957<br />
Netherlands 3B-36 1001-1008 Buitenkamp,<br />
Henk<br />
Netherlands 3B-37 1009-1013 Op den Camp,<br />
Jan G.<br />
Netherlands 3B-38 1014-1018 Van der Horst,<br />
Hans<br />
Postal Rates and Franking of Slovenia,<br />
Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina<br />
1918-1921<br />
Origin and development of the postal<br />
service in the Lower Rhine region<br />
until 1871, with its important local and<br />
international aspects<br />
The Netherlands; messages via the<br />
Red Cross during World War 2<br />
Netherlands 3B-39 1019-1026 Wiersma, Hotze Border cross mail 1668-1810, exhibited<br />
by letters related to Holland<br />
Poland 3B-40 1027-1031 Bator, Janusz PRZEMYŚL – POSTAL HISTORY<br />
UNTIL 1918<br />
Poland 3B-41 1032-1036 Chabros,<br />
Sławek<br />
Fight for independence and borders of<br />
Poland 1918-1921<br />
Poland 3B-42 1037-1041 Klamut, Andrzej Austrian base post offices<br />
in the Polish Lands 1914-1918<br />
118
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Poland 3B-43 1042-1049 Okniński,<br />
Roman<br />
Poland 3B-44 1050-1054 Piwko,<br />
Krzysztof<br />
Post activities in the Kingdom of Galicia<br />
and Lodomeria to 1867<br />
Local Posts in occupied Poland<br />
1914-1918<br />
Portugal 3B-45 1055-1059 Frazão, Luís Postal History of Portugal in the<br />
Pre-stamp Period<br />
Romania 3B-46 1060-1064 Chirescu, Ion Postal services in Romanian<br />
Principalities, 1829-1859<br />
Slovenia 3B-47 1065-1069 Artel, Thomas Postal rates and frankings of Slovenia,<br />
Croatia and Bosnia-Hercegovina<br />
1918-1921<br />
Spain 3B-48 1070-1074 Gisbert Llacer,<br />
Miriam<br />
Valencian prephilatelics marks<br />
XVIII-XIX centuries<br />
Sweden 3B-49 1075-1082 Lithén, Gunnar Cancellations from Swedish steamship<br />
mail post offices from 1869 up to 1951<br />
Sweden 3B-50 1082-1087 Persson, Göran Cancellations of the Swedish Skilling<br />
Banco Stamps 1855-1858<br />
Sweden 3B-51 1088-1092 Wittsten, Peter Mail between Denmark and Sweden -<br />
both ways 1658-1875<br />
Switzerland 3B-52 1093-1097 Felder, Franz-<br />
Josef<br />
Switzerland 3B-53 1098-1105 Sprenger,<br />
Markus<br />
Germany: Inflation in the period<br />
1916-1923. Documentation of<br />
the collapse of the currency through<br />
selected postal items<br />
British-Egyptian Censor Marks during<br />
World War II<br />
Turkey 3B-54 1106-1110 Erhan, Yelda Rare postal marks used in the<br />
early years of the Turkish Republic<br />
1923-1930<br />
Turkey 3B-55 1111-1115 Tunaci, Atadan Competition in Ottoman Sea<br />
Turkey 3B-56 1116-1120 Yilmaz, Hakan Postal History – Province of<br />
HÜDAVENDİGAR<br />
Ukraine 3B-57 1121-1125 Andriy,<br />
Grodetskyy<br />
Postal history of Podolian region within<br />
the Russian Empire<br />
119
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Ukraine 3B-58 1126-1133 Galyna,<br />
Filonova<br />
«Urgent mail» delivery in Russian<br />
Empire, the RSFSR and the USSR<br />
in 1668-1938<br />
Ukraine 3B-59 1134-1138 Semenov, Igor Odessa postal history in 1798-1900<br />
United Arab<br />
Emirates<br />
United<br />
Kingdom<br />
United<br />
Kingdom<br />
United<br />
Kingdom<br />
United<br />
Kingdom<br />
3B-60 1139-1143 Awan, Shafiq Postal Markings of Britain<br />
3B-61 1144-1151 Hedley, Bill Postal Service development in Poszony<br />
and its environs during the Habsburg<br />
era to 1900<br />
3B-62 1152-1159 King, Birthe Refugee Camps in Denmark 1945-1949<br />
3B-63 1160-1167 King, Chris The Posts in the City of Lübeck before<br />
1868<br />
3B-64 1168-1175 Pizer, Robin German Parcel Cards to Foreign<br />
Countries 1907-1928<br />
USA 3B-65 1176-1180 Grassi,<br />
Armando<br />
The Crimean War<br />
Sweden 3B-66 0315-0322 Ydell, Fredrik Swedish Postal History 1550-1872<br />
3C – Postal History – America<br />
Argentina 3C-01 1181-1185 Chaves, Carlos Argentina-Register Mail from<br />
1878 to 1920<br />
Argentina 3C-02 1186-1193 Reim, Pablo<br />
Alejandro<br />
The Argentine Stage-Coach Monks<br />
(1852-1870)<br />
Argentina 3C-03 1194-1201 Villard, Olivier Overseas Mail form and to Argentina<br />
(1852-1878)<br />
Belgium 3C-04 1202-1206 Van Laere,<br />
Roger<br />
History of the Borders of Peru and<br />
Bolivia<br />
Brazil 3C-05 1207-1214 Chen, Ying Dao Brazil-Portugal Maritime Mail<br />
(1698-1877)<br />
Brazil 3C-06 1215-1219 Porto Jr.,<br />
Rubem<br />
Censored Brazilian Mail: 1914 to 1939<br />
120
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Chile 3C-07 1220-1224 Bravo, Rodrigo Marcas Postales y Etiquetas de<br />
Servicio Auxiliares a la Obliteración,<br />
Chile 1853-1920<br />
Germany 3C-09 1233-1240 Heimbüchler,<br />
Fritz<br />
Collection of the first stamps of Brazil<br />
1843-1870<br />
USA 3C-12 1251-1258 Kewriga, Matt United States 1870-88 Bank Note issue<br />
Postal History<br />
USA 3C-13 1259-1263 Rodriguez,<br />
Omar<br />
Mexico: The Use of the Medallion,<br />
Numeral, and Mulitas Stamps During<br />
the Drastic Drop of Rates When Joining<br />
UPU 1884-1900<br />
3D – Postal History – Asia, Oceania and Africa<br />
Germany 3D-01 1264-1268 Grundmann,<br />
Wilhelm<br />
Mongolia - Land of Genghis Khan.<br />
Post Offices and Postmarks 1878-1939<br />
India 3D-02 1269-1273 James Cochin State Postal History<br />
Italy 3D-04 1279-1283 Fumu, Antonello 1845/85 – The mail service in the North<br />
Africa ports: Alexandria, Tunis, Algiers,<br />
Bone, Philippeville, Oran, Tangier and<br />
Tripoli of Barbary<br />
Italy 3D-05 1284-1288 Maria, Luciano Ethiopia: the pre-UPU period<br />
Japan 3D-06 1289-1296 Koiwa, Akihiko Indian Campaigns<br />
Pakistan 3D-07 1297-1301 Kodwavwala,<br />
Muhammad<br />
Rizwan<br />
Postal Marking of Karachi<br />
State of<br />
Qatar<br />
3D-08 1302-1306 Al-Ismail,<br />
Shatha<br />
Oman Postal History<br />
State of<br />
Qatar<br />
State of<br />
Qatar<br />
3D-09 1307-1311 Al-Ismail, Ali Kuwait Postal History<br />
3D-10 1312-1316 Sorour, Yacoub Aden Postal History<br />
Sweden 3D-11 1317-1321 Sohrne, Björn The Ottman, Turkey and Persian<br />
Empires, Postal Relations,<br />
ca 1800 to 1920s.<br />
121
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Switzerland 3D-12 1322-1329 Scherer, Eric Prepaid reply cards in international mail<br />
- Historic development and practice of<br />
usage<br />
Thailand 3D-13 1330-1337 Euarchukiati,<br />
Nuntawat<br />
Thailand 3D-14 1338-1345 Karnasuta,<br />
Charnchai<br />
Thailand 3D-15 1346-1350 Sinchawla,<br />
Santpal<br />
Siam: Thai Occupation and World<br />
War II (1943-1946)<br />
Death Railway POW & Civilian Labor<br />
Mail, and Thailand Internee Mail<br />
Early India Mails Using De La Rue & Co<br />
Typographed Stamps<br />
United Arab<br />
Emirates<br />
3D-16 1351-1358 Alserkal, Ahmad A Postal History Study of Air mail from<br />
Iraq (1919-1945)<br />
United<br />
Kingdom<br />
3D-18 1359-1366 Wheatley,<br />
Richard<br />
Netherlands East Indies Mail 1789 to<br />
GPU (1877)<br />
4 – Postal Stationery<br />
Australia 4-01 1372-1379 McMahon, Ian Envelopes and Postcards of Canada<br />
Bangladesh 4-02 1380-1384 Munir, M M<br />
Salman<br />
Postal stationery of Natal 1885-1912<br />
Bulgaria 4-03 1385-1392 Todorov, Orlin Classic Postal Stationeries of Bulgaria<br />
(1879-1898)<br />
Costa Rica 4-04 1393-1397 Sancho, Cesar Costa Rica 1923. The First Locally<br />
Manufactured Postal Stationery<br />
Costa Rica 4-05 1398-1405 Wayman, Giana 19th Century Postal Stationery of Costa<br />
Rica and their usage<br />
Finland 4-06 1406-1410 Tuori, Jussi Finland M/30 postal stationery<br />
France 4-07 1411-1415 Logette, Jean-<br />
François<br />
Essays, Proofs and Blocks of 4 of the<br />
Rome model International reply coupon<br />
Germany 4-08 1416-1420 Sarlak, Behrouz Postal stationery Persia 1875-1945<br />
Germany 4-09 1421-1428 Süss, Peter The Postal Cards of Mexico 1879-1890<br />
India 4-10 1429-1433 Jhingan,<br />
Madhukar<br />
Indian Aerogrammes<br />
122
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Indonesia 4-11 1434-1438 Fadli Postal Cards of Netherlands Indies<br />
1874-1932<br />
Japan 4-12 1439-1446 Ando, Gensei The Japanese Foreign Mail Postcards<br />
Japan 4-13 1447-1454 Yamazaki,<br />
Fumio<br />
Spain 4-16 1465-1472 Baschwitz,<br />
German<br />
Spain 4-17 1473-1480 Martinez<br />
Herñandez,<br />
Manuel<br />
Spain 4-18 1481-1485 Rodriguez<br />
Piñero, Jose<br />
Carlos<br />
Sweden 4-19 1486-1490 Fredriksson,<br />
Gert<br />
Hawaiian Postal Stationery<br />
Spain postal stationery of general use<br />
(1873-1938)<br />
Postal stationery type "MATRONA"<br />
1931-1936<br />
Postal stationery of Mexico<br />
"Serie Mulitas"<br />
Denmark Postal Stationary 1913-1927,<br />
Christian X Rigth Profile<br />
Switzerland 4-20 1491-1498 Bamert, Peter Wells Fargo Express Conquers Mexico<br />
Switzerland 4-21 1499-1503 Dünki, Joos Postal Stationery of the Principality of<br />
Liechtenstein from 1918<br />
Switzerland 4-22 1504-1508 Fink, Peter Aerogram Story<br />
Switzerland 4-23 1509-1516 Lienert, Otmar The System of International Reply<br />
Coupons<br />
Switzerland 4-24 1517-1521 Lualdi, Armando<br />
Andreas<br />
Postal History of Switzerland STO,<br />
stamped to private order 1907-1930<br />
United<br />
Kingdom<br />
4-25 1522-1526 Richards,<br />
Simon<br />
Grenada Postal Stationery<br />
United<br />
Kingdom<br />
4-26 1527-1531 Walton, Frank Great Britain QEII Registered<br />
Envelopes of the Tudor Rose design<br />
Uruguay 4-27 1532-1539 Charlone,<br />
Rogelio<br />
USA 4-28 1540-1547 Jaiswal,<br />
Sandeep<br />
50 Years of Postal Stationery in<br />
Uruguay<br />
British India Queen Victoria Postal<br />
Stationary<br />
Venezuela 4-30 1556-1563 Meri, Pedro Venezuela: Postal stationery, new order<br />
123
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
5 – Aerophilately<br />
Argentina 5-01 1564-1568 Vogt, Ronny Argentina Airmails 1912-1939<br />
Colombia 5-02 1569-1576 Johnson,<br />
James C<br />
Scadta - Postal routes 1923-1929<br />
Czech<br />
Republic<br />
5-03 1577-1584 Bouda, Pavel Czechoslovak Airpost 1920-1938<br />
France 5-04 1585-1589 Maréchal, René Airmail across the Aegean Sea<br />
(1929-1947)<br />
France 5-05 1590-1597 Renaud,<br />
Jacques<br />
France 5-06 1598-1605 Trzeciak,<br />
Patrice<br />
Honduras 5-07 1606-1610 Bendeck,<br />
Sergio Antonio<br />
Commercial and private mail carried by<br />
German airships mechanical postage<br />
period 1928-1935<br />
Transatlantic Airmail Services During<br />
WW2<br />
The first year of Honduras Air mail,<br />
1925-1933<br />
Hungary 5-08 1611-1615 Lővei, György Chapters of the Hungarian air mail -<br />
Foreign destinations from the beginning<br />
up to 31.12.1933.<br />
India 5-09 1616-1620 Khaitan, Piyush The 1948 Air-India International Flight<br />
to London<br />
Ireland 5-10 1621-1628 Callan, Brian Graf Zeppelin DZ-127 South America<br />
Airmail 1930-1937<br />
Italy 5-11 1629-1633 Di Mento, Eligio The Mail by Helicopter in Italy<br />
Italy 5-12 1634-1638 Restaino, Luca The Balbo Cruise in 1933<br />
Italy 5-13 1639-1643 Riccitelli, Flavio The contribution of Zeppelins in the<br />
development of the German Aeropostal<br />
System from/to South America<br />
(1934-1937)<br />
Netherlands 5-15 1652-1659 Bot, Jacques Fokker during the Interbellum<br />
Poland 5-16 1660-1667 Kosmala, Jacek Airplane services on the Polish<br />
Territories 1914-1939<br />
124
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Portugal 5-17 1668-1672 Costa Postal Air Service Catapult<br />
(North Atlantic)<br />
Spain 5-18 1673-1680 Gomez-Agüero,<br />
Jose Pedro<br />
Air Mail on Spanish lands (1919-1939)<br />
Switzerland 5-19 1681-1688 Beer, Peter North Atlantic Catapult Airmail Flights<br />
1928-1935<br />
Switzerland 5-20 1689-1693 Flückiger,<br />
Markus<br />
Military Aviation Switzerland<br />
Switzerland 5-21 1694-1698 Förster,<br />
Eckhard<br />
The development of drop mail of<br />
LZ 127 "Graf Zeppelin" 1928–1936<br />
Switzerland 5-22 1699-1703 Heiniger, Ueli Airmail Switzerland<br />
Switzerland 5-23 1704-1711 Keller, Christian Courrier Sud / Southern Airmails<br />
Switzerland 5-24 1712-1719 Ravasi, Mario SCADTA Development of Colombian<br />
airmail<br />
United<br />
Kingdom<br />
5-25 1720-1724 Athale, Dinar Development of the Indian Air Mail<br />
Service 1911-1941<br />
USA 5-26 1725-1729 Ganz, Cheryl Zeppelins and the United States<br />
USA 5-27 1730-1737 Melamed,<br />
Semyon<br />
Iraq 5-28 1274-1278 Abdulwahab,<br />
Nader<br />
Zeppelin Airships and Their Flights<br />
The Royal Air Force Cairo - Baghdad<br />
Air Mail Service 1921-1927.<br />
Honduras 5-29 1241-1245 Mejía, Mauricio First and special flights from and to<br />
Honduras<br />
6 – Thematic Philately<br />
6A – Thematic Philately – Nature<br />
Argentina 6A-01 1738-1745 Casielles,<br />
Daiana Aylen<br />
My friend's dog<br />
Croatia 6A-02 1746-1751 Maras, Julije Gold & Golden<br />
France 6A-03 1752-1759 Riera, Manuel Chelonians (Turtles)<br />
France 6A-04 1760-1767 Rothenburg,<br />
Jacques<br />
Beautiful as a rose !<br />
125
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Germany 6A-05 1768-1775 Fuchs, Wilfried The fox and his varied relationship to us<br />
human beings<br />
Israel 6A-06 1776-1783 Charrach, Josef Minerals - Their Origin, Exploitation and<br />
Uses<br />
Rep. of<br />
Korea<br />
6A-08 1789-1793 Jung, Soon<br />
Jong<br />
Horses with Human Civilization<br />
Switzerland 6A-09 1794-1798 Grigorescu,<br />
Razvan<br />
Horse racing, a fascinating world<br />
Switzerland 6A-10 1799-1806 Kaelin, Sylvia I Love Chickens<br />
Switzerland 6A-11 1807-1814 Scheibler, Hans All Scrap or what?<br />
Switzerland 6A-12 1815-1819 Streit, Toni MAMMALS: Human, too human and<br />
superhuman<br />
Switzerland 6A-13 1820-1827 Zehnder, Erika Arctophilia/Bearmania - Arctophilie/<br />
Bärenmanie<br />
Uruguay 6A-14 1828-1832 Bellini, Enzo The Turtles: A Singular Evolutionary<br />
Success<br />
6B – Thematic Philately – Culture<br />
Argentina 6B-01 1833-1837 Cravero,<br />
Roberto Nestor<br />
Earth Drawings<br />
Bangladesh 6B-02 1838-1842 Ghazi, Qayyum Canoe, The Amazing Prehistoric<br />
Watercraft of All Time<br />
Belgium 6B-04 1848-1852 Iéko, Philippe Impressionism, a major step in painting<br />
Belgium 6B-05 1853-1860 Paquet,<br />
Jacques<br />
The Gothic Cathedral between<br />
God and Men<br />
Belgium 6B-06 1861-1865 Soreil, Charlotte And the Man created his face<br />
Belgium 6B-07 1866-1870 Suys, Jean-<br />
Pierre<br />
Brazil 6B-08 1871-1875 Martins Neto,<br />
Braz<br />
Brazil 6B-09 1876-1880 Dedivitis,<br />
Rogério<br />
Brazil 6B-10 1881-1885 Pinet, Ricardo<br />
Jorge<br />
From body sounds to sound bodies<br />
Rule of Law - Defense and Breach<br />
The Nazism and the war:<br />
The age of social catastrophe<br />
A Brief View to Brazil by a Brazilianist<br />
126
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Chile 6B-11 1886-1890 jbellido "Simply, Michelangelo" The life and<br />
work of Renaissance Man<br />
France 6B-12 1891-1898 Israël, Alain The red cross from Solferino<br />
to modern times<br />
France 6B-13 1899-1906 Sauvaître,<br />
Jean-Marie<br />
India 6B-14 1907-1911 Ghose,<br />
Chandrajit<br />
India 6B-15 1912-1916 Sharma,<br />
Dinesh<br />
My journey in freemasonry<br />
Bicentennial Celebration of<br />
independence of USA in 1976<br />
Summer Olympic Games<br />
Indonesia 6B-16 1917-1924 Noviandi, Gita One World, One Promise<br />
Israel 6B-17 1925-1929 Lador,<br />
Menachem<br />
2nd Oldest Profession -<br />
Intelligence Services<br />
Italy 6B-18 1930-1934 Licata, Giovanni The Maya<br />
Italy 6B-19 1935-1939 Picconi,<br />
Salvatore<br />
San Marino: History of ancient<br />
land of the freedom<br />
Netherlands 6B-20 1940-1944 Kniese, Eric A book is more than a story<br />
Netherlands 6B-21 1945-1949 van Nies, Peter CARNIVAL, more than three foolish<br />
days!<br />
Rep. of<br />
Korea<br />
6B-22 1950-1954 Ryoo, Sang<br />
Boom<br />
One Century of Western Painting after<br />
French Revolution<br />
Romania 6B-23 1955-1959 Constantin<br />
Leonid, Calin<br />
Romania 6B-24 1960-1964 Muntean,<br />
Marius<br />
Lions in human culture<br />
Ballet<br />
Sweden 6B-25 1965-1972 Olason, Anders The American Civil War 1861-1865<br />
- background, course of events and<br />
aftermath<br />
Sweden 6B-26 1973-1977 Samuelsson,<br />
Tommy<br />
Switzerland 6B-27 1978-1982 Hoffner,<br />
Johannes<br />
Allied fighter aircraft operations<br />
1939-1945<br />
The Transition from the German Empire<br />
to the Weimar Republic<br />
Switzerland 6B-28 1983-1990 Märki, Kurt The occidental church building in the<br />
high and late Middle Ages<br />
127
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Switzerland 6B-29 1991-1995 Pfister, Esther The dove: the symbolic and messenger<br />
bird<br />
Switzerland 6B-30 1996-2003 Seydoux, Jean-<br />
Marc<br />
Our father the Sun<br />
6C – Thematic Philately – Technology<br />
France 6C-02 2009-2016 Frick, Jean The acoustic<br />
France 6C-03 2017-2024 Rouch,<br />
Bernadette<br />
Wood: an Inventory<br />
Israel 6C-04 2025-2032 Barak, Izhak The Development of Aviation and<br />
Transformation of Mail by Air until 1914<br />
Netherlands 6C-06 2038-2045 Scheer, André Masks of the Universe<br />
Rep. of<br />
Korea<br />
6C-07 2046-2050 Yoo, Yong Sang The Endless Challenges-Aviation<br />
Stories<br />
Switzerland 6C-08 2051-2055 Tschumi, Marcel Bridges, marvels of the technique from<br />
four points of view<br />
Switzerland 6C-09 2056-2060 Weber, Hans<br />
Jürg<br />
7 – Philatelic Literature<br />
Our drinking Water<br />
7A – Philatelic Literature – Philatelic books and research papers<br />
published after 1st January 2017<br />
Argentina 7A-01 Di Lalla, Hector Development of the railways in<br />
Argentina Ferrocarriles del Oeste y<br />
Norte Study of travelling post marks<br />
1865-1920 Volume I<br />
Australia 7A-02 Tasmanian<br />
Philatelic<br />
Society Inc.<br />
Tasmanian Postal Stationery<br />
Austria 7A-03 VÖPh 100 Jahre VÖPh<br />
Bulgaria 7A-05 Kalinkov<br />
Radenovski, &<br />
Boris Dimitar<br />
The artist soul<br />
128
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Bulgaria 7A-06 Kalinkov<br />
Radenovski, &<br />
Boris Dimitar<br />
Denmark 7A-07 Engelbrecht,<br />
Lars<br />
Denmark 7A-08 Mouritsen,<br />
Henrik<br />
Germany 7A-09 Dorr, Ute &<br />
Elmar<br />
The future now. AMPHAT "Sveti Ivan<br />
Rilski" - Sofia.<br />
Postal Stationery of Denmark - The Bicoloured<br />
issue 1871-1905 & Danmarks<br />
Helsager - Den Tofarvede Udgave<br />
1871-1905<br />
Danish Postal History 1875-1907.<br />
Danish postal rates, regulations and<br />
rarity information 01/Jan/1875-30/<br />
Sep/1907 for all types of domestic<br />
and international mail, including an<br />
extensive study of the transition to UPU<br />
and its developments during its first 32<br />
years of existence<br />
The Orient Express 1883-1914<br />
Germany 7A-10 Dorr, Elmar Historical forays through the postal<br />
history of the town of Neustadt an der<br />
Haardt<br />
Germany 7A-11 Salzmann,<br />
Hans-Werner<br />
Germany 7A-12 Springer,<br />
Renate &<br />
Christian<br />
"Von der Wiege bis zur Bahre"<br />
- Panorama der französischen<br />
Fiskalphila<br />
COLOGNE 1945-1947 -<br />
The Path to Normality after World War II<br />
Germany 7A-13 Wewer, Heinz Spuren des Terrors. Postalische<br />
Zeugnisse zum System der deutschen<br />
Konzentrationslager (Traces of Terror.<br />
The System of German Concentration<br />
Camps as reflected in Postal Documents)<br />
Germany 7A-14 Wewer, Heinz Spuren der Vernichtung. Stationen der<br />
"Endlösung" im Zeugnis postalischer<br />
Dokumente (Traces of Annihilation.<br />
Stages of the "Final Solution" as<br />
reflected in Postal Documents)<br />
Greece 7A-15 Karniaoutakis,<br />
Nikolaos<br />
Large Hermes Heads of Greece<br />
Observations on Identifying and<br />
Classifying the "easier" to follow Values<br />
129
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Hungary 7A-16 Perneczky,<br />
László<br />
India 7A-17 Madiraju,<br />
Lokeswara Rao<br />
Reverent Memory of Raoul Wallenberg<br />
in Philately<br />
Buddhism on Stamps<br />
India 7A-18 Natarajan, Kiran The Long Sea Route - a remarkable<br />
postal circuit between Imperial Russia &<br />
British India<br />
India 7A-19 Sharma,<br />
Dinesh<br />
Indonesia 7A-20 Soebardi,<br />
Soehardjo<br />
Indonesia 7A-21 Soebardi,<br />
Soehardjo<br />
Olympic Flame & Torch Relay<br />
Pak Harto the Footmarks on Postage<br />
Stamps<br />
50 Soeharto’s Initiatives for Indonesia &<br />
the World on Postage Stamps<br />
Iraq 7A-22 Ameel, Saif Municipalities Fees in Iraq<br />
Italy 7A-23 Manzati,<br />
Claudio Ernesto<br />
Mario<br />
Postal History of Tuscany: 1851-1862<br />
Italy 7A-24 Rigo, Franco Venice and the Levant - Bailo Palace in<br />
Constantinople -The mail XIV° - XVII°<br />
century<br />
Italy 7A-25 Zanaria, Angelo 1867-1870 From Mentana to Porta Pia -<br />
Postal History of the capture of Rome<br />
Japan 7A-26 Enosowa,<br />
Yuichi<br />
How to Make Your Exhibit for JAPEX<br />
Japan 7A-27 Shoda, Yukihiro Brazil Classic Philately<br />
Macau 7A-28 Chio, Hong Chi Research and classification on the<br />
Macau postage stamps errors<br />
Malaysia 7A-29 Lim, Lik 1998 XVI Commonwealth Games<br />
Monaco 7A-30 European<br />
Academy of<br />
Philately<br />
Monaco 7A-31 European<br />
Academy of<br />
Philately<br />
OPUS XIX, Treaty of Versailles and its<br />
Consequences<br />
OPUS XX, The British Empire<br />
130
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Monaco 7A-32 European<br />
Academy of<br />
Philately<br />
OPUS XXI, Germany and its Colonies<br />
Netherlands 7A-33 Haasnoot, Arie Philatelic Persons Register of<br />
Musicians<br />
Poland 7A-34 Jakucewicz,<br />
Stefan<br />
Printing of postage stamps<br />
Poland 7A-36 Mąka, Zdzisław Historia Poczty w Szczecinie<br />
(Postal History in Szczecin)<br />
Portugal 7A-37 Vaz Pereira,<br />
Pedro Marçal<br />
Os Correios Portugueses 1853-1900<br />
nos 500 Anos do Correio em Portugal.<br />
The Portuguese Post Office 1853-1900<br />
in the 500 Years of the Post Office in<br />
Portugal<br />
Rep. of<br />
Korea<br />
7A-38 Eun, Chong Ho Korean Glossary of Philatelic Terms<br />
Singapore 7A-40 Teo Bee Yen YILIN Philately 2020<br />
Singapore 7A-41 Association<br />
of Singapore<br />
Philatelists<br />
Singapore 7A-42 Association<br />
of Singapore<br />
Philatelists<br />
Spain 7A-43 De Quesada,<br />
Eugenio<br />
Spain 7A-44 Sociedad<br />
Filatelica de<br />
Madrid<br />
Spain 7A-45 Sociedad<br />
Filatelica de<br />
Madrid<br />
Airmails From, Through and to<br />
Singapore and Malaya, Volume 1<br />
China Silver Yuan Stamps<br />
Chasquis<br />
Philatelic and postal curiosities in time<br />
of pandemic<br />
Postal history of Cuba 1851-1858<br />
(4 VOL)<br />
Spain 7A-46 El Eco Filatelico Spanish civil war (VOL V - EL ECO<br />
FILATELICO STUDIES)<br />
Spain 7A-47 Fesofi Names for philately and Spanish postal<br />
history (Cuadernos de Filatelia 25/25)<br />
131
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Switzerland 7A-48 Bach, Jean-<br />
Paul<br />
Basle Dove<br />
Switzerland 7A-49 Bader, Jvo Swiss postal agencies in Italy and<br />
France<br />
Switzerland 7A-50 Baumgartner,<br />
Kurt<br />
Switzerland 7A-51 Baumgartner,<br />
Kurt<br />
Switzerland 7A-52 Schaefer,<br />
Richard<br />
Switzerland 7A-53 Schaefer,<br />
Richard<br />
A journey in images on Monte<br />
Generoso<br />
PTT The Museum of Memories<br />
The first federal postages stamps<br />
of Switzerland letter mail<br />
01.10.1850–30.09.1854<br />
SWISS CANTONAL STAMPS<br />
authentic-fake-falsified<br />
Turkey 7A-54 Oral, Aydin "Postal History of Ottoman Iraq<br />
during the British Occupation<br />
(1914-1924)"<br />
Ukraine 7A-55 Katsman, Vitaliy "Fragments of the history of collecting<br />
Zemstvo stamps and Zemstvo post.<br />
Gallery of famous collectors and<br />
researchers of Zemstvo post.<br />
Illustrated bibliography"<br />
Ukraine 7A-56 Katsman, Vitaliy "Famous collectors and researchers of<br />
the Zemstvo post. Brief biographies.<br />
Fragments of collections. in 2 volumes"<br />
United<br />
Kingdom<br />
United<br />
Kingdom<br />
7A-57 Trotter, Brian Rhodesian Philately until 1924 - The<br />
British South Africa Company Period<br />
7A-58 Young, Peter The inks of De La Rue & Co. and their<br />
introduction of synthetic and aniline<br />
ingredients c.1850-1910<br />
USA 7A-59 Ganz, Cheryl U.S. Zeppelin and Airship Mail Flights<br />
USA 7A-60 Kupiec-<br />
Weglinski, Jerzy<br />
The History of Airmail in Poland and<br />
its Contribution to Airmail Services of<br />
Europe (1914-1939)<br />
132
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
7B – Philatelic Literature – Philatelic magazines and periodicals<br />
published after 1st January 2020<br />
Australia 7B-01 McMahon, Ian Postal Stationery Collector<br />
Bulgaria 7B-02 Bulgarian<br />
Philatelic<br />
Academy<br />
Bulgaria 7B-03 Union of the<br />
Bulgarian<br />
Philatelists<br />
Croatia 7B-04 Croatian<br />
Philatelic<br />
Society Zadar<br />
Croatia 7B-05 Hrvatski Savez<br />
Filatelista<br />
Finland 7B-06 Laakso, Seija-<br />
Riitta<br />
Annual Bulletin 2020 including "The<br />
history of the three 'Napoleons' & Civil<br />
censorship of the correspondence in<br />
Bulgaria during the First World War<br />
1914-1918<br />
Philatelen pregled / Philatelic review<br />
magazine<br />
Zadarski Filatelist<br />
Hrvatski Filatelist<br />
The Congress Book 2021<br />
Italy 7B-08 Burdiat, Nicola L'Intero Postale / The Postal Stationery<br />
Italy 7B-09 Lavagnino,<br />
Luca<br />
Cursores<br />
Italy 7B-10 Vaccari Srl Vaccari Magazine Nr. 63<br />
Italy 7B-11 Vaccari Srl Vaccari Magazine Nr. 64<br />
Luxembourg 7B-12 (Luxembourg<br />
Federation),<br />
FSPL<br />
Moniteur du Collectionneur<br />
(Collector's Monitor)<br />
Macau 7B-13 Huo, Huixiao Macau philately "Warmly celebrate<br />
the 40th anniversary of The CLUBE<br />
FILATELICO DE MACAU" (2020)<br />
Netherlands 7B-14 Maandblad<br />
Filatelie<br />
Portugal 7B-15 Vale do Neiva,<br />
Associação<br />
Filatelia<br />
Filatelie<br />
Vale do Neiva Filatélico<br />
133
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Rep. of<br />
Korea<br />
7B-16 The Philatelic<br />
Federation of<br />
Korea<br />
Philatelic Monthly "WOOPYO" 2020<br />
Spain 7B-17 Galaron Calvo,<br />
Andres<br />
Switzerland 7B-18 Emmenegger,<br />
Jean-Louis<br />
Weekly philatelics items in the "DIARIO<br />
DE BURGOS" (2020-22)<br />
Rhône Philatélie<br />
7C – Philatelic Literature – <strong>Catalogue</strong>s published after 1st January 2020<br />
Argentina 7C-01 Casielles,<br />
Miguel<br />
Bulgaria 7C-02 Sofia Philatelic<br />
Society<br />
Croatia 7C-03 Marka Nova<br />
D.O.O.<br />
Catalogo Especializado de Perforados<br />
Republica Argentina (Specialised<br />
<strong>Catalogue</strong> of Perforated Products<br />
Republic of Argentina)<br />
<strong>Catalogue</strong> of the Bulgarian stamps<br />
(1879-2019)<br />
Acta Philatelic Nova 2021<br />
Czech<br />
Republic<br />
7C-04 Mádl, Tomáš BIENNALE 2020<br />
Italy 7C-05 Vaccari Srl Some hits of Milanese history from the<br />
XIV to XIX century - The Post in Milan<br />
1849-1859. <strong>Catalogue</strong> of cancellations<br />
and postmarks in Milan post office<br />
Israel 7C-06 Meer,<br />
Kossoy<br />
Forms of receipts and stamped paper<br />
for the Post Department 1807-1864<br />
Spain 7C-09 Filatelia Hobby Spanish air letter-covers and aerograms<br />
with meters (1947-1986)<br />
Sweden 7C-10 Lithén, Gunnar Facit Special Classic <strong>2022</strong><br />
Sweden 7C-11 Lithén, Gunnar Facit Sverige 2021<br />
Sweden 7C-12 Lithén, Gunnar Facit Norden <strong>2022</strong><br />
Switzerland 7C-13 Wiederkehr,<br />
Albrik<br />
Turkey 7C-14 Papuççuoglu,<br />
Bülent<br />
Handbook of Swiss PTO postal<br />
stationery<br />
Surcharged commemoratives stamps<br />
for the opening of Ankaras-Sivas<br />
Railway line<br />
134
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Turkey 7C-15 Papuççuoglu,<br />
Bülent<br />
Turkish stamps specialized catalogue<br />
"The Government of the Grand National<br />
Assembly of Turkey 1920-1923"<br />
Greece 7C-16 Karamitsos, A. Hellas 2020<br />
8 – One Frame Exhibits<br />
Armenia 8-01 2061 Kurghinyan,<br />
Anna<br />
Armenia 8-02 2062 Simonyan,<br />
Suren<br />
Armenia 8-03 2063 Taurinskaite,<br />
Dalia<br />
"GREAT BRITAIN. Non Value<br />
Indicators.1st Class 1993/2021<br />
(elliptical perforation)"<br />
Postage stamps of the First Republic of<br />
Armenia 1919-1920. Overprints on the<br />
Russian Empire postage stamp with 1<br />
kopeyka face value<br />
Caution - Poisonous mushrooms!<br />
Australia 8-04 2064 Xavier, Paul Fiji KGVI - The Omnibus<br />
Commemoratives<br />
Bahrain 8-05 2065 Darwish, Khalid Postal card, from India to Bahrain from<br />
1945 to 1950<br />
Bahrain 8-06 2066 Abo luai Saudi Arabia postal history<br />
Bangladesh 8-07 2067 Haque, Farzana Health Issues Of New Zealand Post<br />
1929-1966<br />
Brazil 8-10 2070 Quinhone,<br />
Gerson<br />
A Tribute to the Urban Legion<br />
Bulgaria 8-11 2071 Nikolov, Nikola Censorship at the Bulgarian divisional<br />
military regions during the World War I<br />
(1915-1918)<br />
Chile 8-12 2072 Rojas, Jorge Chile Double Postmarked envelopes<br />
1928-1972<br />
Colombia 8-13 2073 Frohlich, Alfredo Replating Colombia's 1861<br />
1 peso stamp<br />
Costa Rica 8-14 2074 Sauma, Pablo Commemorative Stamps for Costa<br />
Rica's First Philatelic <strong>Exhibition</strong> of 1932<br />
135
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Costa Rica 8-15 2075 Sauma, Pablo 1945 Overprint on 1927 Telegraph<br />
Stamps<br />
Croatia 8-16 2076 Glavić, Matej Novska - Traveling post<br />
Croatia 8-17 2077 Katančević,<br />
Slavoljub<br />
Croatia 8-18 2078 Novaković,<br />
Damir<br />
New Zealand Government Life<br />
Insurance Department Issue<br />
1891 to 1981<br />
The use of first Yugoslav Definitive<br />
Issue (1945) Denominated in<br />
Occupation Currency<br />
Croatia 8-19 2079 Redžep, Željko Trappist Cheese from Banja Luka,<br />
Bosnia<br />
Croatia 8-20 2080 Grobenski,<br />
Davor<br />
Geodesy - Geodetic instruments<br />
Egypt 8-22 2082 Mokhtar, Tarek Shibin El-Kom Postmarks 1870-1922<br />
Egypt 8-23 2083 Yousef, Ahmed 1897 Provisionally Overprinted<br />
Egyptian Stamps in The Sudan<br />
France 8-24 2084 Fanchini, Louis The Fakes & Forgeries of the Large<br />
Hermes Head of Greece<br />
Germany 8-25 2085 Dorr, Ute The Orient Express 1883-1914<br />
Greece 8-26 2086 Cangelaris,<br />
Panayotis<br />
Greece 8-27 2087 Galinos,<br />
Alexandre<br />
Greece 8-28 2088 Papadopoulos,<br />
Alexios<br />
The Mafeking Blues 1900<br />
The French Army of Morea, 1828-1830<br />
Commercial Zeppelin Letter mail to/<br />
from South America in 1936<br />
Iraq 8-29 2089 Falah, Ali The I.E.F. 'D' Occupation of Mosul in<br />
1919<br />
Israel 8-30 2090 Fisher,<br />
Lawrence<br />
Poland 8-31 2091 Cieślak,<br />
Ryszard<br />
Slovenia 8-32 2092 Petauer,<br />
Boštjan<br />
The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee<br />
Problem and its Perpetuation<br />
Information - a challenge for secret<br />
services<br />
Yugoslavia to USA air mail rates<br />
1945-1965<br />
136
Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Slovenia 8-33 2093 Tomc, Alojz The Italian Military post office No.59<br />
during World War II<br />
Spain 8-34 2094 De Quesada,<br />
Eugenio<br />
Mail in hand with "CHASQUIS" in the<br />
viceroyalty of Nueva Granada in XVII<br />
and XVIII centuries<br />
Switzerland 8-35 2095 Fink, Peter Prisoner of war aerograms World War II<br />
Turkey 8-36 2096 Artam, Turgay 1862-1863 Tugra Stamps<br />
Turkey 8-37 2097 Bahar, Yusuf Zeppelin transported mail related to<br />
Turkey<br />
United<br />
Kingdom<br />
8-38 2098 Athale, Dinar Indelible Evidence: The History of<br />
Forensic Medicine<br />
United<br />
Kingdom<br />
8-39 2099 Winters,<br />
Graham<br />
Ceylon, King George V Silver Jubilee<br />
Issue<br />
USA 8-40 2100 Banchik, Mark Overprinted 1929 Black Official Airmail<br />
Stamps of Mexico<br />
USA 8-41 2101 Benninghof,<br />
Robert<br />
USA 8-42 2102 Grinfelds,<br />
Vesma<br />
USA 8-43 2103 Jaiswal,<br />
Sandeep<br />
The Creation of the Border Between<br />
Two Irelands<br />
Latvia: The First Banknote Stamp and<br />
Its overprints<br />
The 1904 Provisional Issue of Jaipur<br />
Czech<br />
Republic<br />
8-44 2104 Amler, Tomáš 1927 4th Postage Due Provisional<br />
Issue (Chainbreaker) 50/150 h<br />
Bahrain 8-45 2105 Al Saleh,<br />
Haytham<br />
Bahrain post office initiatives of post<br />
cards<br />
137
Exhibit Listing by Country<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Argentina<br />
2C-01 0395-0402 Casielles, Miguel San Martin in Oval 1908<br />
2C-02 0403-0410 Moscatelli, Jorge<br />
Eduardo<br />
Argentina Definitive Issues 1923-1935<br />
3C-01 1181-1185 Chaves, Carlos Argentina-Register Mail from 1878 to 1920<br />
3C-02 1186-1193 Reim, Pablo<br />
Alejandro<br />
The Argentine Stage-Coach Monks (1852-1870)<br />
3C-03 1194-1201 Villard, Olivier Overseas Mail form and to Argentina (1852-1878)<br />
5-01 1564-1568 Vogt, Ronny Argentina Airmails 1912-1939<br />
6A-01 1738-1745 Casielles,<br />
Daiana Aylen<br />
6B-01 1833-1837 Cravero, Roberto<br />
Nestor<br />
My friend's dog<br />
Earth Drawings<br />
7A-01 Di Lalla, Hector Development of the railways in Argentina<br />
Ferrocarriles del Oeste y Norte Study of travelling<br />
post marks 1865-1920 Volume I<br />
7C-01 Casielles, Miguel Catalogo Especializado de Perforados Republica<br />
Argentina (Specialised <strong>Catalogue</strong> of Perforated<br />
Products Republic of Argentina)<br />
Armenia<br />
8-01 2061 Kurghinyan,<br />
Anna<br />
"GREAT BRITAIN. Non Value Indicators.1st Class<br />
1993/2021 (elliptical perforation)"<br />
8-02 2062 Simonyan, Suren Postage stamps of the First Republic of Armenia<br />
1919-1920. Overprints on the Russian Empire<br />
postage stamp with 1 kopeyka face value<br />
8-03 2063 Taurinskaite,<br />
Dalia<br />
Caution - Poisonous mushrooms!<br />
138
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Australia<br />
2D-01 0528-0535 Kellow, Geoffrey The 2d Bell Design of Victoria, 1873-1880<br />
3B-01 0782-0786 Lewis, Geoffrey Mail Routes in the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian<br />
Oceans, plus the routes between the oceans<br />
4-01 1372-1379 McMahon, Ian Envelopes and Postcards of Canada<br />
7A-02 Tasmanian<br />
Philatelic Society<br />
Inc.<br />
Tasmanian Postal Stationery<br />
7B-01 McMahon, Ian Postal Stationery Collector<br />
8-04 2064 Xavier, Paul Fiji KGVI - The Omnibus Commemoratives<br />
Austria<br />
1-01 0001-0008 Spieler, Rudolf AAA - All About Automobiles<br />
3A-01 0684-0688 Blaickner,<br />
Gerhard<br />
3B-02 0787-0794 Horin, Horst<br />
Erich<br />
Schweizer Auslandfrankaturen zur Zeit der<br />
Rayonmarken 1850-1854<br />
Field- and military mail under the double eagle in the<br />
German Confederation 1815-1866<br />
3B-03 0795-0802 Lind, Armin Money- and Value - Letters in Austria<br />
3B-04 0803-0810 Stepniczka,<br />
Heinrich<br />
Kingdom of Lombardy - Venetia (1815-1866)<br />
7A-03 VÖPh 100 Jahre VÖPh<br />
Bahrain<br />
8-05 2065 Darwish, Khalid Postal card, from India to Bahrain from 1945 to 1950<br />
8-06 2066 Abo luai Saudi Arabia postal history<br />
8-45 2105 Al Saleh,<br />
Haytham<br />
Bahrain post office initiatives of post cards<br />
Bangladesh<br />
2D-02 0536-0540 Rahman, A.H.M.<br />
Faizur<br />
4-02 1380-1384 Munir, M M<br />
Salman<br />
Postage stamps of Bangladesh on the United<br />
Nations<br />
Postal stationery of Natal 1885-1912<br />
139
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
6B-02 1838-1842 Ghazi, Qayyum Canoe, The Amazing Prehistoric Watercraft of All<br />
Time<br />
8-07 2067 Haque, Farzana Health Issues Of New Zealand Post 1929-1966<br />
Belgium<br />
3B-06 0816-0823 Selis, Luc Ocean Letters<br />
3C-04 1202-1206 Van Laere,<br />
Roger<br />
History of the Borders of Peru and Bolivia<br />
6B-04 1848-1852 Iéko, Philippe Impressionism, a major step in painting<br />
6B-05 1853-1860 Paquet, Jacques The Gothic Cathedral between God and Men<br />
6B-06 1861-1865 Soreil, Charlotte And the Man created his face<br />
6B-07 1866-1870 Suys, Jean-<br />
Pierre<br />
From body sounds to sound bodies<br />
Brazil<br />
2C-03 0411-0415 Benchimol,<br />
Jacques<br />
"Dom Pedro II - Emperor of Brazil<br />
American & Continental Bank Note issues -<br />
1866-1878"<br />
3C-05 1207-1214 Chen, Ying Dao Brazil-Portugal Maritime Mail (1698-1877)<br />
3C-06 1215-1219 Porto Jr., Rubem Censored Brazilian Mail: 1914 to 1939<br />
6B-08 1871-1875 Martins Neto,<br />
Braz<br />
6B-09 1876-1880 Dedivitis,<br />
Rogério<br />
6B-10 1881-1885 Pinet, Ricardo<br />
Jorge<br />
8-10 2070 Quinhone,<br />
Gerson<br />
Rule of Law - Defense and Breach<br />
The Nazism and the war: The age of social<br />
catastrophe<br />
A Brief View to Brazil by a Brazilianist<br />
A Tribute to the Urban Legion<br />
Bulgaria<br />
2B-01 0145-0152 Todorov, Orlin Small lion issues (1889-1901)<br />
3B-07 0824-0828 Barneva,<br />
Lyudmila<br />
Bulgaria. Post offices of Royal Palaces & Royal Mail<br />
(1886-1946).<br />
140
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
4-03 1385-1392 Todorov, Orlin Classic Postal Stationeries of Bulgaria (1879-1898)<br />
7A-05 Kalinkov<br />
Radenovski, &<br />
Boris Dimitar<br />
7A-06 Kalinkov<br />
Radenovski, &<br />
Boris Dimitar<br />
7B-02 Bulgarian<br />
Philatelic<br />
Academy<br />
7B-03 Union of the<br />
Bulgarian<br />
Philatelists<br />
7C-02 Sofia Philatelic<br />
Society<br />
The artist soul<br />
The future now. AMPHAT "Sveti Ivan Rilski" - Sofia.<br />
Annual Bulletin 2020 including "The history of<br />
the three 'Napoleons' & Civil censorship of the<br />
correspondence in Bulgaria during the First World<br />
War 1914-1918<br />
Philatelen pregled / Philatelic review magazine<br />
<strong>Catalogue</strong> of the Bulgarian stamps (1879-2019)<br />
8-11 2071 Nikolov, Nikola Censorship at the Bulgarian divisional military<br />
regions during the World War I (1915-1918)<br />
Chile<br />
2C-04 0416-0420 Mouat, Cristian Chile: The Peso Bronce Issue 1904-1909. Includes<br />
the overprinted issue "Islas de Juan Fernandez"<br />
from 1910<br />
3C-07 1220-1224 Bravo, Rodrigo Marcas Postales y Etiquetas de Servicio Auxiliares a<br />
la Obliteración, Chile 1853-1920<br />
6B-11 1886-1890 jbellido "Simply, Michelangelo" The life and work of<br />
Renaissance Man<br />
8-12 2072 Rojas, Jorge Chile Double Postmarked envelopes 1928-1972<br />
Colombia<br />
1-02 0009-0016 Arbelaez, Jorge<br />
Enrique<br />
Pre-Philatelic letter with content from Colombia<br />
1531-1859<br />
2C-05 0421-0428 Cruz, Santiago Colombia - The Perkins 1917 Issue<br />
2C-06 0429-0433 Frohlich, Alfredo Colombia - The Last classic issue of 1866<br />
141
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
5-02 1569-1576 Johnson,<br />
James C<br />
Scadta - Postal routes 1923-1929<br />
8-13 2073 Frohlich, Alfredo Replating Colombia's 1861 1 peso stamp<br />
Costa Rica<br />
2C-07 0434-0438 Castro-Harrigan,<br />
Alvaro<br />
2C-08 0439-0443 Diaz, Luis<br />
Fernando<br />
Costa Rica: The Classic Period 1863-1883<br />
Costa Rica: Coat of Arms Issue of 1892<br />
4-04 1393-1397 Sancho, Cesar Costa Rica 1923. The First Locally Manufactured<br />
Postal Stationery<br />
4-05 1398-1405 Wayman, Giana 19th Century Postal Stationery of Costa Rica and<br />
their usage<br />
8-14 2074 Sauma, Pablo Commemorative Stamps for Costa Rica's First<br />
Philatelic <strong>Exhibition</strong> of 1932<br />
8-15 2075 Sauma, Pablo 1945 Overprint on 1927 Telegraph Stamps<br />
Croatia<br />
2B-02 0153-0160 Gubijan, Željko Albania 1913-1920<br />
6A-02 1746-1751 Maras, Julije Gold & Golden<br />
7B-04 Croatian<br />
Philatelic Society<br />
Zadar<br />
7B-05 Hrvatski Savez<br />
Filatelista<br />
7C-03 Marka Nova<br />
D.O.O.<br />
Zadarski Filatelist<br />
Hrvatski Filatelist<br />
Acta Philatelic Nova 2021<br />
8-16 2076 Glavić, Matej Novska - Traveling post<br />
8-17 2077 Katančević,<br />
Slavoljub<br />
8-18 2078 Novaković,<br />
Damir<br />
New Zealand Government Life Insurance<br />
Department Issue 1891 to 1981<br />
The use of first Yugoslav Definitive Issue (1945)<br />
Denominated in Occupation Currency<br />
8-19 2079 Redžep, Željko Trappist Cheese from Banja Luka, Bosnia<br />
8-20 2080 Grobenski,<br />
Davor<br />
Geodesy - Geodetic instruments<br />
142
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Czech Republic<br />
1-12 0837-0844 Vaníček, Vít Postal History of Czech Lands<br />
(From the Beginning until 1867)<br />
3B-08 0829-0836 Červinka, Miloš Development of postal services in Decin region<br />
5-03 1577-1584 Bouda, Pavel Czechoslovak Airpost 1920-1938<br />
7C-04 Mádl, Tomáš BIENNALE 2020<br />
8-44 2104 Amler, Tomáš 1927 4th Postage Due Provisional Issue<br />
(Chainbreaker) 50/150 h<br />
Denmark<br />
2A-01 0089-0093 Mortensen, Per<br />
Friis<br />
Switzerland, The First Meter Stamp -<br />
The Oval type 1924-1962<br />
2B-04 0166-0173 Malm, Torben Service Stamps of Denmark 1871-1924<br />
2D-03 0541-0545 Møller, Klaus The New Zealand Chalon Issues 1855-1873<br />
7A-07 Engelbrecht,<br />
Lars<br />
7A-08 Mouritsen,<br />
Henrik<br />
Postal Stationery of Denmark - The Bi-coloured<br />
issue 1871-1905 & Danmarks Helsager - Den<br />
Tofarvede Udgave 1871-1905<br />
Danish Postal History 1875-1907. Danish postal<br />
rates, regulations and rarity information 01/<br />
Jan/1875-30/Sep/1907 for all types of domestic and<br />
international mail, including an extensive study of<br />
the transition to UPU and its developments during its<br />
first 32 years of existence<br />
Egypt<br />
1-03 0017-0024 Salam, Hany Egypt: Maritime Mail Routes, 19th Century<br />
2D-04 0546-0553 Bassyouny,<br />
Hisham<br />
British Forces in Egypt Stamps Issued 1932-1939<br />
8-22 2082 Mokhtar, Tarek Shibin El-Kom Postmarks 1870-1922<br />
8-23 2083 Yousef, Ahmed 1897 Provisionally Overprinted Egyptian Stamps<br />
in The Sudan<br />
Finland<br />
2B-06 0179-0183 Olli, Marcus Helsinki Citypost 1866-1891<br />
2D-05 0554-0558 Weber, Reinhard Straits Settlements Sultanat Johor 1885-1940<br />
143
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
3B-10 0845-0849 Muhonen, Ari Finland special agreements 1922-1945<br />
3B-11 0850-0854 Nikkanen, Janne The Development of Espoo Municipality Post<br />
1760-1918<br />
4-06 1406-1410 Tuori, Jussi Finland M/30 postal stationery<br />
7B-06 Laakso, Seija-<br />
Riitta<br />
The Congress Book 2021<br />
France<br />
1-04 0025-0032 Tillard, Jean-<br />
Jacques<br />
2B-07 0184-0190 Gontier, Jean-<br />
Claude<br />
2B-08 0191-0195 Peroche,<br />
Bernard<br />
3B-12 0855-0859 Bonnefoy,<br />
Laurent<br />
3B-13 0860-0864 Kaminski,<br />
Philippe<br />
The overprints of St. Pierre et Miquelon in the<br />
19th century<br />
French commemoratives for Paris 1924 Olympic<br />
games set issue and postal use<br />
0,50 F Marianne de Béquet stamp: design,<br />
manufacture and production<br />
The 5 F Merson-Type<br />
(Metropolitan France 1900-1932)<br />
British registered mail 1850-1886<br />
3B-14 0865-0869 Trinquier, Alain Use of Mouchon type stamps on mail from France<br />
(1900-1906)<br />
3B-15 0870-0874 Banette French Electric Telegraphy in the Metropolis and in<br />
the World from 1850 to 1900<br />
4-07 1411-1415 Logette, Jean-<br />
François<br />
Essays, Proofs and Blocks of 4 of the Rome model<br />
International reply coupon<br />
5-04 1585-1589 Maréchal, René Airmail across the Aegean Sea (1929-1947)<br />
5-05 1590-1597 Renaud,<br />
Jacques<br />
Commercial and private mail carried by German<br />
airships mechanical postage period 1928-1935<br />
5-06 1598-1605 Trzeciak, Patrice Transatlantic Airmail Services During WW2<br />
6A-03 1752-1759 Riera, Manuel Chelonians (Turtles)<br />
6A-04 1760-1767 Rothenburg,<br />
Jacques<br />
Beautiful as a rose !<br />
6B-12 1891-1898 Israël, Alain The red cross from Solferino to modern times<br />
144
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
6B-13 1899-1906 Sauvaître, Jean-<br />
Marie<br />
My journey in freemasonry<br />
6C-02 2009-2016 Frick, Jean The acoustic<br />
6C-03 2017-2024 Rouch,<br />
Bernadette<br />
Wood: an Inventory<br />
8-24 2084 Fanchini, Louis The Fakes & Forgeries of the Large Hermes Head of<br />
Greece<br />
Germany<br />
2B-09 0196-0200 Avramidis,<br />
Pandelis<br />
Greece small Hermes Heads<br />
2B-10 0201-0208 Reinhold, Henke Berlin victim and housing imprint (Notopfer Berlin<br />
und Wohnungsbau Aufdrucke)<br />
2B-11 0209-0213 Steinbach, Willi Greece large Hermes Heads<br />
2B-12 0214-0221 Wilhelms, Georg Czechoslovakia, 'The Hradcany Issue'<br />
2B-13 0222-0226 Wirges, Werner The II. Kontrollratsausgabe 1947/1948, printing<br />
idiosyncrasies and the variety of uses up to the<br />
currency reform as tenfold franking<br />
2C-11 0454-0458 Jaretzky, Rolf-<br />
Dieter<br />
2D-06 0559-0566 Bornmann,<br />
Johannes<br />
Confederate States of America<br />
Nepal, Pre-Philately and Classic<br />
3B-16 0875-0879 Camerer, Martin Letter mail between the Old Italian and the Old<br />
German States 1850-1870<br />
3B-17 0880-0887 Günnewig, Franz<br />
Josef<br />
Norway-German postal history on mail transport et<br />
vice versa up to the foundation of the UPU<br />
3B-18 0888-0895 Krauss, Karlfried Prussia as the Main Link of the Russian-Polish Mail<br />
with the West (from the beginning until 1875)<br />
3B-19 0896-0903 Krug,<br />
Hansmichael<br />
3B-20 0904-0908 Liebermann,<br />
Hartmut<br />
Postal traffic between the area of the Deutsche<br />
Reichspost and the United States of America<br />
4.5.1871-1875<br />
Postmarks in Bohemia and Moravia during the postwar<br />
period after WW II<br />
145
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
3B-21 0909-0913 Martens, Sven German Imperial Post - Postal rates for foreign<br />
destinations from 1875 and the development into the<br />
UPU tariffs<br />
3B-22 0914-0920 Schädlich, Klaus Postmark in the principality Liechtenstein<br />
3B-23 0921-0925 Selig, Heinz Postal History of the hamlet Lauenau<br />
3B-24 0926-0933 Siebert, Werner History of the postal service in German Southwest<br />
Africa<br />
3B-25 0934-0938 Soll, Hans-<br />
Joachim<br />
The postal infrastructure of German East Africa<br />
1890-1917<br />
3B-26 0939-0943 Weis, Klaus The Development of the Local Postmarks in the<br />
Later Grand Duchy Baden 1723-1871<br />
3C-09 1233-1240 Heimbüchler,<br />
Fritz<br />
3D-01 1264-1268 Grundmann,<br />
Wilhelm<br />
Collection of the first stamps of Brazil 1843-1870<br />
Mongolia - Land of Genghis Khan. Post Offices and<br />
Postmarks 1878-1939<br />
4-08 1416-1420 Sarlak, Behrouz Postal stationery Persia 1875-1945<br />
4-09 1421-1428 Süss, Peter The Postal Cards of Mexico 1879-1890<br />
6A-05 1768-1775 Fuchs, Wilfried The fox and his varied relationship to us human<br />
beings<br />
7A-09 Dorr, Ute &<br />
Elmar<br />
The Orient Express 1883-1914<br />
7A-10 Dorr, Elmar Historical forays through the postal history of the<br />
town of Neustadt an der Haardt<br />
7A-11 Salzmann, Hans-<br />
Werner<br />
7A-12 Springer, Renate<br />
& Christian<br />
"Von der Wiege bis zur Bahre" - Panorama der<br />
französischen Fiskalphila<br />
COLOGNE 1945-1947 -<br />
The Path to Normality after World War II<br />
7A-13 Wewer, Heinz Spuren des Terrors. Postalische Zeugnisse zum<br />
System der deutschen Konzentrationslager (Traces<br />
of Terror. The System of German Concentration<br />
Camps as reflected in Postal Documents)<br />
146
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
7A-14 Wewer, Heinz Spuren der Vernichtung. Stationen der "Endlösung"<br />
im Zeugnis postalischer Dokumente (Traces of<br />
Annihilation. Stages of the "Final Solution" as<br />
reflected in Postal Documents)<br />
8-25 2085 Dorr, Ute The Orient Express 1883-1914<br />
Greece<br />
3B-27 0944-0951 Arvanitis,<br />
Thomas<br />
3B-28 0952-0956 Chazapis,<br />
Costas<br />
7A-15 Karniaoutakis,<br />
Nikolaos<br />
The Prephilatelic period of the Hellenic Postal<br />
Service<br />
Greece: The 4th of August regime (1936-41)<br />
Large Hermes Heads of Greece Observations on<br />
Identifying and Classifying the "easier" to follow Values<br />
7C-16 Karamitsos, A. Hellas 2020<br />
8-26 2086 Cangelaris,<br />
Panayotis<br />
8-27 2087 Galinos,<br />
Alexandre<br />
8-28 2088 Papadopoulos,<br />
Alexios<br />
The Mafeking Blues 1900<br />
The French Army of Morea, 1828-1830<br />
Commercial Zeppelin Letter mail to/from South<br />
America in 1936<br />
Honduras<br />
2C-12 0459-0465 Diaz, Maria<br />
Beatriz<br />
5-07 1606-1610 Bendeck, Sergio<br />
Antonio<br />
Honduras 1865-1899<br />
The first year of Honduras Air mail, 1925-1933<br />
5-29 1241-1245 Mejía, Mauricio First and special flights from and to Honduras<br />
Hungary<br />
3B-29 0957-0964 Glatz, István Foreign Frankings from Hungary 1900-1918<br />
3B-30 0965-0969 Homonnay, Géza Hungarian Consular Post Offices in Romania, 1 May<br />
1867-31 March 1869<br />
5-08 1611-1615 Lővei, György Chapters of the Hungarian air mail - Foreign<br />
destinations from the beginning up to 31.12.1933.<br />
7A-16 Perneczky,<br />
László<br />
Reverent Memory of Raoul Wallenberg in Philately<br />
147
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
India<br />
2C-13 0466-0470 Suri, Anil Stamps of Uruguay, The Waterlow Issues 1889-1954<br />
2D-07 0567-0571 Kedia,<br />
Om Prakash<br />
2D-08 0572-0576 Mahalingan,<br />
Ramachandran<br />
Litho Stamps of Bhopal State 1871-1908<br />
Kingdom of Cochin<br />
2D-09 0577-0581 Mohan, K S Study of Service Stamps of Cochin<br />
2D-10 0582-0586 Ramachandran,<br />
Madhav<br />
British India<br />
3D-02 1269-1273 James Cochin State Postal History<br />
4-10 1429-1433 Jhingan,<br />
Madhukar<br />
Indian Aerogrammes<br />
5-09 1616-1620 Khaitan, Piyush The 1948 Air-India International Flight to London<br />
6B-14 1907-1911 Ghose,<br />
Chandrajit<br />
Bicentennial Celebration of independence of USA<br />
in 1976<br />
6B-15 1912-1916 Sharma, Dinesh Summer Olympic Games<br />
7A-17 Madiraju,<br />
Lokeswara Rao<br />
Buddhism on Stamps<br />
7A-18 Natarajan, Kiran The Long Sea Route - a remarkable postal circuit<br />
between Imperial Russia & British India<br />
7A-19 Sharma, Dinesh Olympic Flame & Torch Relay<br />
Indonesia<br />
4-11 1434-1438 Fadli Postal Cards of Netherlands Indies 1874-1932<br />
6B-16 1917-1924 Noviandi, Gita One World, One Promise<br />
7A-20 Soebardi,<br />
Soehardjo<br />
7A-21 Soebardi,<br />
Soehardjo<br />
Pak Harto the Footmarks on Postage Stamps<br />
50 Soeharto’s Initiatives for Indonesia & the World<br />
on Postage Stamps<br />
Iraq<br />
2B-14 0227-0231 Naji, Abdulnasir<br />
Hilal<br />
Portraits of The Three Kings of Iraq and their<br />
Surcharges<br />
148
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
5-28 1274-1278 Abdulwahab,<br />
Nader<br />
The Royal Air Force Cairo - Baghdad Air Mail<br />
Service 1921-1927.<br />
7A-22 Ameel, Saif Municipalities Fees in Iraq<br />
8-29 2089 Falah, Ali The I.E.F. 'D' Occupation of Mosul in 1919<br />
Ireland<br />
5-10 1621-1628 Callan, Brian Graf Zeppelin DZ-127 South America Airmail<br />
1930-1937<br />
Israel<br />
3B-31 0970-0977 Tsachor, Yacov France - The Perforated Ceres: Routes &<br />
Postmarks, 1871-1878<br />
6A-06 1776-1783 Charrach, Josef Minerals - Their Origin, Exploitation and Uses<br />
6B-17 1925-1929 Lador,<br />
Menachem<br />
2nd Oldest Profession - Intelligence Services<br />
6C-04 2025-2032 Barak, Izhak The Development of Aviation and Transformation of<br />
Mail by Air until 1914<br />
7C-06 Meer Kossoy, Forms of receipts and stamped paper for the Post<br />
Department 1807-1864<br />
8-30 2090 Fisher, Lawrence The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem and its<br />
Perpetuation<br />
Italy<br />
1-05 0033-0040 Morani, Vittorio "Tuscany 1836 to GPU (up to 30th June 1875)"<br />
Letter mail in, from and to Tuscany: routes, rates and<br />
charges"<br />
1-06 0041-0048 Jaquard "Souvenir du Siège de Paris 1870/1871<br />
Private mail transported by Ballons-Montés during<br />
the Prussian Siege "<br />
2B-15 0232-0239 Melone,<br />
Francesco<br />
Naples<br />
2B-16 0240-0244 Perricone, Giulio Kingdom of Sicily 1859-1860<br />
3B-32 0978-0982 Mathà, Thomas Postal relations between Papal States and<br />
Lombardy Venetia 1815-1852<br />
149
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
3B-33 0983-0987 Nembrini,<br />
Giovanni<br />
The Postal Relationship between Italy and France<br />
1850-1875<br />
3B-34 0988-0995 Rigo, Franco Venice, the contagion, the quarantine, the<br />
disenfection, the quarantine hospitals (postal history<br />
of the health office from xvi to xix century)<br />
3B-35 0996-1000 Veneri, Aniello Postal services in Italy 1945-1957<br />
3D-04 1279-1283 Fumu, Antonello 1845/85 – The mail service in the North Africa ports:<br />
Alexandria, Tunis, Algiers, Bone, Philippeville, Oran,<br />
Tangier and Tripoli of Barbary<br />
3D-05 1284-1288 Maria, Luciano Ethiopia: the pre-UPU period<br />
5-11 1629-1633 Di Mento, Eligio The Mail by Helicopter in Italy<br />
5-12 1634-1638 Restaino, Luca The Balbo Cruise in 1933<br />
5-13 1639-1643 Riccitelli, Flavio The contribution of Zeppelins in the development<br />
of the German Aeropostal System from/to South<br />
America (1934-1937)<br />
6B-18 1930-1934 Licata, Giovanni The Maya<br />
6B-19 1935-1939 Picconi,<br />
Salvatore<br />
7A-23 Manzati, Claudio<br />
Ernesto Mario<br />
San Marino: History of ancient land of the freedom<br />
Postal History of Tuscany: 1851-1862<br />
7A-24 Rigo, Franco Venice and the Levant - Bailo Palace in<br />
Constantinople -The mail XIV° - XVII° century<br />
7A-25 Zanaria, Angelo 1867-1870 From Mentana to Porta Pia -<br />
Postal History of the capture of Rome<br />
7B-08 Burdiat, Nicola L'Intero Postale / The Postal Stationery<br />
7B-09 Lavagnino, Luca Cursores<br />
7B-10 Vaccari Srl Vaccari Magazine Nr. 63<br />
7B-11 Vaccari Srl Vaccari Magazine Nr. 64<br />
7C-05 Vaccari Srl Some hits of Milanese history from the XIV to XIX<br />
century - The Post in Milan 1849-1859. <strong>Catalogue</strong> of<br />
cancellations and postmarks in Milan post office<br />
150
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Japan<br />
2A-02 0094-0098 Ariyoshi, Nobuto Switzerland postage due stamps 1883-1910<br />
2A-03 0099-0106 Yoshida, Takashi Classic Switzerland<br />
2B-17 0245-0249 Saito, Tamaki Lombardy Venetia the 1850 Issue<br />
2D-11 0587-0591 Kato, Shigeki Japan Chrysanthemum Stamps 1899-1910<br />
2D-12 0592-0596 Kido, Yusuke Ryukyu Dollar Currency Conversion Provisional<br />
Series<br />
3D-06 1289-1296 Koiwa, Akihiko Indian Campaigns<br />
4-12 1439-1446 Ando, Gensei The Japanese Foreign Mail Postcards<br />
4-13 1447-1454 Yamazaki, Fumio Hawaiian Postal Stationery<br />
7A-26 Enosowa, Yuichi How to Make Your Exhibit for JAPEX<br />
7A-27 Shoda, Yukihiro Brazil Classic Philately<br />
Rep. of Korea<br />
2D-17 0620-0624 Kim, Heon Sik The Second Regular Stamps in Korea(1951-1953)<br />
6A-08 1789-1793 Jung, Soon Jong Horses with Human Civilization<br />
6B-22 1950-1954 Ryoo, Sang<br />
Boom<br />
One Century of Western Painting after French<br />
Revolution<br />
6C-07 2046-2050 Yoo, Yong Sang The Endless Challenges-Aviation Stories<br />
7A-38 Eun, Chong Ho Korean Glossary of Philatelic Terms<br />
7B-16 The Philatelic<br />
Federation of<br />
Korea<br />
Philatelic Monthly "WOOPYO" 2020<br />
Liechtenstein<br />
2B-18 0250-0257 Huys-Berlingin,<br />
Jan<br />
Belgium's first issue, the EPAULETTES<br />
Luxembourg<br />
7B-12 (Luxembourg<br />
Federation),<br />
FSPL<br />
Moniteur du Collectionneur (Collector's Monitor)<br />
151
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Macau<br />
7A-28 Chio, Hong Chi Research and classification on the Macau postage<br />
stamps errors<br />
7B-13 Huo, Huixiao Macau philately "Warmly celebrate the 40th<br />
anniversary of The CLUBE FILATELICO DE<br />
MACAU" (2020)<br />
Malaysia<br />
7A-29 Lim, Lik 1998 XVI Commonwealth Games<br />
Monaco<br />
1-07 0049-0056 Bianchi, Paolo Portuguese East Africa (Mozambique)<br />
7A-30 European<br />
Academy of<br />
Philately<br />
7A-31 European<br />
Academy of<br />
Philately<br />
7A-32 European<br />
Academy of<br />
Philately<br />
OPUS XIX, Treaty of Versailles and its<br />
Consequences<br />
OPUS XX, The British Empire<br />
OPUS XXI, Germany and its Colonies<br />
Netherlands<br />
3B-36 1001-1008 Buitenkamp,<br />
Henk<br />
3B-37 1009-1013 Op den Camp,<br />
Jan G.<br />
3B-38 1014-1018 Van der Horst,<br />
Hans<br />
Postal Rates and Franking of Slovenia, Croatia and<br />
Bosnia-Herzegovina 1918-1921<br />
Origin and development of the postal service in the<br />
Lower Rhine region until 1871, with its important<br />
local and international aspects<br />
The Netherlands; messages via the Red Cross<br />
during World War 2<br />
3B-39 1019-1026 Wiersma, Hotze Border cross mail 1668-1810, exhibited by letters<br />
related to Holland<br />
5-15 1652-1659 Bot, Jacques Fokker during the Interbellum<br />
6B-20 1940-1944 Kniese, Eric A book is more than a story<br />
6B-21 1945-1949 van Nies, Peter CARNIVAL, more than three foolish days!<br />
152
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
6C-06 2038-2045 Scheer, André Masks of the Universe<br />
7A-33 Haasnoot, Arie Philatelic Persons Register of Musicians<br />
7B-14 Maandblad<br />
Filatelie<br />
Filatelie<br />
Pakistan<br />
2D-15 0607-0614 Balgamwala,<br />
Muhammad Arif<br />
2D-16 0615-0619 Nanjee, Afzal<br />
Hussain<br />
3D-07 1297-1301 Kodwavwala,<br />
Muhammad<br />
Rizwan<br />
AFGANISTAN ABDUL RAHMAN 1888-1890<br />
(Circular series)<br />
Ottoman Empire (Turkey): The Study of Arms Issue<br />
Postal Marking of Karachi<br />
Poland<br />
3B-40 1027-1031 Bator, Janusz PRZEMYŚL – POSTAL HISTORY UNTIL 1918<br />
3B-41 1032-1036 Chabros, Sławek Fight for independence and borders of Poland<br />
1918-1921<br />
3B-42 1037-1041 Klamut , Andrzej Austrian base post offices in the Polish Lands<br />
1914-1918<br />
3B-43 1042-1049 Okniński, Roman Post activities in the Kingdom of Galicia and<br />
Lodomeria to 1867<br />
3B-44 1050-1054 Piwko, Krzysztof Local Posts in occupied Poland 1914-1918<br />
5-16 1660-1667 Kosmala, Jacek Airplane services on the Polish Territories 1914-1939<br />
7A-34 Jakucewicz,<br />
Stefan<br />
Printing of postage stamps<br />
7A-36 Mąka, Zdzisław Historia Poczty w Szczecinie<br />
(Postal History in Szczecin)<br />
8-31 2091 Cieślak, Ryszard Information - a challenge for secret services<br />
Portugal<br />
3B-45 1055-1059 Frazão, Luís Postal History of Portugal in the Pre-stamp Period<br />
5-17 1668-1672 Costa Postal Air Service Catapult (North Atlantic)<br />
153
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
7A-37 Vaz Pereira,<br />
Pedro Marçal<br />
7B-15 Vale do Neiva,<br />
Associação<br />
Filatelia<br />
Os Correios Portugueses 1853-1900 nos 500 Anos<br />
do Correio em Portugal. The Portuguese Post Office<br />
1853-1900 in the 500 Years of the Post Office in<br />
Portugal<br />
Vale do Neiva Filatélico<br />
State of Qatar<br />
2D-18 0625-0629 Al-Ismail,<br />
Hussain<br />
Qatar First Definitive Issue<br />
3D-08 1302-1306 Al-Ismail, Shatha Oman Postal History<br />
3D-09 1307-1311 Al-Ismail, Ali Kuwait Postal History<br />
3D-10 1312-1316 Sorour, Yacoub Aden Postal History<br />
Romania<br />
2B-19 0258-0265 Iordache, Victor Romania 1872-1889<br />
2B-20 0266-0273 Milu, Constantin The stamps for first Olympic Games<br />
3B-46 1060-1064 Chirescu, Ion Postal services in Romanian Principalities,<br />
1829-1859<br />
6B-23 1955-1959 Constantin<br />
Leonid, Calin<br />
Lions in human culture<br />
6B-24 1960-1964 Muntean, Marius Ballet<br />
Singapore<br />
7A-40 Teo Bee Yen YILIN Philately 2020<br />
7A-41 Association<br />
of Singapore<br />
Philatelists<br />
7A-42 Association<br />
of Singapore<br />
Philatelists<br />
Airmails From, Through and to Singapore and<br />
Malaya, Volume 1<br />
China Silver Yuan Stamps<br />
Slovenia<br />
2B-21 0274-0278 Petauer, Boštjan Charity overprints on Bosnian definitive 1914-1915<br />
3B-47 1065-1069 Artel, Thomas Postal rates and frankings of Slovenia, Croatia and<br />
Bosnia-Hercegovina 1918-1921<br />
154
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
8-32 2092 Petauer, Boštjan Yugoslavia to USA air mail rates 1945-1965<br />
8-33 2093 Tomc, Alojz The Italian Military post office No.59 during<br />
World War II<br />
Spain<br />
2B-22 0279-0283 Consejo,<br />
Eduardo<br />
3B-48 1070-1074 Gisbert Llacer,<br />
Miriam<br />
4-16 1465-1472 Baschwitz,<br />
German<br />
4-17 1473-1480 Martinez<br />
Herñandez,<br />
Manuel<br />
4-18 1481-1485 Rodriguez<br />
Piñero, Jose<br />
Carlos<br />
5-18 1673-1680 Gomez-Agüero,<br />
Jose Pedro<br />
7A-43 De Quesada,<br />
Eugenio<br />
7A-44 Sociedad<br />
Filatelica de<br />
Madrid<br />
7A-45 Sociedad<br />
Filatelica de<br />
Madrid<br />
The stamps of the Atogiro flying over Seville<br />
Valencian prephilatelics marks XVIII-XIX centuries<br />
Spain postal stationery of general use (1873-1938)<br />
Postal stationery type "MATRONA" 1931-1936<br />
Postal stationery of Mexico "Serie Mulitas"<br />
Air Mail on Spanish lands (1919-1939)<br />
Chasquis<br />
Philatelic and postal curiosities in time of pandemic<br />
Postal history of Cuba 1851-1858 (4 VOL)<br />
7A-46 El Eco Filatelico Spanish civil war (VOL V - EL ECO FILATELICO<br />
STUDIES)<br />
7A-47 Fesofi Names for philately and Spanish postal history<br />
(Cuadernos de Filatelia 25/25)<br />
7B-17 Galaron Calvo,<br />
Andres<br />
Weekly philatelics items in the "DIARIO DE<br />
BURGOS" (2020-22)<br />
7C-09 , Filatelia Hobby Spanish air letter-covers and aerograms with meters<br />
(1947-1986)<br />
155
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
8-34 2094 De Quesada,<br />
Eugenio<br />
Mail in hand with "CHASQUIS" in the viceroyalty of<br />
Nueva Granada in XVII and XVIII centuries<br />
Sweden<br />
1-08 0057-0064 Storckenfeldt,<br />
Douglas<br />
Iceland until 1901<br />
2B-23 0284-0288 Arnrup, Claes Adhesive Postage Stamps of the World 1840-1860.<br />
From countries that issued their first stams up to 1<br />
July 1852<br />
2B-24 0289-0293 Järnum, Lennart Sweden The Coat-of Arms Stamps 1855-1872<br />
2B-25 0294-0301 Ljungh, Jan-Olof The first stamps of the German Empire, the Eagle<br />
shield stamps and the values 10 and 30 groschen<br />
2B-26 0302-0309 Rietz, Ake Great Britain: Line engraved issues 1840-1870<br />
2B-27 0310-0314 Stommendal,<br />
Peter<br />
Classic Sweden 1855-1872<br />
3B-49 1075-1082 Lithén, Gunnar Cancellations from Swedish steamship mail post<br />
offices from 1869 up to 1951<br />
3B-50 1082-1087 Persson, Göran Cancellations of the Swedish Skilling Banco Stamps<br />
1855-1858<br />
3B-51 1088-1092 Wittsten, Peter Mail between Denmark and Sweden - both ways<br />
1658-1875<br />
3B-66 0315-0322 Ydell, Fredrik Swedish Postal History 1550-1872<br />
3D-11 1317-1321 Sohrne, Björn The Ottman, Turkey and Persian Empires, Postal<br />
Relations, ca 1800 to 1920s.<br />
4-19 1486-1490 Fredriksson, Gert Denmark Postal Stationary 1913-1927, Christian X<br />
Rigth Profile<br />
6B-25 1965-1972 Olason, Anders The American Civil War 1861-1865 - background,<br />
course of events and aftermath<br />
6B-26 1973-1977 Samuelsson,<br />
Tommy<br />
Allied fighter aircraft operations 1939-1945<br />
7C-10 Lithén, Gunnar Facit Special Classic <strong>2022</strong><br />
7C-11 Lithén, Gunnar Facit Sverige 2021<br />
7C-12 Lithén, Gunnar Facit Norden <strong>2022</strong><br />
156
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
Switzerland<br />
1-09 0065-0072 Bergamini,<br />
Adriano<br />
Postal relations between TICINO (Switzerland)<br />
and foreign countries before the UPU<br />
2A-04 0107-0111 Brand, Ruedi Perfins Switzerland and its Postage Control Systems<br />
(up to the Machine Frankings)<br />
2A-05 0112-0116 Farnow, Arnold Switzerland - Imperforate Sitting <strong>Helvetia</strong> "Strubel"<br />
1854-1863<br />
2A-06 0117-0121 Huwiler, Joe Cross & Numeral / Standing <strong>Helvetia</strong> 1882-1907<br />
2A-07 0122-0126 Keller, Hansruedi Portrait of William Tell<br />
2A-08 0127-0131 Lopez, Roberto Proofs and tests of standing <strong>Helvetia</strong>s<br />
2A-09 0132-0136 SwissPhila The Swiss cantonal stamps and their cancellations<br />
2B-29 0323-0327 Brack, Max Denmark 4 skilling 1854-1863<br />
2B-30 0328-0332 Klausner, Werner Day of the postage stamp in various European<br />
countries with a focus on Switzerland<br />
2B-31 0333-0337 Kraner, Gerhard The special stamps and special postcards from<br />
Federal Republic of Germany from 1949-1953.<br />
2B-32 0338-0345 Werner, Eric The stamps of the Italian Kingdom issued during the<br />
Kingdom of Victor Emanuel II<br />
2B-33 0346-0350 Carlo Rossi Papal States 1852-1870<br />
2B-34 0351-0355 Valdisera Roman States 1852-1870<br />
2B-35 0356-0360 Fjället Sweden's definitive issue 1920-1939<br />
2B-36 0361-0365 Andi's<br />
Briefmarken<br />
Kingdom Yugoslavia<br />
2C-14 0471-0478 Aebi, Fritz Mexico: The Hidalgo in Profile Issue 1872-74<br />
2C-15 0479-0483 Cordier, Jean-<br />
Louis<br />
2C-16 0484-0491 Sotty, Jean-<br />
François<br />
2D-19 0630-0634 Meyerhoff,<br />
Daniel<br />
MEXICAN REVOLUTION – SONORA, THE WHITE<br />
AND GREEN SEAL POSTAGE STAMPS<br />
Peru Classic<br />
The stamp issues of Mauritius under Queen Victoria<br />
1847-1897<br />
2D-20 0635-0642 Emerald Imperforate Classics of the World in Green<br />
157
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
3A-02 0689-0693 Bader, Jvo Swiss postal agencies in Italy and France<br />
3A-03 0694-0698 Balimann,<br />
Giovanni<br />
3A-04 0699-0703 Bellini, Gian<br />
Franco<br />
Bulk Mail in Switzerland<br />
(Massensendungen in der Schweiz)<br />
Collection of prephilatelic documents of the county of<br />
Ticino<br />
3A-05 0704-0708 Berger, Thomas Switzerland in the First World War<br />
3A-06 0709-0713 Bernath,<br />
François<br />
The Postal History of the "Alte Eidgenossenschaft"<br />
till the period of the "Helvetic Republic" (1798 -1803)<br />
3A-07 0714-0718 Budel, Alvise SWITZERLAND The Postal rates since 1850<br />
3A-08 0719-0723 Gamma, Claudio Oval radiation postmarks of the Canton Ticino<br />
3A-09 0724-0728 Geissmann,<br />
Christian<br />
Restrictions in Switzerland's International<br />
Postal Connections due to the Second World War<br />
1939-1945<br />
3A-10 0729-0733 Häfeli, Hans Postal History of the Town of Zurich 1602-1900<br />
3A-11 0734-0738 Kuhlmann, René Lettermail: Switzerland to Foreign destination<br />
1862-1883<br />
3A-12 0739-0743 Lachat, Bernard Early oval meter stamps from Switzerland<br />
3A-13 0744-0748 Leggeri, Lorenzo Oval stamps of Ticino and Mesolcina<br />
3A-14 0749-0753 Leuthard, Rolf History of Swiss Army (from the downfall of the Old<br />
Confederation to 1880)<br />
3A-15 0754-0758 Roggo, Diego Postal history of the Lake district (Canton Fribourg)<br />
3A-16 0759-0763 Sägesser, Stefan Postal history Canton Zug from 1700 - 1900<br />
3A-17 0764-0771 Schaefer,<br />
Richard<br />
SWISS LETTER MAIL DURING THE FIRST<br />
FEDERAL PERIOD 1849 - 1854 Cantonal- and<br />
Transitional Stamps, Locals and rayon I, II and III<br />
3A-18 0722-0776 Valesia Valais 1850-1863<br />
3A-19 0777-0781 Totentanz Postal History of Cantonal Lucerne 1850-1910<br />
3B-52 1093-1097 Felder, Franz-<br />
Josef<br />
3B-53 1098-1105 Sprenger,<br />
Markus<br />
Germany: Inflation in the period 1916-1923.<br />
Documentation of the collapse of the currency<br />
through selected postal items<br />
British-Egyptian Censor Marks during World War II<br />
158
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
3D-12 1322-1329 Scherer, Eric Prepaid reply cards in international mail -<br />
Historic development and practice of usage<br />
4-20 1491-1498 Bamert, Peter Wells Fargo Express Conquers Mexico<br />
4-21 1499-1503 Dünki, Joos Postal Stationery of the Principality of Liechtenstein<br />
from 1918<br />
4-22 1504-1508 Fink, Peter Aerogram Story<br />
4-23 1509-1516 Lienert, Otmar The System of International Reply Coupons<br />
4-24 1517-1521 Lualdi, Armando<br />
Andreas<br />
Postal History of Switzerland STO, stamped to<br />
private order 1907-1930<br />
5-19 1681-1688 Beer, Peter North Atlantic Catapult Airmail Flights 1928-1935<br />
5-20 1689-1693 Flückiger,<br />
Markus<br />
Military Aviation Switzerland<br />
5-21 1694-1698 Förster, Eckhard The development of drop mail of LZ 127<br />
"Graf Zeppelin" 1928–1936<br />
5-22 1699-1703 Heiniger, Ueli Airmail Switzerland<br />
5-23 1704-1711 Keller, Christian Courrier Sud / Southern Airmails<br />
5-24 1712-1719 Ravasi, Mario SCADTA Development of Colombian airmail<br />
6A-09 1794-1798 Grigorescu,<br />
Razvan<br />
Horse racing, a fascinating world<br />
6A-10 1799-1806 Kaelin, Sylvia I Love Chickens<br />
6A-11 1807-1814 Scheibler, Hans All Scrap or what?<br />
6A-12 1815-1819 Streit, Toni MAMMALS: Human, too human and superhuman<br />
6A-13 1820-1827 Zehnder, Erika Arctophilia/Bearmania - Arctophilie/Bärenmanie<br />
6B-27 1978-1982 Hoffner,<br />
Johannes<br />
The Transition from the German Empire to the<br />
Weimar Republic<br />
6B-28 1983-1990 Märki, Kurt The occidental church building in the high and late<br />
Middle Ages<br />
6B-29 1991-1995 Pfister, Esther The dove: the symbolic and messenger bird<br />
6B-30 1996-2003 Seydoux, Jean-<br />
Marc<br />
Our father the Sun<br />
159
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
6C-08 2051-2055 Tschumi, Marcel Bridges, marvels of the technique from four points of<br />
view<br />
6C-09 2056-2060 Weber, Hans<br />
Jürg<br />
Our drinking Water<br />
7A-48 Bach, Jean-Paul Basle Dove<br />
7A-49 Bader, Jvo Swiss postal agencies in Italy and France<br />
7A-50 Baumgartner,<br />
Kurt<br />
7A-51 Baumgartner,<br />
Kurt<br />
7A-52 Schaefer,<br />
Richard<br />
7A-53 Schaefer,<br />
Richard<br />
7B-18 Emmenegger,<br />
Jean-Louis<br />
7C-13 Wiederkehr,<br />
Albrik<br />
A journey in images on Monte Generoso<br />
PTT The Museum of Memories<br />
The first federal postages stamps of Switzerland<br />
letter mail 01.10.1850–30.09.1854<br />
SWISS CANTONAL STAMPS<br />
authentic-fake-falsified<br />
Rhône Philatélie<br />
Handbook of Swiss PTO postal stationery<br />
8-35 2095 Fink, Peter Prisoner of war aerograms World War II<br />
Thailand<br />
2D-21 0643-0650 Utensute, Ukris Thailand; King Bhumibol’s 2nd definitive issue<br />
3D-13 1330-1337 Euarchukiati,<br />
Nuntawat<br />
3D-14 1338-1345 Karnasuta,<br />
Charnchai<br />
3D-15 1346-1350 Sinchawla,<br />
Santpal<br />
Siam: Thai Occupation and World War II<br />
(1943-1946)<br />
Death Railway POW & Civilian Labor Mail, and<br />
Thailand Internee Mail<br />
Early India Mails Using De La Rue & Co<br />
Typographed Stamps<br />
Turkey<br />
2B-37 0366-0373 Erhan, Mehmet<br />
Yamaç<br />
2B-38 0374-0381 Kamil Serdar,<br />
Yazgan<br />
Specialized Turkey 1920-1928<br />
From the Ankara Government to the Turkish<br />
Republic (1920-1928)<br />
160
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
3B-54 1106-1110 Erhan, Yelda Rare postal marks used in the early years of the<br />
Turkish Republic 1923-1930<br />
3B-55 1111-1115 Tunaci, Atadan Competition in Ottoman Sea<br />
3B-56 1116-1120 Yilmaz, Hakan Postal History – Province of HÜDAVENDİGAR<br />
7A-54 Oral, Aydin "Postal History of Ottoman Iraq<br />
during the British Occupation<br />
(1914-1924)"<br />
7C-14 Papuççuoglu,<br />
Bülent<br />
7C-15 Papuççuoglu,<br />
Bülent<br />
Surcharged commemoratives stamps for the<br />
opening of Ankaras-Sivas Railway line<br />
Turkish stamps specialized catalogue "The<br />
Government of the Grand National Assembly of<br />
Turkey 1920-1923"<br />
8-36 2096 Artam, Turgay 1862-1863 Tugra Stamps<br />
8-37 2097 Bahar, Yusuf Zeppelin transported mail related to Turkey<br />
Ukraine<br />
2B-39 0382-0386 Frenkel, Dmytro Stamps of RSFSR 1918-1923.<br />
3B-57 1121-1125 Andriy,<br />
Grodetskyy<br />
Postal history of Podolian region within the Russian<br />
Empire<br />
3B-58 1126-1133 Galyna, Filonova «Urgent mail» delivery in Russian Empire,<br />
the RSFSR and the USSR in 1668-1938<br />
3B-59 1134-1138 Semenov, Igor Odessa postal history in 1798-1900<br />
7A-55 Katsman, Vitaliy "Fragments of the history of collecting Zemstvo<br />
stamps and Zemstvo post.<br />
Gallery of famous collectors and researchers of<br />
Zemstvo post.<br />
Illustrated bibliography"<br />
7A-56 Katsman, Vitaliy "Famous collectors and researchers of the Zemstvo post.<br />
Brief biographies. Fragments of collections. in 2 volumes"<br />
United Arab Emirates<br />
2D-22 0651-0655 Ahmad, Omar A Glance on Stamps used in Dubai<br />
2D-23 0656-0660 Alserkal, Nasser Dubai Stamps<br />
3B-60 1139-1143 Awan, Shafiq Postal Markings of Britain<br />
161
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
3D-16 1351-1358 Alserkal, Ahmad A Postal History Study of Air mail from Iraq<br />
(1919-1945)<br />
United Kingdom<br />
2A-10 0137-0144 Hackmey,<br />
Joseph<br />
2C-17 0492-0496 Harman,<br />
Christopher G.<br />
2D-25 0666-0673 Martin-Redman,<br />
Simon<br />
Classic Switzerland<br />
The Early Issues of Peru - From the Pacific Steam<br />
Navigation Company until the UPU<br />
Sarawak - The first forty years 1858-1898<br />
2D-26 0674-0678 Sarian, Atif Egypt - The Third Issue 1872-1879<br />
3B-61 1144-1151 Hedley, Bill Postal Service development in Poszony and its<br />
environs during the Habsburg era to 1900<br />
3B-62 1152-1159 King, Birthe Refugee Camps in Denmark 1945-1949<br />
3B-63 1160-1167 King, Chris The Posts in the City of Lübeck before 1868<br />
3B-64 1168-1175 Pizer, Robin German Parcel Cards to Foreign Countries<br />
1907-1928<br />
3D-18 1359-1366 Wheatley,<br />
Richard<br />
Netherlands East Indies Mail 1789 to GPU (1877)<br />
4-25 1522-1526 Richards , Simon Grenada Postal Stationery<br />
4-26 1527-1531 Walton, Frank Great Britain QEII Registered Envelopes of the<br />
Tudor Rose design<br />
5-25 1720-1724 Athale, Dinar Development of the Indian Air Mail Service<br />
1911-1941<br />
7A-57 Trotter, Brian Rhodesian Philately until 1924 - The British South<br />
Africa Company Period<br />
7A-58 Young, Peter The inks of De La Rue & Co. and their introduction of<br />
synthetic and aniline ingredients c.1850-1910<br />
8-38 2098 Athale, Dinar Indelible Evidence: The History of Forensic Medicine<br />
8-39 2099 Winters, Graham Ceylon, King George V Silver Jubilee Issue<br />
Uruguay<br />
1-10 0073-0080 Britz, Walter Uruguay: Early Issues of the XIX Century<br />
(1856-1862)<br />
162
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
2C-18 0497-0504 Boido, Eduardo Uruguay - "Escuditos" issues 1864-1866<br />
4-27 1532-1539 Charlone,<br />
Rogelio<br />
50 Years of Postal Stationery in Uruguay<br />
6A-14 1828-1832 Bellini, Enzo The Turtles: A Singular Evolutionary Success<br />
USA<br />
2B-40 0387-0394 Zulueta, Alfonso Bosnia-Herzegovinia: Double Eagle Definitive<br />
Issues, 1879-1905<br />
2C-19 0505-0509 Banchik, Mark Vera Cruz Occupation (1914) Traditional Study of<br />
Revenue Stamps<br />
2C-20 0510-0514 Erichson, Jeffrey Engraved Perforated Royal Portraits Issued in<br />
Hawaii 1864-1893<br />
2C-21 0515-0519 Reddington,<br />
Stuart<br />
2D-27 0679-0683 Nassre-Esfahani,<br />
Behruz<br />
Canada Small Queens; 1870-1897<br />
The Dual Currency Issues of Persia, 1881-1885<br />
3B-65 1176-1180 Grassi, Armando The Crimean War<br />
3C-12 1251-1258 Kewriga, Matt United States 1870-88 Bank Note issue Postal<br />
History<br />
3C-13 1259-1263 Rodriguez, Omar Mexico: The Use of the Medallion, Numeral, and<br />
Mulitas Stamps During the Drastic Drop of Rates<br />
When Joining UPU 1884-1900<br />
4-28 1540-1547 Jaiswal,<br />
Sandeep<br />
British India Queen Victoria Postal Stationary<br />
5-26 1725-1729 Ganz, Cheryl Zeppelins and the United States<br />
5-27 1730-1737 Melamed,<br />
Semyon<br />
Zeppelin Airships and Their Flights<br />
7A-59 Ganz, Cheryl U.S. Zeppelin and Airship Mail Flights<br />
7A-60 Kupiec-<br />
Weglinski, Jerzy<br />
The History of Airmail in Poland and its Contribution<br />
to Airmail Services of Europe (1914-1939)<br />
8-40 2100 Banchik, Mark Overprinted 1929 Black Official Airmail Stamps of<br />
Mexico<br />
8-41 2101 Benninghof,<br />
Robert<br />
The Creation of the Border Between Two Irelands<br />
163
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Name<br />
Title<br />
8-42 2102 Grinfelds, Vesma Latvia: The First Banknote Stamp and Its overprints<br />
8-43 2103 Jaiswal,<br />
Sandeep<br />
The 1904 Provisional Issue of Jaipur<br />
Venezuela<br />
1-11 0081-0088 Heister, Knut Venezuela: First "Escuelas" Issue (1871-878)<br />
2C-22 0520-0527 Borberg,<br />
Eduardo<br />
Venezuela: The First American Bank Note Co.<br />
Issues<br />
4-30 1556-1563 Meri, Pedro Venezuela: Postal stationery, new order<br />
IL VOSTRO<br />
PARTNER<br />
PER LA<br />
SICUREZZA<br />
164
Exhibit Listing by Name<br />
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Abdulwahab,<br />
Nader<br />
5-28 1274-1278 Iraq The Royal Air Force Cairo - Baghdad<br />
Air Mail Service 1921-1927.<br />
Abo luai 8-06 2066 Bahrain Saudi Arabia postal history<br />
Aebi, Fritz 2C-14 0471-0478 Switzerland Mexico: The Hidalgo in Profile Issue<br />
1872-74<br />
Ahmad, Omar 2D-22 0651-0655 United Arab<br />
Emirates<br />
A Glance on Stamps used in Dubai<br />
Al Saleh,<br />
Haytham<br />
8-45 2105 Bahrain Bahrain post office initiatives of post<br />
cards<br />
Al-Ismail, Ali 3D-09 1307-1311 State of<br />
Qatar<br />
Kuwait Postal History<br />
Al-Ismail,<br />
Hussain<br />
Al-Ismail,<br />
Shatha<br />
2D-18 0625-0629 State of<br />
Qatar<br />
3D-08 1302-1306 State of<br />
Qatar<br />
Qatar First Definitive Issue<br />
Oman Postal History<br />
Alserkal, Ahmad 3D-16 1351-1358 United Arab<br />
Emirates<br />
A Postal History Study of Air mail from<br />
Iraq (1919-1945)<br />
Alserkal,<br />
Nasser<br />
2D-23 0656-0660 United Arab<br />
Emirates<br />
Dubai Stamps<br />
Ameel, Saif 7A-22 Iraq Municipalities Fees in Iraq<br />
Amler, Tomáš 8-44 2104 Czech<br />
Republic<br />
1927 4th Postage Due Provisional<br />
Issue (Chainbreaker) 50/150 h<br />
Andi's<br />
Briefmarken<br />
2B-36 0361-0365 Switzerland Kingdom Yugoslavia<br />
Ando, Gensei 4-12 1439-1446 Japan The Japanese Foreign Mail Postcards<br />
Andriy,<br />
Grodetskyy<br />
Arbelaez, Jorge<br />
Enrique<br />
3B-57 1121-1125 Ukraine Postal history of Podolian region within<br />
the Russian Empire<br />
1-02 0009-0016 Colombia Pre-Philatelic letter with content from<br />
Colombia 1531-1859<br />
165
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Ariyoshi,<br />
Nobuto<br />
2A-02 0094-0098 Japan Switzerland postage due stamps<br />
1883-1910<br />
Arnrup, Claes 2B-23 0284-0288 Sweden Adhesive Postage Stamps of the World<br />
1840-1860. From countries that issued<br />
their first stams up to 1 July 1852<br />
Artam, Turgay 8-36 2096 Turkey 1862-1863 Tugra Stamps<br />
Artel, Thomas 3B-47 1065-1069 Slovenia Postal rates and frankings of Slovenia,<br />
Croatia and Bosnia-Hercegovina<br />
1918-1921<br />
Arvanitis,<br />
Thomas<br />
Association<br />
of Singapore<br />
Philatelists<br />
Association<br />
of Singapore<br />
Philatelists<br />
3B-27 0944-0951 Greece The Prephilatelic period of the Hellenic<br />
Postal Service<br />
7A-41 Singapore Airmails From, Through and to<br />
Singapore and Malaya, Volume 1<br />
7A-42 Singapore China Silver Yuan Stamps<br />
Athale, Dinar 5-25 1720-1724 United<br />
Kingdom<br />
Athale, Dinar 8-38 2098 United<br />
Kingdom<br />
Development of the Indian Air Mail<br />
Service 1911-1941<br />
Indelible Evidence: The History of<br />
Forensic Medicine<br />
Avramidis,<br />
Pandelis<br />
2B-09 0196-0200 Germany Greece small Hermes Heads<br />
Awan, Shafiq 3B-60 1139-1143 United Arab<br />
Emirates<br />
Postal Markings of Britain<br />
Bach, Jean-<br />
Paul<br />
7A-48 Switzerland Basle Dove<br />
Bader, Jvo 3A-02 0689-0693 Switzerland Swiss postal agencies in Italy and<br />
France<br />
Bader, Jvo 7A-49 Switzerland Swiss postal agencies in Italy and<br />
France<br />
Bahar, Yusuf 8-37 2097 Turkey Zeppelin transported mail related to<br />
Turkey<br />
166
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Balgamwala,<br />
Muhammad Arif<br />
Balimann,<br />
Giovanni<br />
2D-15 0607-0614 Pakistan AFGANISTAN ABDUL RAHMAN<br />
1888-1890 (Circular series)<br />
3A-03 0694-0698 Switzerland Bulk Mail in Switzerland<br />
(Massensendungen in der Schweiz)<br />
Bamert, Peter 4-20 1491-1498 Switzerland Wells Fargo Express Conquers Mexico<br />
Banchik, Mark 2C-19 0505-0509 USA Vera Cruz Occupation (1914)<br />
Traditional Study of Revenue Stamps<br />
Banchik, Mark 8-40 2100 USA Overprinted 1929 Black Official Airmail<br />
Stamps of Mexico<br />
Banette 3B-15 0870-0874 France French Electric Telegraphy in the<br />
Metropolis and in the World from<br />
1850 to 1900<br />
Barak, Izhak 6C-04 2025-2032 Israel The Development of Aviation and<br />
Transformation of Mail by Air until 1914<br />
Barneva,<br />
Lyudmila<br />
Baschwitz,<br />
German<br />
Bassyouny,<br />
Hisham<br />
3B-07 0824-0828 Bulgaria Bulgaria. Post offices of Royal Palaces<br />
& Royal Mail (1886-1946).<br />
4-16 1465-1472 Spain Spain postal stationery of general use<br />
(1873-1938)<br />
2D-04 0546-0553 Egypt British Forces in Egypt Stamps Issued<br />
1932-1939<br />
Bator, Janusz 3B-40 1027-1031 Poland PRZEMYŚL – POSTAL HISTORY<br />
UNTIL 1918<br />
Baumgartner,<br />
Kurt<br />
Baumgartner,<br />
Kurt<br />
7A-50 Switzerland A journey in images on Monte<br />
Generoso<br />
7A-51 Switzerland PTT The Museum of Memories<br />
Beer, Peter 5-19 1681-1688 Switzerland North Atlantic Catapult Airmail Flights<br />
1928-1935<br />
Bellini, Enzo 6A-14 1828-1832 Uruguay The Turtles: A Singular Evolutionary<br />
Success<br />
Bellini, Gian<br />
Franco<br />
3A-04 0699-0703 Switzerland Collection of prephilatelic documents of<br />
the county of Ticino<br />
167
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Benchimol,<br />
Jacques<br />
Bendeck,<br />
Sergio Antonio<br />
Benninghof,<br />
Robert<br />
Bergamini,<br />
Adriano<br />
2C-03 0411-0415 Brazil "Dom Pedro II - Emperor of Brazil<br />
American & Continental Bank Note<br />
issues - 1866-1878"<br />
5-07 1606-1610 Honduras The first year of Honduras Air mail,<br />
1925-1933<br />
8-41 2101 USA The Creation of the Border Between<br />
Two Irelands<br />
1-09 0065-0072 Switzerland Postal relations between TICINO<br />
(Switzerland) and foreign countries<br />
before the UPU<br />
Berger, Thomas 3A-05 0704-0708 Switzerland Switzerland in the First World War<br />
Bernath,<br />
François<br />
3A-06 0709-0713 Switzerland The Postal History of the "Alte<br />
Eidgenossenschaft" till the period of the<br />
"Helvetic Republic" (1798-1803)<br />
Bianchi, Paolo 1-07 0049-0056 Monaco Portuguese East Africa (Mozambique)<br />
Blaickner,<br />
Gerhard<br />
3A-01 0684-0688 Austria Schweizer Auslandfrankaturen zur Zeit<br />
der Rayonmarken 1850-1854<br />
Boido, Eduardo 2C-18 0497-0504 Uruguay Uruguay - "Escuditos" issues<br />
1864-1866<br />
Bonnefoy,<br />
Laurent<br />
Borberg,<br />
Eduardo<br />
Bornmann,<br />
Johannes<br />
3B-12 0855-0859 France The 5 F Merson-Type (Metropolitan<br />
France 1900-1932)<br />
2C-22 0520-0527 Venezuela Venezuela: The First American Bank<br />
Note Co. Issues<br />
2D-06 0559-0566 Germany Nepal, Pre-Philately and Classic<br />
Bot, Jacques 5-15 1652-1659 Netherlands Fokker during the Interbellum<br />
Bouda, Pavel 5-03 1577-1584 Czech<br />
Republic<br />
Czechoslovak Airpost 1920-1938<br />
Brack, Max 2B-29 0323-0327 Switzerland Denmark 4 skilling 1854-1863<br />
Brand, Ruedi 2A-04 0107-0111 Switzerland Perfins Switzerland and its Postage<br />
Control Systems (up to the Machine<br />
Frankings)<br />
168
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Bravo, Rodrigo 3C-07 1220-1224 Chile Marcas Postales y Etiquetas de<br />
Servicio Auxiliares a la Obliteración,<br />
Chile 1853-1920<br />
Britz, Walter 1-10 0073-0080 Uruguay Uruguay: Early Issues of the XIX<br />
Century (1856-1862)<br />
Budel, Alvise 3A-07 0714-0718 Switzerland SWITZERLAND The Postal rates since<br />
1850<br />
Buitenkamp,<br />
Henk<br />
Bulgarian<br />
Philatelic<br />
Academy<br />
3B-36 1001-1008 Netherlands Postal Rates and Franking of Slovenia,<br />
Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina<br />
1918-1921<br />
7B-02 Bulgaria Annual Bulletin 2020 including "The<br />
history of the three 'Napoleons' & Civil<br />
censorship of the correspondence in<br />
Bulgaria during the First World War<br />
1914-1918<br />
Burdiat, Nicola 7B-08 Italy L'Intero Postale / The Postal Stationery<br />
Callan, Brian 5-10 1621-1628 Ireland Graf Zeppelin DZ-127 South America<br />
Airmail 1930-1937<br />
Camerer, Martin 3B-16 0875-0879 Germany Letter mail between the Old Italian and<br />
the Old German States 1850-1870<br />
Cangelaris,<br />
Panayotis<br />
8-26 2086 Greece The Mafeking Blues 1900<br />
Carlo Rossi 2B-33 0346-0350 Switzerland Papal States 1852-1870<br />
Casielles,<br />
Daiana Aylen<br />
Casielles,<br />
Miguel<br />
Casielles,<br />
Miguel<br />
Castro-<br />
Harrigan, Alvaro<br />
6A-01 1738-1745 Argentina My friend's dog<br />
2C-01 0395-0402 Argentina San Martin in Oval 1908<br />
7C-01 Argentina Catalogo Especializado de Perforados<br />
Republica Argentina (Specialised<br />
<strong>Catalogue</strong> of Perforated Products<br />
Republic of Argentina)<br />
2C-07 0434-0438 Costa Rica Costa Rica: The Classic Period<br />
1863-1883<br />
169
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Červinka, Miloš 3B-08 0829-0836 Czech<br />
Republic<br />
Development of postal services in<br />
Decin region<br />
Chabros,<br />
Sławek<br />
Charlone,<br />
Rogelio<br />
3B-41 1032-1036 Poland Fight for independence and borders of<br />
Poland 1918-1921<br />
4-27 1532-1539 Uruguay 50 Years of Postal Stationery in<br />
Uruguay<br />
Charrach, Josef 6A-06 1776-1783 Israel Minerals - Their Origin, Exploitation and<br />
Uses<br />
Chaves, Carlos 3C-01 1181-1185 Argentina Argentina-Register Mail from<br />
1878 to 1920<br />
Chazapis,<br />
Costas<br />
3B-28 0952-0956 Greece Greece: The 4th of August regime<br />
(1936-41)<br />
Chen, Ying Dao 3C-05 1207-1214 Brazil Brazil-Portugal Maritime Mail<br />
(1698-1877)<br />
Chio, Hong Chi 7A-28 Macau Research and classification on the<br />
Macau postage stamps errors<br />
Chirescu, Ion 3B-46 1060-1064 Romania Postal services in Romanian<br />
Principalities, 1829-1859<br />
Cieślak,<br />
Ryszard<br />
Consejo,<br />
Eduardo<br />
Constantin<br />
Leonid, Calin<br />
Cordier, Jean-<br />
Louis<br />
8-31 2091 Poland Information - a challenge for secret<br />
services<br />
2B-22 0279-0283 Spain The stamps of the Atogiro flying over<br />
Seville<br />
6B-23 1955-1959 Romania Lions in human culture<br />
2C-15 0479-0483 Switzerland MEXICAN REVOLUTION – SONORA,<br />
THE WHITE AND GREEN SEAL<br />
POSTAGE STAMPS<br />
Costa 5-17 1668-1672 Portugal Postal Air Service Catapult<br />
(North Atlantic)<br />
Cravero,<br />
Roberto Nestor<br />
Croatian Philatelic<br />
Society Zadar<br />
6B-01 1833-1837 Argentina Earth Drawings<br />
7B-04 Croatia Zadarski Filatelist<br />
Cruz, Santiago 2C-05 0421-0428 Colombia Colombia - The Perkins 1917 Issue<br />
170
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Darwish, Khalid 8-05 2065 Bahrain Postal card, from India to Bahrain from<br />
1945 to 1950<br />
De Quesada,<br />
Eugenio<br />
De Quesada,<br />
Eugenio<br />
Dedivitis,<br />
Rogério<br />
7A-43 Spain Chasquis<br />
8-34 2094 Spain Mail in hand with "CHASQUIS" in the<br />
viceroyalty of Nueva Granada in XVII<br />
and XVIII centuries<br />
6B-09 1876-1880 Brazil The Nazism and the war: The age of<br />
social catastrophe<br />
Di Lalla, Hector 7A-01 Argentina Development of the railways in<br />
Argentina Ferrocarriles del Oeste y<br />
Norte Study of travelling post marks<br />
1865-1920 Volume I<br />
Di Mento, Eligio 5-11 1629-1633 Italy The Mail by Helicopter in Italy<br />
Diaz, Luis<br />
Fernando<br />
Diaz, Maria<br />
Beatriz<br />
2C-08 0439-0443 Costa Rica Costa Rica: Coat of Arms Issue of 1892<br />
2C-12 0459-0465 Honduras Honduras 1865-1899<br />
Dorr, Elmar 7A-10 Germany Historical forays through the postal<br />
history of the town of Neustadt an der<br />
Haardt<br />
Dorr, Ute 8-25 2085 Germany The Orient Express 1883-1914<br />
Dorr, Ute &<br />
Elmar<br />
7A-09 Germany The Orient Express 1883-1914<br />
Dünki, Joos 4-21 1499-1503 Switzerland Postal Stationery of the Principality of<br />
Liechtenstein from 1918<br />
El Eco Filatelico 7A-46 Spain Spanish civil war (VOL V -<br />
EL ECO FILATELICO STUDIES)<br />
Emerald 2D-20 0635-0642 Switzerland Imperforate Classics of the World in<br />
Green<br />
Emmenegger,<br />
Jean-Louis<br />
Engelbrecht,<br />
Lars<br />
7B-18 Switzerland Rhône Philatélie<br />
7A-07 Denmark Postal Stationery of Denmark -<br />
The Bi-coloured issue 1871-1905 &<br />
Danmarks Helsager - Den Tofarvede<br />
Udgave 1871-1905<br />
171
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Enosowa,<br />
Yuichi<br />
Erhan, Mehmet<br />
Yamaç<br />
7A-26 Japan How to Make Your Exhibit for JAPEX<br />
2B-37 0366-0373 Turkey Specialized Turkey 1920-1928<br />
Erhan, Yelda 3B-54 1106-1110 Turkey Rare postal marks used in the<br />
early years of the Turkish Republic<br />
1923-1930<br />
Erichson,<br />
Jeffrey<br />
Euarchukiati,<br />
Nuntawat<br />
2C-20 0510-0514 USA Engraved Perforated Royal Portraits<br />
Issued in Hawaii 1864-1893<br />
3D-13 1330-1337 Thailand Siam: Thai Occupation and<br />
World War II (1943-1946)<br />
Eun, Chong Ho 7A-38 Rep. of Korea Korean Glossary of Philatelic Terms<br />
European<br />
Academy of<br />
Philately<br />
European<br />
Academy of<br />
Philately<br />
European<br />
Academy of<br />
Philately<br />
7A-30 Monaco OPUS XIX, Treaty of Versailles and its<br />
Consequences<br />
7A-31 Monaco OPUS XX, The British Empire<br />
7A-32 Monaco OPUS XXI, Germany and its Colonies<br />
Fadli 4-11 1434-1438 Indonesia Postal Cards of Netherlands Indies<br />
1874-1932<br />
Falah, Ali 8-29 2089 Iraq The I.E.F. 'D' Occupation of Mosul in<br />
1919<br />
Fanchini, Louis 8-24 2084 France The Fakes & Forgeries of the Large<br />
Hermes Head of Greece<br />
Farnow, Arnold 2A-05 0112-0116 Switzerland Switzerland - Imperforate Sitting<br />
<strong>Helvetia</strong> "Strubel" 1854-1863<br />
Felder, Franz-<br />
Josef<br />
3B-52 1093-1097 Switzerland Germany: Inflation in the period<br />
1916-1923. Documentation of the<br />
collapse of the currency through<br />
selected postal items<br />
Fesofi 7A-47 Spain Names for philately and Spanish postal<br />
history (Cuadernos de Filatelia 25/25)<br />
172
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Filatelia Hobby 7C-09 Spain Spanish air letter-covers and aerograms<br />
with meters (1947-1986)<br />
Fink, Peter 4-22 1504-1508 Switzerland Aerogram Story<br />
Fink, Peter 8-35 2095 Switzerland Prisoner of war aerograms<br />
World War II<br />
Fisher,<br />
Lawrence<br />
8-30 2090 Israel The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee<br />
Problem and its Perpetuation<br />
Fjället 2B-35 0356-0360 Switzerland Sweden's definitive issue 1920-1939<br />
Flückiger,<br />
Markus<br />
Förster,<br />
Eckhard<br />
5-20 1689-1693 Switzerland Military Aviation Switzerland<br />
5-21 1694-1698 Switzerland The development of drop mail of<br />
LZ 127 "Graf Zeppelin" 1928–1936<br />
Frazão, Luís 3B-45 1055-1059 Portugal Postal History of Portugal in the<br />
Pre-stamp Period<br />
Fredriksson,<br />
Gert<br />
4-19 1486-1490 Sweden Denmark Postal Stationary 1913-1927,<br />
Christian X Rigth Profile<br />
Frenkel, Dmytro 2B-39 0382-0386 Ukraine Stamps of RSFSR 1918-1923.<br />
Frick, Jean 6C-02 2009-2016 France The acoustic<br />
Frohlich, Alfredo 2C-06 0429-0433 Colombia Colombia - The Last classic issue of<br />
1866<br />
Frohlich, Alfredo 8-13 2073 Colombia Replating Colombia's 1861 1 peso<br />
stamp<br />
FSPL<br />
(Luxembourg<br />
Federation),<br />
7B-12 Luxembourg Moniteur du Collectionneur<br />
(Collector's Monitor)<br />
Fuchs, Wilfried 6A-05 1768-1775 Germany The fox and his varied relationship to us<br />
human beings<br />
Fumu, Antonello 3D-04 1279-1283 Italy 1845/85 – The mail service in the North<br />
Africa ports: Alexandria, Tunis, Algiers,<br />
Bone, Philippeville, Oran, Tangier and<br />
Tripoli of Barbary<br />
Galaron Calvo,<br />
Andres<br />
7B-17 Spain Weekly philatelics items in the "DIARIO<br />
DE BURGOS" (2020-22)<br />
173
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Galinos,<br />
Alexandre<br />
Galyna,<br />
Filonova<br />
Gamma,<br />
Claudio<br />
8-27 2087 Greece The French Army of Morea, 1828-1830<br />
3B-58 1126-1133 Ukraine «Urgent mail» delivery in Russian<br />
Empire, the RSFSR and the USSR<br />
in 1668-1938<br />
3A-08 0719-0723 Switzerland Oval radiation postmarks of the Canton<br />
Ticino<br />
Ganz, Cheryl 5-26 1725-1729 USA Zeppelins and the United States<br />
Ganz, Cheryl 7A-59 USA U.S. Zeppelin and Airship Mail Flights<br />
Geissmann,<br />
Christian<br />
3A-09 0724-0728 Switzerland Restrictions in Switzerland's<br />
International Postal Connections due to<br />
the Second World War 1939-1945<br />
Ghazi, Qayyum 6B-02 1838-1842 Bangladesh Canoe, The Amazing Prehistoric<br />
Watercraft of All Time<br />
Ghose,<br />
Chandrajit<br />
Gisbert Llacer,<br />
Miriam<br />
6B-14 1907-1911 India Bicentennial Celebration of<br />
independence of USA in 1976<br />
3B-48 1070-1074 Spain Valencian prephilatelics marks<br />
XVIII-XIX centuries<br />
Glatz, István 3B-29 0957-0964 Hungary Foreign Frankings from Hungary<br />
1900-1918<br />
Glavić, Matej 8-16 2076 Croatia Novska - Traveling post<br />
Gomez-Agüero,<br />
Jose Pedro<br />
Gontier, Jean-<br />
Claude<br />
Grassi,<br />
Armando<br />
Grigorescu,<br />
Razvan<br />
Grinfelds,<br />
Vesma<br />
5-18 1673-1680 Spain Air Mail on Spanish lands (1919-1939)<br />
2B-07 0184-0190 France French commemoratives for Paris<br />
1924 Olympic games set issue and<br />
postal use<br />
3B-65 1176-1180 USA The Crimean War<br />
6A-09 1794-1798 Switzerland Horse racing, a fascinating world<br />
8-42 2102 USA Latvia: The First Banknote Stamp and<br />
Its overprints<br />
174
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Grobenski,<br />
Davor<br />
Grundmann,<br />
Wilhelm<br />
8-20 2080 Croatia Geodesy - Geodetic instruments<br />
3D-01 1264-1268 Germany Mongolia - Land of Genghis Khan. Post<br />
Offices and Postmarks 1878-1939<br />
Gubijan, Željko 2B-02 0153-0160 Croatia Albania 1913-1920<br />
Günnewig,<br />
Franz Josef<br />
3B-17 0880-0887 Germany Norway-German postal history on<br />
mail transport et vice versa up to the<br />
foundation of the UPU<br />
Haasnoot, Arie 7A-33 Netherlands Philatelic Persons Register of<br />
Musicians<br />
Hackmey,<br />
Joseph<br />
2A-10 0137-0144 United<br />
Kingdom<br />
Classic Switzerland<br />
Häfeli, Hans 3A-10 0729-0733 Switzerland Postal History of the Town of Zurich<br />
1602-1900<br />
Haque, Farzana 8-07 2067 Bangladesh Health Issues Of New Zealand Post<br />
1929-1966<br />
Harman,<br />
Christopher G.<br />
2C-17 0492-0496 United<br />
Kingdom<br />
The Early Issues of Peru - From the<br />
Pacific Steam Navigation Company<br />
until the UPU<br />
Hedley, Bill 3B-61 1144-1151 United<br />
Kingdom<br />
Postal Service development in Poszony<br />
and its environs during the Habsburg<br />
era to 1900<br />
Heimbüchler,<br />
Fritz<br />
3C-09 1233-1240 Germany Collection of the first stamps of Brazil<br />
1843-1870<br />
Heiniger, Ueli 5-22 1699-1703 Switzerland Airmail Switzerland<br />
Heister, Knut 1-11 0081-0088 Venezuela Venezuela: First "Escuelas" Issue<br />
(1871-878)<br />
Hoffner,<br />
Johannes<br />
Homonnay,<br />
Géza<br />
Horin, Horst<br />
Erich<br />
6B-27 1978-1982 Switzerland The Transition from the German Empire<br />
to the Weimar Republic<br />
3B-30 0965-0969 Hungary Hungarian Consular Post Offices in<br />
Romania, 1 May 1867-31 March 1869<br />
3B-02 0787-0794 Austria Field- and military mail under the double<br />
eagle in the German Confederation<br />
1815-1866<br />
175
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Hrvatski Savez<br />
Filatelista<br />
7B-05 Croatia Hrvatski Filatelist<br />
Huo, Huixiao 7B-13 Macau Macau philately "Warmly celebrate<br />
the 40th anniversary of The CLUBE<br />
FILATELICO DE MACAU" (2020)<br />
Huwiler, Joe 2A-06 0117-0121 Switzerland Cross & Numeral / Standing <strong>Helvetia</strong><br />
1882-1907<br />
Huys-Berlingin,<br />
Jan<br />
2B-18 0250-0257 Liechtenstein Belgium's first issue, the EPAULETTES<br />
Iéko, Philippe 6B-04 1848-1852 Belgium Impressionism, a major step in painting<br />
Iordache, Victor 2B-19 0258-0265 Romania Romania 1872-1889<br />
Israël, Alain 6B-12 1891-1898 France The red cross from Solferino to modern<br />
times<br />
Jaiswal,<br />
Sandeep<br />
Jaiswal,<br />
Sandeep<br />
Jakucewicz,<br />
Stefan<br />
4-28 1540-1547 USA British India Queen Victoria Postal<br />
Stationary<br />
8-43 2103 USA The 1904 Provisional Issue of Jaipur<br />
7A-34 Poland Printing of postage stamps<br />
James 3D-02 1269-1273 India Cochin State Postal History<br />
Jaquard 1-06 0041-0048 Italy "Souvenir du Siège de Paris 1870/1871<br />
Private mail transported by Ballons-<br />
Montés during the Prussian Siege "<br />
Jaretzky, Rolf-<br />
Dieter<br />
Järnum,<br />
Lennart<br />
2C-11 0454-0458 Germany Confederate States of America<br />
2B-24 0289-0293 Sweden Sweden The Coat-of Arms Stamps<br />
1855-1872<br />
jbellido 6B-11 1886-1890 Chile "Simply, Michelangelo" The life and<br />
work of Renaissance Man<br />
Jhingan,<br />
Madhukar<br />
Johnson,<br />
James C<br />
Jung, Soon<br />
Jong<br />
4-10 1429-1433 India Indian Aerogrammes<br />
5-02 1569-1576 Colombia Scadta - Postal routes 1923-1929<br />
6A-08 1789-1793 Rep. of Korea Horses with Human Civilization<br />
176
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Kaelin, Sylvia 6A-10 1799-1806 Switzerland I Love Chickens<br />
Kalinkov<br />
Radenovski, &<br />
Boris Dimitar<br />
Kalinkov<br />
Radenovski, &<br />
Boris Dimitar<br />
Kamil Serdar,<br />
Yazgan<br />
Kaminski,<br />
Philippe<br />
7A-05 Bulgaria The artist soul<br />
7A-06 Bulgaria The future now.<br />
AMPHAT "Sveti Ivan Rilski" - Sofia.<br />
2B-38 0374-0381 Turkey From the Ankara Government to the<br />
Turkish Republic (1920-1928)<br />
3B-13 0860-0864 France British registered mail 1850-1886<br />
Karamitsos, A. 7C-16 Greece Hellas 2020<br />
Karnasuta,<br />
Charnchai<br />
Karniaoutakis,<br />
Nikolaos<br />
Katančević,<br />
Slavoljub<br />
3D-14 1338-1345 Thailand Death Railway POW & Civilian Labor<br />
Mail, and Thailand Internee Mail<br />
7A-15 Greece Large Hermes Heads of Greece<br />
Observations on Identifying and<br />
Classifying the "easier" to follow Values<br />
8-17 2077 Croatia New Zealand Government Life<br />
Insurance Department Issue<br />
1891 to 1981<br />
Kato, Shigeki 2D-11 0587-0591 Japan Japan Chrysanthemum Stamps<br />
1899-1910<br />
Katsman, Vitaliy 7A-56 Ukraine "Famous collectors and researchers of<br />
the Zemstvo post. Brief biographies.<br />
Fragments of collections. in 2 volumes"<br />
Katsman, Vitaliy 7A-55 Ukraine "Fragments of the history of collecting<br />
Zemstvo stamps and Zemstvo post.<br />
Gallery of famous collectors and<br />
researchers of Zemstvo post.<br />
Illustrated bibliography"<br />
Kedia,<br />
Om Prakash<br />
2D-07 0567-0571 India Litho Stamps of Bhopal State<br />
1871-1908<br />
Keller, Christian 5-23 1704-1711 Switzerland Courrier Sud / Southern Airmails<br />
Keller,<br />
Hansruedi<br />
2A-07 0122-0126 Switzerland Portrait of William Tell<br />
177
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Kellow,<br />
Geoffrey<br />
2D-01 0528-0535 Australia The 2d Bell Design of Victoria,<br />
1873-1880<br />
Kewriga, Matt 3C-12 1251-1258 USA United States 1870-88 Bank Note issue<br />
Postal History<br />
Khaitan, Piyush 5-09 1616-1620 India The 1948 Air-India International Flight<br />
to London<br />
Kido, Yusuke 2D-12 0592-0596 Japan Ryukyu Dollar Currency Conversion<br />
Provisional Series<br />
Kim, Heon Sik 2D-17 0620-0624 Rep. of Korea The Second Regular Stamps in<br />
Korea(1951-1953)<br />
King, Chris 3B-63 1160-1167 United<br />
Kingdom<br />
King, Birthe 3B-62 1152-1159 United<br />
Kingdom<br />
The Posts in the City of Lübeck before<br />
1868<br />
Refugee Camps in Denmark 1945-1949<br />
Klamut ,<br />
Andrzej<br />
Klausner,<br />
Werner<br />
3B-42 1037-1041 Poland Austrian base post offices in the Polish<br />
Lands 194-1918<br />
2B-30 0328-0332 Switzerland Day of the postage stamp in various<br />
European countries with a focus on<br />
Switzerland<br />
Kniese, Eric 6B-20 1940-1944 Netherlands A book is more than a story<br />
Kodwavwala,<br />
Muhammad<br />
Rizwan<br />
3D-07 1297-1301 Pakistan Postal Marking of Karachi<br />
Koiwa, Akihiko 3D-06 1289-1296 Japan Indian Campaigns<br />
Kosmala, Jacek 5-16 1660-1667 Poland Airplane services on the Polish<br />
Territories 1914-1939<br />
Kraner, Gerhard 2B-31 0333-0337 Switzerland The special stamps and special<br />
postcards from Federal Republic of<br />
Germany from 1949-1953.<br />
Krauss,<br />
Karlfried<br />
3B-18 0888-0895 Germany Prussia as the Main Link of the<br />
Russian-Polish Mail with the West<br />
(from the beginning until 1875)<br />
178
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Krug,<br />
Hansmichael<br />
Kuhlmann,<br />
René<br />
Kupiec-<br />
Weglinski, Jerzy<br />
Kurghinyan,<br />
Anna<br />
Laakso, Seija-<br />
Riitta<br />
3B-19 0896-0903 Germany Postal traffic between the area of the<br />
Deutsche Reichspost and the United<br />
States of America 4.5.1871-1875<br />
3A-11 0734-0738 Switzerland Lettermail: Switzerland to Foreign<br />
destination 1862-1883<br />
7A-60 USA The History of Airmail in Poland and<br />
its Contribution to Airmail Services of<br />
Europe (1914-1939)<br />
8-01 2061 Armenia "GREAT BRITAIN. Non Value<br />
Indicators.1st Class 1993/2021<br />
(elliptical perforation)<br />
"<br />
7B-06 Finland The Congress Book 2021<br />
Lachat, Bernard 3A-12 0739-0743 Switzerland Early oval meter stamps from<br />
Switzerland<br />
Lador,<br />
Menachem<br />
Lavagnino,<br />
Luca<br />
Leggeri,<br />
Lorenzo<br />
6B-17 1925-1929 Israel 2nd Oldest Profession - Intelligence<br />
Services<br />
7B-09 Italy Cursores<br />
3A-13 0744-0748 Switzerland Oval stamps of Ticino and Mesolcina<br />
Leuthard, Rolf 3A-14 0749-0753 Switzerland History of Swiss Army (from the<br />
downfall of the Old Confederation to<br />
1880)<br />
Lewis, Geoffrey 3B-01 0782-0786 Australia Mail Routes in the Atlantic, Pacific and<br />
Indian Oceans, plus the routes between<br />
the oceans<br />
Licata, Giovanni 6B-18 1930-1934 Italy The Maya<br />
Liebermann,<br />
Hartmut<br />
3B-20 0904-0908 Germany Postmarks in Bohemia and Moravia<br />
during the post-war period after WW II<br />
Lienert, Otmar 4-23 1509-1516 Switzerland The System of International Reply<br />
Coupons<br />
Lim, Lik 7A-29 Malaysia 1998 XVI Commonwealth Games<br />
179
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Lind, Armin 3B-03 0795-0802 Austria Money- and Value - Letters in Austria<br />
Lithén, Gunnar 3B-49 1075-1082 Sweden Cancellations from Swedish steamship<br />
mail post offices from 1869 up to 1951<br />
Lithén, Gunnar 7C-10 Sweden Facit Special Classic <strong>2022</strong><br />
Lithén, Gunnar 7C-11 Sweden Facit Sverige 2021<br />
Lithén, Gunnar 7C-12 Sweden Facit Norden <strong>2022</strong><br />
Ljungh, Jan-<br />
Olof<br />
Logette, Jean-<br />
François<br />
2B-25 0294-0301 Sweden The first stamps of the German Empire,<br />
the Eagle shield stamps and the values<br />
10 and 30 groschen<br />
4-07 1411-1415 France Essays, Proofs and Blocks of 4 of the<br />
Rome model International reply coupon<br />
Lopez, Roberto 2A-08 0127-0131 Switzerland Proofs and tests of standing <strong>Helvetia</strong>s<br />
Lővei, György 5-08 1611-1615 Hungary Chapters of the Hungarian air mail -<br />
Foreign destinations from the beginning<br />
up to 31.12.1933.<br />
Lualdi, Armando<br />
Andreas<br />
Maandblad<br />
Filatelie<br />
Madiraju,<br />
Lokeswara Rao<br />
4-24 1517-1521 Switzerland Postal History of Switzerland STO,<br />
stamped to private order 1907-1930<br />
7B-14 Netherlands Filatelie<br />
7A-17 India Buddhism on Stamps<br />
Mádl, Tomáš 7C-04 Czech<br />
Republic<br />
BIENNALE 2020<br />
Mahalingan,<br />
Ramachandran<br />
2D-08 0572-0576 India Kingdom of Cochin<br />
Mąka, Zdzisław 7A-36 Poland Historia Poczty w Szczecinie<br />
(Postal History in Szczecin)<br />
Malm, Torben 2B-04 0166-0173 Denmark Service Stamps of Denmark 1871-1924<br />
Manzati,<br />
Claudio Ernesto<br />
Mario<br />
7A-23 Italy Postal History of Tuscany: 1851-1862<br />
Maras, Julije 6A-02 1746-1751 Croatia Gold & Golden<br />
180
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Maréchal, René 5-04 1585-1589 France Airmail across the Aegean Sea<br />
(1929-1947)<br />
Maria, Luciano 3D-05 1284-1288 Italy Ethiopia: the pre-UPU period<br />
Marka Nova<br />
D.O.O.<br />
7C-03 Croatia Acta Philatelic Nova 2021<br />
Märki, Kurt 6B-28 1983-1990 Switzerland The occidental church building in the<br />
high and late Middle Ages<br />
Martens, Sven 3B-21 0909-0913 Germany German Imperial Post - Postal rates for<br />
foreign destinations from 1875 and the<br />
development into the UPU tariffs<br />
Martinez<br />
Herñandez,<br />
Manuel<br />
4-17 1473-1480 Spain Postal stationery type "MATRONA"<br />
1931-1936<br />
Martin-Redman,<br />
Simon<br />
Martins Neto,<br />
Braz<br />
2D-25 0666-0673 United<br />
Kingdom<br />
Sarawak - The first forty years<br />
1858-1898<br />
6B-08 1871-1875 Brazil Rule of Law - Defense and Breach<br />
Mathà, Thomas 3B-32 0978-0982 Italy Postal relations between Papal States<br />
and Lombardy Venetia 1815-1852<br />
McMahon, Ian 4-01 1372-1379 Australia Envelopes and Postcards of Canada<br />
McMahon, Ian 7B-01 Australia Postal Stationery Collector<br />
Meer Kossoy, 7C-06 Israel Forms of receipts and stamped paper<br />
for the Post Department 1807-1864<br />
Mejía, Mauricio 5-29 1241-1245 Honduras First and special flights from and to<br />
Honduras<br />
Melamed,<br />
Semyon<br />
Melone,<br />
Francesco<br />
5-27 1730-1737 USA Zeppelin Airships and Their Flights<br />
2B-15 0232-0239 Italy Naples<br />
Meri, Pedro 4-30 1556-1563 Venezuela Venezuela: Postal stationery, new order<br />
Meyerhoff,<br />
Daniel<br />
2D-19 0630-0634 Switzerland The stamp issues of Mauritius under<br />
Queen Victoria 1847-1897<br />
Milu, Constantin 2B-20 0266-0273 Romania The stamps for first Olympic Games<br />
Mohan, K S 2D-09 0577-0581 India Study of Service Stamps of Cochin<br />
Mokhtar, Tarek 8-22 2082 Egypt Shibin El-Kom Postmarks 1870-1922<br />
181
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Møller, Klaus 2D-03 0541-0545 Denmark The New Zealand Chalon Issues<br />
1855-1873<br />
Morani, Vittorio 1-05 0033-0040 Italy "Tuscany 1836 to GPU<br />
(up to 30th June 1875)"<br />
Letter mail in, from and to Tuscany:<br />
routes, rates and charges"<br />
Mortensen, Per<br />
Friis<br />
Moscatelli,<br />
Jorge Eduardo<br />
2A-01 0089-0093 Denmark Switzerland, The First Meter Stamp -<br />
The Oval type 1924-1962<br />
2C-02 0403-0410 Argentina Argentina Definitive Issues 1923-1935<br />
Mouat, Cristian 2C-04 0416-0420 Chile Chile: The Peso Bronce Issue<br />
1904-1909. Includes the overprinted<br />
issue "Islas de Juan Fernandez" from<br />
1910<br />
Mouritsen,<br />
Henrik<br />
7A-08 Denmark Danish Postal History 1875-1907.<br />
Danish postal rates, regulations and<br />
rarity information 01/Jan/1875-30/<br />
Sep/1907 for all types of domestic<br />
and international mail, including an<br />
extensive study of the transition to UPU<br />
and its developments during its first<br />
2 years of existence<br />
Muhonen, Ari 3B-10 0845-0849 Finland Finland special agreements 1922-1945<br />
Munir, M M<br />
Salman<br />
Muntean,<br />
Marius<br />
Naji, Abdulnasir<br />
Hilal<br />
Nanjee, Afzal<br />
Hussain<br />
Nassre-<br />
Esfahani,<br />
Behruz<br />
4-02 1380-1384 Bangladesh Postal stationery of Natal 1885-1912<br />
6B-24 1960-1964 Romania Ballet<br />
2B-14 0227-0231 Iraq Portraits of The Three Kings of Iraq and<br />
their Surcharges<br />
2D-16 0615-0619 Pakistan Ottoman Empire (Turkey): The Study of<br />
Arms Issue<br />
2D-27 0679-0683 USA The Dual Currency Issues of Persia,<br />
1881-1885<br />
Natarajan, Kiran 7A-18 India The Long Sea Route - a remarkable<br />
postal circuit between Imperial Russia &<br />
British India<br />
182
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Nembrini,<br />
Giovanni<br />
Nikkanen,<br />
Janne<br />
3B-33 0983-0987 Italy The Postal Relationship between Italy<br />
and France 1850-1875<br />
3B-11 0850-0854 Finland The Development of Espoo Municipality<br />
Post 1760-1918<br />
Nikolov, Nikola 8-11 2071 Bulgaria Censorship at the Bulgarian divisional<br />
military regions during the World War I<br />
(1915-1918)<br />
Novaković,<br />
Damir<br />
8-18 2078 Croatia The use of first Yugoslav Definitive<br />
Issue (1945) Denominated in<br />
Occupation Currency<br />
Noviandi, Gita 6B-16 1917-1924 Indonesia One World, One Promise<br />
Okniński,<br />
Roman<br />
3B-43 1042-1049 Poland Post activities in the Kingdom of Galicia<br />
and Lodomeria to 1867<br />
Olason, Anders 6B-25 1965-1972 Sweden The American Civil War 1861-1865<br />
- background, course of events and<br />
aftermath<br />
Olli, Marcus 2B-06 0179-0183 Finland Helsinki Citypost 1866-1891<br />
Op den Camp,<br />
Jan G.<br />
3B-37 1009-1013 Netherlands Origin and development of the postal<br />
service in the Lower Rhine region<br />
until 1871, with its important local and<br />
international aspects<br />
Oral, Aydin 7A-54 Turkey "Postal History of Ottoman Iraq<br />
during the British Occupation<br />
(1914-1924)"<br />
Papadopoulos,<br />
Alexios<br />
Papuççuoglu,<br />
Bülent<br />
Papuççuoglu,<br />
Bülent<br />
Paquet,<br />
Jacques<br />
8-28 2088 Greece Commercial Zeppelin Letter mail to/<br />
from South America in 1936<br />
7C-14 Turkey Surcharged commemoratives stamps<br />
for the opening of Ankaras-Sivas<br />
Railway line<br />
7C-15 Turkey Turkish stamps specialized catalogue<br />
"The Government of the Grand National<br />
Assembly of Turkey 1920-1923"<br />
6B-05 1853-1860 Belgium The Gothic Cathedral between God and<br />
Men<br />
183
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Perneczky,<br />
László<br />
Peroche,<br />
Bernard<br />
Perricone,<br />
Giulio<br />
7A-16 Hungary Reverent Memory of Raoul Wallenberg<br />
in Philately<br />
2B-08 0191-0195 France 0,50 F Marianne de Béquet stamp:<br />
design, manufacture and production<br />
2B-16 0240-0244 Italy Kingdom of Sicily 1859-1860<br />
Persson, Göran 3B-50 1082-1087 Sweden Cancellations of the Swedish Skilling<br />
Banco Stamps 1855-1858<br />
Petauer,<br />
Boštjan<br />
Petauer,<br />
Boštjan<br />
2B-21 0274-0278 Slovenia Charity overprints on Bosnian definitive<br />
1914-1915<br />
8-32 2092 Slovenia Yugoslavia to USA air mail rates<br />
1945-1965<br />
Pfister, Esther 6B-29 1991-1995 Switzerland The dove: the symbolic and messenger<br />
bird<br />
Picconi,<br />
Salvatore<br />
Pinet, Ricardo<br />
Jorge<br />
Piwko,<br />
Krzysztof<br />
6B-19 1935-1939 Italy San Marino: History of ancient land of<br />
the freedom<br />
6B-10 1881-1885 Brazil A Brief View to Brazil by a Brazilianist<br />
3B-44 1050-1054 Poland Local Posts in occupied Poland<br />
1914-1918<br />
Pizer, Robin 3B-64 1168-1175 United<br />
Kingdom<br />
Porto Jr.,<br />
Rubem<br />
Quinhone,<br />
Gerson<br />
Rahman,<br />
A.H.M. Faizur<br />
Ramachandran,<br />
Madhav<br />
German Parcel Cards to Foreign<br />
Countries 1907-1928<br />
3C-06 1215-1219 Brazil Censored Brazilian Mail: 1914 to 1939<br />
8-10 2070 Brazil A Tribute to the Urban Legion<br />
2D-02 0536-0540 Bangladesh Postage stamps of Bangladesh on the<br />
United Nations<br />
2D-10 0582-0586 India British India<br />
Ravasi, Mario 5-24 1712-1719 Switzerland SCADTA Development of Colombian<br />
airmail<br />
Reddington,<br />
Stuart<br />
2C-21 0515-0519 USA Canada Small Queens; 1870-1897<br />
Redžep, Željko 8-19 2079 Croatia Trappist Cheese from Banja Luka,<br />
Bosnia<br />
184
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Reim, Pablo<br />
Alejandro<br />
Reinhold,<br />
Henke<br />
Renaud,<br />
Jacques<br />
3C-02 1186-1193 Argentina The Argentine Stage-Coach Monks<br />
(1852-1870)<br />
2B-10 0201-0208 Germany Berlin victim and housing imprint<br />
(Notopfer Berlin und Wohnungsbau<br />
Aufdrucke)<br />
5-05 1590-1597 France Commercial and private mail carried by<br />
German airships mechanical postage<br />
period 1928-1935<br />
Restaino, Luca 5-12 1634-1638 Italy The Balbo Cruise in 1933<br />
Riccitelli, Flavio 5-13 1639-1643 Italy The contribution of Zeppelins in the<br />
development of the German Aeropostal<br />
System from/to South America<br />
(1934-1937)<br />
Richards ,<br />
Simon<br />
4-25 1522-1526 United<br />
Kingdom<br />
Grenada Postal Stationery<br />
Riera, Manuel 6A-03 1752-1759 France Chelonians (Turtles)<br />
Rietz, Ake 2B-26 0302-0309 Sweden Great Britain: Line engraved issues<br />
1840-1870<br />
Rigo, Franco 3B-34 0988-0995 Italy Venice, the contagion, the quarantine,<br />
the disenfection, the quarantine hospitals<br />
(postal history of the health office from<br />
the xvi to the xix century)<br />
Rigo, Franco 7A-24 Italy Venice and the Levant - Bailo Palace in<br />
Constantinople -The mail XIV° - XVII°<br />
century<br />
Rodriguez<br />
Piñero, Jose<br />
Carlos<br />
Rodriguez,<br />
Omar<br />
4-18 1481-1485 Spain Postal stationery of Mexico "Serie<br />
Mulitas"<br />
3C-13 1259-1263 USA Mexico: The Use of the Medallion,<br />
Numeral, and Mulitas Stamps During<br />
the Drastic Drop of Rates When Joining<br />
UPU 1884-1900<br />
Roggo, Diego 3A-15 0754-0758 Switzerland Postal history of the Lake district<br />
(Canton Fribourg)<br />
Rojas, Jorge 8-12 2072 Chile Chile Double Postmarked envelopes<br />
1928-1972<br />
185
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Rothenburg,<br />
Jacques<br />
Rouch,<br />
Bernadette<br />
Ryoo, Sang<br />
Boom<br />
Sägesser,<br />
Stefan<br />
6A-04 1760-1767 France Beautiful as a rose !<br />
6C-03 2017-2024 France Wood: an Inventory<br />
6B-22 1950-1954 Rep. of Korea One Century of Western Painting after<br />
French Revolution<br />
3A-16 0759-0763 Switzerland Postal history Canton Zug<br />
from 1700 - 1900<br />
Saito, Tamaki 2B-17 0245-0249 Japan Lombardy Venetia the 1850 Issue<br />
Salam, Hany 1-03 0017-0024 Egypt Egypt: Maritime Mail Routes,<br />
19th Century<br />
Salzmann,<br />
Hans-Werner<br />
Samuelsson,<br />
Tommy<br />
7A-11 Germany "Von der Wiege bis zur Bahre"<br />
- Panorama der französischen<br />
Fiskalphila<br />
6B-26 1973-1977 Sweden Allied fighter aircraft operations<br />
1939-1945<br />
Sancho, Cesar 4-04 1393-1397 Costa Rica Costa Rica 1923. The First Locally<br />
Manufactured Postal Stationery<br />
Sarian, Atif 2D-26 0674-0678 United<br />
Kingdom<br />
Egypt - The Third Issue 1872-1879<br />
Sarlak, Behrouz 4-08 1416-1420 Germany Postal stationery Persia 1875-1945<br />
Sauma, Pablo 8-14 2074 Costa Rica Commemorative Stamps for Costa<br />
Rica's First Philatelic <strong>Exhibition</strong> of 1932<br />
Sauma, Pablo 8-15 2075 Costa Rica 1945 Overprint on 1927 Telegraph<br />
Stamps<br />
Sauvaître,<br />
Jean-Marie<br />
Schädlich,<br />
Klaus<br />
Schaefer,<br />
Richard<br />
6B-13 1899-1906 France My journey in freemasonry<br />
3B-22 0914-0920 Germany Postmark in the principality<br />
Liechtenstein<br />
3A-17 0764-0771 Switzerland SWISS LETTER MAIL DURING THE<br />
FIRST FEDERAL PERIOD 1849-1854<br />
Cantonal- and Transitional Stamps,<br />
Locals and rayon I, II and III<br />
186
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Schaefer,<br />
Richard<br />
Schaefer,<br />
Richard<br />
7A-52 Switzerland The first federal postages stamps<br />
of Switzerland letter mail<br />
01.10.1850–30.09.1854<br />
7A-53 Switzerland SWISS CANTONAL STAMPS<br />
authentic-fake-falsified<br />
Scheer, André 6C-06 2038-2045 Netherlands Masks of the Universe<br />
Scheibler, Hans 6A-11 1807-1814 Switzerland All Scrap or what?<br />
Scherer, Eric 3D-12 1322-1329 Switzerland Prepaid reply cards in international mail<br />
- Historic development and practice of<br />
usage<br />
Selig, Heinz 3B-23 0921-0925 Germany Postal History of the hamlet Lauenau<br />
Selis, Luc 3B-06 0816-0823 Belgium Ocean Letters<br />
Semenov, Igor 3B-59 1134-1138 Ukraine Odessa postal history in 1798-1900<br />
Seydoux,<br />
Jean-Marc<br />
Sharma,<br />
Dinesh<br />
Sharma,<br />
Dinesh<br />
6B-30 1996-2003 Switzerland Our father the Sun<br />
6B-15 1912-1916 India Summer Olympic Games<br />
7A-19 India Olympic Flame & Torch Relay<br />
Shoda, Yukihiro 7A-27 Japan Brazil Classic Philately<br />
Siebert, Werner 3B-24 0926-0933 Germany History of the postal service in German<br />
Southwest Africa<br />
Simonyan,<br />
Suren<br />
Sinchawla,<br />
Santpal<br />
Sociedad<br />
Filatelica de<br />
Madrid<br />
Sociedad<br />
Filatelica de<br />
Madrid<br />
8-02 2062 Armenia Postage stamps of the First Republic of<br />
Armenia 1919-1920. Overprints on the<br />
Russian Empire postage stamp with 1<br />
kopeyka face value<br />
3D-15 1346-1350 Thailand Early India Mails Using De La Rue & Co<br />
Typographed Stamps<br />
7A-44 Spain Philatelic and postal curiosities in time<br />
of pandemic<br />
7A-45 Spain Postal history of Cuba 1851-1858<br />
(4 VOL)<br />
187
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Soebardi,<br />
Soehardjo<br />
Soebardi,<br />
Soehardjo<br />
Sofia Philatelic<br />
Society<br />
7A-20 Indonesia Pak Harto the Footmarks on Postage<br />
Stamps<br />
7A-21 Indonesia 50 Soeharto’s Initiatives for Indonesia &<br />
the World on Postage Stamps<br />
7C-02 Bulgaria <strong>Catalogue</strong> of the Bulgarian stamps<br />
(1879-2019)<br />
Sohrne, Björn 3D-11 1317-1321 Sweden The Ottman, Turkey and Persian<br />
Empires, Postal Relations, ca 1800 to<br />
1920s.<br />
Soll, Hans-<br />
Joachim<br />
3B-25 0934-0938 Germany The postal infrastructure of German<br />
East Africa 1890-1917<br />
Soreil, Charlotte 6B-06 1861-1865 Belgium And the Man created his face<br />
Sorour, Yacoub 3D-10 1312-1316 State of<br />
Qatar<br />
Aden Postal History<br />
Sotty, Jean-<br />
François<br />
2C-16 0484-0491 Switzerland Peru Classic<br />
Spieler, Rudolf 1-01 0001-0008 Austria AAA - All About Automobiles<br />
Sprenger,<br />
Markus<br />
Springer,<br />
Renate &<br />
Christian<br />
3B-53 1098-1105 Switzerland British-Egyptian Censor Marks during<br />
World War II<br />
7A-12 Germany COLOGNE 1945-1947 –<br />
The Path to Normality after World War II<br />
Steinbach, Willi 2B-11 0209-0213 Germany Greece large Hermes Heads<br />
Stepniczka,<br />
Heinrich<br />
Stommendal,<br />
Peter<br />
Storckenfeldt,<br />
Douglas<br />
3B-04 0803-0810 Austria Kingdom of Lombardy-Venetia<br />
(1815-1866)<br />
2B-27 0310-0314 Sweden Classic Sweden 1855-1872<br />
1-08 0057-0064 Sweden Iceland until 1901<br />
Streit, Toni 6A-12 1815-1819 Switzerland MAMMALS: Human, too human and<br />
superhuman<br />
Suri, Anil 2C-13 0466-0470 India Stamps of Uruguay, The Waterlow<br />
Issues 1889-1954<br />
Süss, Peter 4-09 1421-1428 Germany The Postal Cards of Mexico 1879-1890<br />
188
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Suys, Jean-<br />
Pierre<br />
6B-07 1866-1870 Belgium From body sounds to sound bodies<br />
SwissPhila 2A-09 0132-0136 Switzerland The Swiss cantonal stamps and their<br />
cancellations<br />
Tasmanian<br />
Philatelic<br />
Society Inc.<br />
Taurinskaite,<br />
Dalia<br />
7A-02 Australia Tasmanian Postal Stationery<br />
8-03 2063 Armenia Caution - Poisonous mushrooms!<br />
Teo Bee Yen 7A-40 Singapore YILIN Philately 2020<br />
The Philatelic<br />
Federation of<br />
Korea<br />
Tillard, Jean-<br />
Jacques<br />
7B-16 Rep. of Korea Philatelic Monthly "WOOPYO" 2020<br />
1-04 0025-0032 France The overprints of St. Pierre et Miquelon<br />
in the 19th century<br />
Todorov, Orlin 2B-01 0145-0152 Bulgaria Small lion issues (1889-1901)<br />
Todorov, Orlin 4-03 1385-1392 Bulgaria Classic Postal Stationeries of Bulgaria<br />
(1879-1898)<br />
Tomc, Alojz 8-33 2093 Slovenia The Italian Military post office No.59<br />
during World War II<br />
Totentanz 3A-19 0777-0781 Switzerland Postal History of Cantonal Lucerne<br />
1850-1910<br />
Trinquier, Alain 3B-14 0865-0869 France Use of Mouchon type stamps on mail<br />
from France (1900-1906)<br />
Trotter, Brian 7A-57 United<br />
Kingdom<br />
Rhodesian Philately until 1924 - The<br />
British South Africa Company Period<br />
Trzeciak,<br />
Patrice<br />
5-06 1598-1605 France Transatlantic Airmail Services During<br />
WW2<br />
Tsachor, Yacov 3B-31 0970-0977 Israel France - The Perforated Ceres: Routes<br />
& Postmarks, 1871-1878<br />
Tschumi, Marcel 6C-08 2051-2055 Switzerland Bridges, marvels of the technique from<br />
four points of view<br />
Tunaci, Atadan 3B-55 1111-1115 Turkey Competition in Ottoman Sea<br />
Tuori, Jussi 4-06 1406-1410 Finland Finland M/30 postal stationery<br />
189
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Union of the<br />
Bulgarian<br />
Philatelists<br />
7B-03 Bulgaria Philatelen pregled / Philatelic review<br />
magazine<br />
Utensute, Ukris 2D-21 0643-0650 Thailand Thailand: King Bhumibol’s 2nd definitive<br />
issue<br />
Vaccari Srl 7B-10 Italy Vaccari Magazine Nr. 63<br />
Vaccari Srl 7B-11 Italy Vaccari Magazine Nr. 64<br />
Vaccari Srl 7C-05 Italy Some hits of Milanese history from the<br />
XIV to XIX century - The Post in Milan<br />
1849-1859. <strong>Catalogue</strong> of cancellations<br />
and postmarks in Milan post office<br />
Valdisera 2B-34 0351-0355 Switzerland Roman States 1852-1870<br />
Vale do Neiva,<br />
Associação<br />
Filatelia<br />
7B-15 Portugal Vale do Neiva Filatélico<br />
Valesia 3A-18 0722-0776 Switzerland Valais 1850 - 1863<br />
Van der Horst,<br />
Hans<br />
Van Laere,<br />
Roger<br />
3B-38 1014-1018 Netherlands The Netherlands; messages via the<br />
Red Cross during World War 2<br />
3C-04 1202-1206 Belgium History of the Borders of Peru and<br />
Bolivia<br />
van Nies, Peter 6B-21 1945-1949 Netherlands CARNIVAL, more than three foolish<br />
days!<br />
Vaníček, Vít 1-12 0837-0844 Czech<br />
Republic<br />
Postal History of Czech Lands<br />
(From the Beginning until 1867)<br />
Vaz Pereira,<br />
Pedro Marçal<br />
7A-37 Portugal Os Correios Portugueses 1853-1900<br />
nos 500 Anos do Correio em Portugal.<br />
The Portuguese Post Office 1853-1900<br />
in the 500 Years of the Post Office in<br />
Portugal<br />
Veneri, Aniello 3B-35 0996-1000 Italy Postal services in Italy 1945-1957<br />
Villard, Olivier 3C-03 1194-1201 Argentina Overseas Mail form and to Argentina<br />
(1852-1878)<br />
Vogt, Ronny 5-01 1564-1568 Argentina Argentina Airmails 1912-1939<br />
190
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
VÖPh 7A-03 Austria 100 Jahre VÖPh<br />
Walton, Frank 4-26 1527-1531 United<br />
Kingdom<br />
Great Britain QEII Registered<br />
Envelopes of the Tudor Rose design<br />
Wayman, Giana 4-05 1398-1405 Costa Rica 19th Century Postal Stationery of Costa<br />
Rica and their usage<br />
Weber, Hans<br />
Jürg<br />
Weber,<br />
Reinhard<br />
6C-09 2056-2060 Switzerland Our drinking Water<br />
2D-05 0554-0558 Finland Straits Settlements Sultanat Johor<br />
1885-1940<br />
Weis, Klaus 3B-26 0939-0943 Germany The Development of the Local<br />
Postmarks in the Later Grand Duchy<br />
Baden 1723-1871<br />
Werner, Eric 2B-32 0338-0345 Switzerland The stamps of the Italian Kingdom<br />
issued during the Kingdom of Victor<br />
Emanuel II<br />
Wewer, Heinz 7A-13 Germany Spuren des Terrors. Postalische<br />
Zeugnisse zum System der deutschen<br />
Konzentrationslager (Traces of Terror.<br />
The System of German Concentration<br />
Camps as reflected in Postal<br />
Documents)<br />
Wewer, Heinz 7A-14 Germany Spuren der Vernichtung. Stationen der<br />
"Endlösung" im Zeugnis postalischer<br />
Dokumente (Traces of Annihilation.<br />
Stages of the "Final Solution" as<br />
reflected in Postal Documents)<br />
Wheatley,<br />
Richard<br />
3D-18 1359-1366 United<br />
Kingdom<br />
Netherlands East Indies Mail 1789 to<br />
GPU (1877)<br />
Wiederkehr,<br />
Albrik<br />
7C-13 Switzerland Handbook of Swiss PTO postal<br />
stationery<br />
Wiersma, Hotze 3B-39 1019-1026 Netherlands Border cross mail 1668-1810, exhibited<br />
by letters related to Holland<br />
Wilhelms,<br />
Georg<br />
2B-12 0214-0221 Germany Czechoslovakia, 'The Hradcany Issue'<br />
191
Name<br />
Exhibit<br />
Number<br />
Frame<br />
Number<br />
Country<br />
Title<br />
Winters,<br />
Graham<br />
8-39 2099 United<br />
Kingdom<br />
Ceylon, King George V Silver Jubilee<br />
Issue<br />
Wirges, Werner 2B-13 0222-0226 Germany The II. Kontrollratsausgabe 1947/1948,<br />
printing idiosyncrasies and the variety<br />
of uses up to the currency reform as<br />
tenfold franking<br />
Wittsten, Peter 3B-51 1088-1092 Sweden Mail between Denmark and Sweden -<br />
both ways 1658-1875<br />
Xavier, Paul 8-04 2064 Australia Fiji KGVI - The Omnibus<br />
Commemoratives<br />
Yamazaki,<br />
Fumio<br />
4-13 1447-1454 Japan Hawaiian Postal Stationery<br />
Ydell, Fredrik 3B-66 0315-0322 Sweden Swedish Postal History 1550-1872<br />
Yilmaz, Hakan 3B-56 1116-1120 Turkey Postal History – Province of<br />
HÜDAVENDİGAR<br />
Yoo, Yong Sang 6C-07 2046-2050 Rep. of Korea The Endless Challenges-Aviation<br />
Stories<br />
Yoshida,<br />
Takashi<br />
2A-03 0099-0106 Japan Classic Switzerland<br />
Young, Peter 7A-58 United<br />
Kingdom<br />
The inks of De La Rue & Co. and their<br />
introduction of synthetic and aniline<br />
ingredients c.1850-1910<br />
Yousef, Ahmed 8-23 2083 Egypt 1897 Provisionally Overprinted<br />
Egyptian Stamps in The Sudan<br />
Zanaria, Angelo 7A-25 Italy 1867-1870 From Mentana to Porta Pia -<br />
Postal History of the capture of Rome<br />
Zehnder, Erika 6A-13 1820-1827 Switzerland Arctophilia/Bearmania - Arctophilie/<br />
Bärenmanie<br />
Zulueta, Alfonso 2B-40 0387-0394 USA Bosnia-Herzegovinia: Double Eagle<br />
Definitive Issues, 1879-1905<br />
192
Public Academic Seminar<br />
Padiglione Conza, Lugano, Switzerland, Sunday 22 May <strong>2022</strong><br />
Consilium Philateliae Helveticae (CPhH)<br />
European Academy of Philately (AEP)<br />
Académie de philatélie (France)<br />
Time Lecturer Country Title<br />
10:00 - 10:05 Welcome (Jean Voruz, President CPhH & AEP)<br />
10:05 - 10:25 Robert Abensur FR From France to Ticino via the Sardinian Route<br />
(1829-1849)<br />
10:25 - 10:45 Gerhard Blaickner AT Outgoing Postage at the time of the RAYON Stamps<br />
(1850-1854)<br />
10:45 - 11:05 Jérôme Castanet FR International Postcards:<br />
Particular Rules of the UGP Period (1875-1879)<br />
11:05 - 11:25 Giovanni Balimann CH The Collapse of the Latin Monetary Union<br />
in Switzerland (1920-1921)<br />
11:25 - 11:45 Hubert Caprasse BE The 1845-85 History of Finland<br />
as I see it through Traditional Philately<br />
11:45 - 12:00 Presentation OPUS <strong>2022</strong> (yearly AEP publication) dedicated to Switzerland<br />
12:00 - 12:15 CPhH & AEP Awards Presentation<br />
193
Präsident: Jean-Paul Bach, Schöllenenstrasse 2, 4054 Basel, Tel: 0041 61 281 81 15, info@bach-philatelie.ch<br />
Sekretariat: Hans Schwarz, Postfach 2, 5022 Rombach, Tel: 0041 79 422 15 00, sbhv@schwarzpr.ch<br />
Ankersmit Hein Rebweg 1<br />
8115 Hüttikon<br />
Auction Agent<br />
Switzerland GmbH,<br />
Hanspeter Thalmann<br />
Langrütistr. 9<br />
8820 Wädenswil<br />
Avi Helmuth Via Longhena 3<br />
6900 Lugano<br />
Bach Jean-Paul Schöllenenstrasse 2<br />
4054 Basel<br />
Bietenholz Philatelie AG,<br />
Promberger Kurth<br />
Briefmarken <strong>Helvetia</strong>,<br />
Wyss Adrian<br />
Briefmarken Schneider,<br />
Schneider Martin<br />
Büchel Helmut,<br />
SwissPhila<br />
Corinphila Auktionen AG,<br />
Clavel Antoine + Louis Karl<br />
Cuche Philatélie SA,<br />
Cuche Jacques<br />
Swissasia Philately Ltd,<br />
Calonder Urs<br />
David Feldman Auktionen<br />
Merkurstrasse 9<br />
8953 Dietikon<br />
Lautengartenstrasse 13<br />
4052 Basel<br />
Reichsgasse 47<br />
7002 Chur<br />
Gutenbergstr. 9<br />
9435 Heerbrugg<br />
Postfach<br />
8032 Zürich<br />
Ami Girard 13<br />
2054 Ch. Saint-Martin<br />
Mühlestrasse 4F<br />
8912 Obfelden<br />
59, route de Chancy<br />
1213 Petit-Lancy<br />
Filatelistyka, G. Marzec Pobox 123<br />
PL-30093 Krakow 23<br />
Forster Marcel, Philatelie Rue des Mayettes 4<br />
2824 Vicques<br />
Christoph Gärtner GmbH Steinbeisstr. 6 + 8<br />
D-74321 Bietigheim<br />
Giorgino Antonio Rue G. Reimann 20<br />
2504 Biel<br />
Groth AG,<br />
Giulio Filippo Bolaffi<br />
Grünenfelder & Co.,<br />
Grünenfelder Hans<br />
Gewerbestrasse 19, PF 167<br />
6314 Unteraegeri<br />
Rathausstr. 21, PF 1538<br />
8640 Rapperswil<br />
Günther Roger Kantonsstr. 19<br />
6048 Horw<br />
Hächler Werner Alte Greifenseestr. 4<br />
8604 Volketswil<br />
Heuberger Auktionen,<br />
Heuberger Thomas<br />
Honegger Leandra,<br />
Auktionen<br />
Honegger Philatelie AG,<br />
Honegger G. + M.<br />
Schlüsselwiese 5<br />
8853 Lachen<br />
Hauptstrasse 103<br />
4415 Lausen<br />
Kürzestr. 1, Postfach<br />
8716 Schmerikon<br />
Johnson Richard P.O. Box 32091,<br />
Summerstrand<br />
ZA-6019 Port Elizabeth<br />
Leuchtturm Albenverlag GmbH<br />
& Co. KG<br />
LE TIMBRE CLASSIQUE SA<br />
Anders Thorell<br />
Am Spakenberg 45<br />
D-21502 Geesthacht<br />
15, rue du Jeu-de-l‘Arc<br />
1207 Genève<br />
Liechtensteinische Post AG Alte Zollstrasse 11<br />
LI-9494 Schaan<br />
LINDNER Falzlos-<br />
Gesellschaft mbH<br />
Rottweiler Strasse 38<br />
D-72355 Schömberg<br />
Tel: 0041 44 844 32 40<br />
ankerbrief@sunrise.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 44 780 61 63 Fax: 044 780 50 78<br />
Tel: 0041 91 972 48 58<br />
helmuthavi@sunrise.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 61 281 81 15<br />
info@bach-philatelie.ch<br />
Fax: 0041 91 972 48 61<br />
Fax: 0041 61 281 80 26<br />
www.bach-philatelie.ch<br />
Schweiz klassische Marken<br />
Schweiz ab 1907<br />
Europa + Übersee<br />
Neuheiten im Abonnement<br />
Liechtenstein<br />
Auktionen<br />
Ladengeschäft + Bedarfsartikel<br />
Versandgeschäft<br />
Engros-Handel<br />
Münzen<br />
• • • • • •<br />
•<br />
Auction Agent<br />
• •<br />
Tel: 0041 44 740 55 73<br />
philat.bietenholz@swissonline.ch • • • • • • • • •<br />
Tel: 0041 61 851 26 39<br />
briefmarken.helvetia@bluewin.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 81 252 71 21<br />
phila@briefmarken-schneider.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 71 722 68 25<br />
info@swissphila.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 44 389 91 91<br />
info@corinphila.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 32 753 12 54<br />
info@cuchephila.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 79 261 52 53<br />
urs.calonder@swissasia-stamps.com<br />
Tel: 0041 22 727 07 77<br />
info@davidfeldman.com<br />
Tel: 0048 602 385 412<br />
gmarzec@filatelista.pl<br />
Tel: 0041 32 435 50 88<br />
info@forsterphila.ch<br />
Tel: 0049 7142-7890<br />
Info@philatelie-gaertner.de<br />
Tel: 0041 32 322 64 54<br />
giorgino@romandie.com<br />
Tel: 0041 41 750 45 72<br />
info@wwfstamp.com<br />
Tel: 0041 55 220 52 90<br />
info@gruenenfelder.cc<br />
Tel: 0041 41 342 18 14<br />
info@guenther-stamps.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 44 945 58 32<br />
Tel: 0041 55 442 55 60<br />
info@heubergerphila.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 79 649 65 53<br />
info@leandra-honegger.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 55 286 20 00<br />
info@honegger-philatelie.ch<br />
Tel: 0027 41 583 3159<br />
rj@johnson.co.za<br />
Tel: 0049 4152 801 0<br />
info@leuchtturm.com<br />
Tel: 0041 22 760 11 11<br />
athorell@letimbreclassique.com<br />
Tel: 00423 399 44 66<br />
briefmarken@post.li<br />
Tel: 0049 742 770 10<br />
info@lindner-original.de<br />
Fax: 0041 61 851 26 39<br />
www.briefmarken-schneider.ch<br />
www.swissphila.ch<br />
Fax: 0041 44 389 91 95<br />
www.corinphila.ch<br />
Fax: 0041 32 753 90 50<br />
www.cuchephila.ch<br />
www.swissasia-stamps.com<br />
Fax: 0041 22 727 07 78<br />
www.davidfeldman.com<br />
Fax: 0048 124 270 543<br />
www.filatelista.pl<br />
Fax: 0041 32 435 50 87<br />
www.forsterphila.ch<br />
Fax: 0049 7142-789110<br />
www.auktionen-gaertner.de<br />
Fax: 0041 32 322 64 54<br />
www.giorgino.ch<br />
Fax: 0041 41 750 53 55<br />
www.groth.ch<br />
Fax: 0041 55 220 52 91<br />
www.gruenenfelder.cc<br />
Fax: 0041 55 442 55 61<br />
www.heubergerphila.ch<br />
Fax: 0041 61 599 20 08<br />
www.leandra-honegger.ch<br />
Fax: 0041 55 286 20 01<br />
www.honegger-philatelie.ch<br />
Fax: 0027 41 583 3187<br />
Fax: 0049 4152 801 222<br />
www.leuchtturm.com<br />
www.letimbreclassique.com<br />
Fax: 00423 399 44 94<br />
Fax: 0049 742 761 18<br />
www.lindner-original.ch<br />
• • •<br />
• • • • • • • •<br />
• • • • • •<br />
• • • • •<br />
• • • • • • •<br />
• • • • •<br />
• • • •<br />
• • • • •<br />
• • • • • • •<br />
•<br />
• • • •<br />
• • • • • • • • •<br />
• • • • • • •<br />
• • • •<br />
• • • • • •<br />
• • • • •<br />
• •<br />
• • •<br />
Zubehör-Generalvertretung<br />
• • • • •<br />
•<br />
Zubehör-Generalvertretung
Präsident: Jean-Paul Bach, Schöllenenstrasse 2, 4054 Basel, Tel: 0041 61 281 81 15, info@bach-philatelie.ch<br />
Sekretariat: Hans Schwarz, Postfach 2, 5022 Rombach, Tel: 0041 79 422 15 00, sbhv@schwarzpr.ch<br />
Liechtensteinische Post AG Alte Zollstrasse 11<br />
LI-9494 Schaan<br />
LINDNER Falzlos-<br />
Gesellschaft mbH<br />
Philamondo GmbH<br />
Roland Herzog<br />
Philatelie Marchand,<br />
Marchand J.-C.<br />
Marken-Müller AG,<br />
Glanzmann J. + Hebeisen C.<br />
Mina Walo<br />
Rottweiler Strasse 38<br />
D-72355 Schömberg<br />
Dahlienweg 14<br />
3422 Kirchberg<br />
Place de la Synagogue 2<br />
1204 Genève<br />
Riedstrasse 2<br />
4222 Zwingen<br />
Aste filateliche<br />
CP 7, 6984 Pura<br />
Müller Johannes Neuengasse 38, PF 2764<br />
3001 Bern<br />
Multiprint Verlag GmbH,<br />
Joss Thomas<br />
Pilatusmail AG<br />
Odermatt Alexander<br />
Peguiron-Philatélie,<br />
Peguiron M.<br />
Peter Rapp AG,<br />
Peter Rapp + Marianne Rapp<br />
Philaclassica AG,<br />
Eichele Martin<br />
Philasearch.com GmbH,<br />
Fedra Franz<br />
Philatelie Walter AG,<br />
Walter Ingomar + Cyrill,<br />
Cardinaux Walter Suzy<br />
PHILIMPEX,<br />
A. Zbojnowicz<br />
Pitteri SA,<br />
Pitteri Maurizio<br />
Rölli Auktionen AG,<br />
Rölli Christina<br />
Birkenstrasse 7<br />
4304 Giebenach<br />
Kantonsstrasse 19<br />
6048 Horw<br />
Plaine 45, CP 1116<br />
1401 Yverdon<br />
Toggenburgerstr. 139<br />
9500 Wil<br />
Birseckstr. 99, PF 608<br />
4144 Arlesheim<br />
Lindenweg 1<br />
D-63877 Sailauf<br />
Rämistrasse 7<br />
8024 Zürich<br />
Goldbühlstrasse 3<br />
8620 Wetzikon<br />
Postfach 1525<br />
6830 Chiasso 1<br />
Buzibachring 4a<br />
6023 Rothenburg<br />
Schwaneberger Verlag GmbH Industriestrasse 1<br />
D-82110 Germering<br />
Schwarz Hans,<br />
Philatelie und Medien<br />
Buchmattweg 6, Postfach 2<br />
5022 Rombach<br />
Schwarzenbach Auktion Zürich Merkurstr. 64<br />
8032 Zürich 7<br />
Veraphil,<br />
Fliss Vera<br />
Batteriestrasse 10<br />
4103 Bottmingen<br />
Weggler Rolf Zürichstrasse 139<br />
8700 Küsnacht<br />
Westermayr-Slavicek Tatjana Mariahilferstrasse 91<br />
2. Stock / Tür 8<br />
A-1060 Wien<br />
Wieland Daniela Steinmattli 2<br />
6055 Alpnach<br />
Zum Postillon GmbH,<br />
Becker Ruth<br />
Obere Kirchgasse 20<br />
8400 Winterthur<br />
Tel: 00423 399 44 66<br />
briefmarken@post.li<br />
Tel: 0049 742 770 10<br />
info@lindner-original.de<br />
Tel: 0041 79 300 49 61<br />
philamondo@bluewin.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 22 781 38 12<br />
jcm@philatelie-marchand.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 61 766 93 93<br />
info@marken-mueller.ch<br />
Tel. 079 631 58 54<br />
studio.mina-witzig@bluewin.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 31 311 70 24<br />
info@august.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 61 713 70 05<br />
multiprint.joss@bluewin.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 41 266 05 49<br />
info@pilatusmail.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 24 425 29 83<br />
info@peguiron.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 71 923 77 44<br />
info@rapp-auktionen.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 61 261 73 79<br />
info@philaclassica.ch<br />
Tel: 0049 911 560 399-0<br />
franz.fedra@philasearch.com<br />
Tel: 0041 44 251 22 70<br />
info@philateliewalter.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 79 628 98 54<br />
info@philimpex.com<br />
Tel: 0041 91 683 66 21<br />
pitteri@pitteri.org<br />
Tel: 0041 41 226 02 02<br />
info@roelliphila.ch<br />
Tel: 0049 89 323 93-02<br />
info@michel.de<br />
Tel: 0041 79 422 15 00<br />
info@schwarzpr.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 43 244 89 00<br />
info@schwarzenbach-auktion.ch<br />
Tel: 0041 61 281 30 30<br />
veraphil1@gmail.com<br />
Tel: 0041 44 252 13 96<br />
rolfweggler@bluewin.ch<br />
Tel. 0043 1 597 51 34 oder<br />
0043 664 10 17 634<br />
westermayr@chello.at<br />
Tel: 0041 41 671 02 40<br />
wieland-briefmarken@bluewin.ch<br />
Fax: 00423 399 44 94<br />
Fax: 0049 742 761 18<br />
www.lindner-original.ch<br />
www.philamondo.ch<br />
Fax: 0041 22 781 08 17<br />
www.philatelie-marchand.ch<br />
Fax: 0041 61 766 93 94<br />
www.marken-mueller.ch<br />
www.luganophila.ch<br />
www.pilatusmail.ch<br />
Schweiz klassische Marken<br />
Schweiz ab 1907<br />
Europa + Übersee<br />
Neuheiten im Abonnement<br />
Liechtenstein<br />
Auktionen<br />
Ladengeschäft + Bedarfsartikel<br />
Versandgeschäft<br />
Engros-Handel<br />
Münzen<br />
•<br />
Zubehör-Generalvertretung<br />
• •<br />
• • • • •<br />
• • • • • • • •<br />
• • •<br />
Verlag<br />
• • • •<br />
• •<br />
www.peguiron.ch<br />
• • • • • • • •<br />
Fax: 0041 71 923 92 20<br />
www.rapp-auktionen.ch<br />
• • • • • •<br />
Fax: 0041 61 261 73 77<br />
www.philaclassica.ch<br />
• • • • • •<br />
Fax: 0049 911 560 399 66<br />
www.philasearch.com<br />
Internetportal / Software<br />
Fax: 0041 44 251 22 68<br />
www.philateliewalter.ch • • • • • • • • •<br />
www.philimpex.net<br />
www.philimpex.com<br />
Fax: 0041 91 683 69 26<br />
www.pitteri.org<br />
Fax: 0041 41 226 02 01<br />
www.roelli-auktionen.ch<br />
Fax: 0049 89 323 93 248<br />
www.michel.de<br />
www.schwarzenbach-auktion.ch<br />
Fax: 0041 61 281 30 35<br />
www.veraphil.jimdo.com<br />
www.weggler-stamps.ch<br />
Fax: 0041 41 671 02 41<br />
www.wieland-briefmarken.ch<br />
• • • • • •<br />
•<br />
• • • • • • • • •<br />
Verlag<br />
Verlag<br />
• • • • • • •<br />
• • • • •<br />
• • • • • •<br />
• •<br />
• • • • •<br />
Tel: 0041 52 213 85 50<br />
zum.postillon@bluewin.ch • • • • • •<br />
Das Signet Ihres Vertrauens.<br />
Stand 01/<strong>2022</strong>
196
197
Global Philatelic Network<br />
Stand Global Philatelic Network<br />
Corinphila Auktionen<br />
Heinrich Köhler Auktionshaus<br />
Corinphila Veilingen<br />
Switzerland<br />
Germany<br />
Netherlands<br />
H. R. Harmer USA<br />
John Bull Auctions<br />
Hong Kong<br />
198
Trade Booth A1 to A20 – Swiss Stamp Dealers Association SBHV<br />
A1 VERAPHIL<br />
A2 Philaclassica AG, Martin Eichele<br />
A3/A4 Peguiron Philatélie - DAVO<br />
A5/A6 Philatelie Walter AG<br />
A7 Rolf Weggler Internationale Philatelie<br />
A8 Philamondo GmbH, 3422 Kirchberg<br />
A9 Rölli Auktionen AG<br />
A10 Honegger Philatelie AG<br />
A11 LE TIMBRE CLASSIQUE S.A.<br />
A12 Schwarzenbach Auktion Zürich<br />
A13<br />
A14<br />
A15<br />
A16<br />
Odermatt/Günther, Pilatusmail-Auktion<br />
SBHV – Schweizer<br />
Briefmarkenhändler-Verband<br />
Christoph Gärtner<br />
Auktionshaus Ulrich Felzmann<br />
A17 Schweizer Briefmarken Zeitung SBZ /<br />
VSPhV Jugend<br />
A18<br />
A19<br />
A20<br />
Briefmarken <strong>Helvetia</strong>, Adrian Wyss<br />
Philasearch.com<br />
Jean-Paul Bach<br />
Trade Booth Directory by Name<br />
Dealer Nation Booth No.<br />
AAR-TOP GmbH Switzerland B20<br />
A. F. Milano Srl Italy B13<br />
Auction Gallery AG Italy B13<br />
Jean-Paul Bach Switzerland A20<br />
Bill Barrel Ltd. United Kingdom B2<br />
Briefmarken <strong>Helvetia</strong>, Adrian Wyss Switzerland A18<br />
Briefmarken Probst Switzerland B19<br />
Michael Chipperfield United Kingdom B4<br />
Classicphil GmbH Austria B5<br />
Club Filatelico Lugano Switzerland B8<br />
David Feldman SA Switzerland B10<br />
Auktionshaus Ulrich Felzmann Germany A16<br />
Ferrario Aste Srl Italy B9<br />
Filatelia Gazzera Italy B3<br />
Odermatt/Günther, Pilatusmail-Auktion Switzerland A13<br />
Filatelia Mazzini Milano SAS Italy B13<br />
Christoph Gärtner Germany A15<br />
Werner Hächler Switzerland B14<br />
Gary Hendershott USA B16<br />
199
Trade Booth Directory by Name<br />
Dealer Nation Booth No.<br />
Honegger Philatelie AG Switzerland A10<br />
P. Keiser AG Switzerland B21<br />
Laser-Invest Srl Italy D3<br />
Le Timbre Classique S.A. Switzerland A11<br />
Liechtensteinische Post AG Liechtenstein B15<br />
Luzernerraute GmbH Switzerland D1<br />
Peguiron Philatélie – DAVO Switzerland A3/4<br />
Philaclassica AG Switzerland A2<br />
Philamondo GmbH Switzerland A8<br />
Philasearch.com Germany A19<br />
Philatelie Walter AG Switzerland A5/6<br />
Pilatusmail AG Switzerland A13<br />
Postiljonen AB Sueden B7<br />
Rölli Auktionen AG Switzerland A9<br />
Schwarzenbach Auktion AG Switzerland A12<br />
Schweizer Briefmarken Prüfer Verband Switzerland B1<br />
Schweizer Briefmarkenhändler-Verband Switzerland A14<br />
Servizi di Telefonia del Vaticano Vatican D2<br />
Spink & Son LTD United Kingdom B11/12<br />
Stanley Gibbons United Kingdom B6<br />
Veraphil Switzerland A1<br />
Viennafil Auktionen GmbH Austria B3<br />
VSPhV/Schweizer Briefmarken Zeitung SBZ Switzerland A17<br />
Rolf Weggler Internationale Philatelie Switzerland A7<br />
United Nations Postal Administration UNO D4<br />
200
HELVETIA <strong>2022</strong><br />
<strong>Exhibition</strong> Date Stamp and Overprints<br />
During the exhibition, the Swiss Post will be operating a sales stand with a postmark service.<br />
Date stamp used during the exhibition<br />
The date stamp shows the designer<br />
of the Sitting <strong>Helvetia</strong> stamp, Johann Adam Ries.<br />
Souvernir sheet 2021<br />
Souvenir sheet <strong>2022</strong><br />
Every day a different silver overprint is sold, available exclusively at the exhibition<br />
Day 1 - 18. May <strong>2022</strong> overprint “Sitzende <strong>Helvetia</strong>”<br />
Day 2 - 19. May <strong>2022</strong> overprint “Weltpostverein”<br />
Day 3 - 20. May <strong>2022</strong> overprint “Ticino – Lugano”<br />
Day 4 - 21. May <strong>2022</strong> overprint ”FIP – Fédération Internationale de Philatelie”<br />
Day 5 - 22. May <strong>2022</strong> overprint “Schweizer Briefmarken”<br />
201
Post Liechtenstein Souvenir sheet <strong>2022</strong><br />
During the exhibition, the Post Liechtenstein will be operating a sales stand with a postmark service.<br />
A special date stamp is used during the exhibition<br />
Swiss association of philatelic experts<br />
For many decades, the stamp examiners of the SBPV have supported collectors in acquiring and the<br />
trade in selling genuine stamps and covers. The eleven members have in-depth expertise in their areas<br />
of examination. The focus of our examination activities is on stamps and the postal history of Switzerland<br />
from 1843 to the present day.<br />
In Lugano we will have a stand on all days. At our stand we will be able to advise you free of charge on<br />
topics such as the authenticity and quality of stamps and give you hints and tips on how to deal with test<br />
items. If you have any questions about counterfeit detection, our experts will also be on hand to look at<br />
your material with you. Unfortunately, no tests can be carried out on site.<br />
If you are thinking of becoming a stamp examiner, please contact us.<br />
We look forward to meeting you in Lugano and hope that all visitors and exhibitors enjoy this exhibition.<br />
202
Premium Domestic Appliances<br />
Visit our Showroom in Bironico<br />
Opening hours: Monday – Friday 09:00 – 11:30 / 13:30 – 17:00<br />
Via Cantonale 65 ∙ 6804 Bironico TI<br />
Tel. 091 630 26 26 ∙ www.fors.ch ∙ bironico@fors.ch
At first glance, what wine, the label and the stamp<br />
might have in common is the glue and the paper<br />
they are printed on. But a closer look reveals<br />
great similarities. As with the issue of a commemorative<br />
stamp, commemorative labels are also<br />
made with wine and it is not uncommon to find<br />
bottles labelled, numbered and printed in limited<br />
series. In addition, wine is a prized collector’s<br />
item for enthusiasts.<br />
The first postage stamp, the famous Penny<br />
Black, was issued in 1840, only a few years after<br />
the Valsangiacomo Vini company began its<br />
activities.<br />
Giovanni – Cesare - Vittore - Cesare - Fausto<br />
- Uberto this is the exact sequence of the generations<br />
(6) of the Valsangiacomo family that<br />
have followed one another in the company since<br />
1831. 191 years later, the business has its headquarters<br />
in Mendrisio, is run by Uberto, and is<br />
still a reference point in the Swiss wine sector.<br />
In fact, Valsangiacomo is one of the few familyowned<br />
companies in the Canton of Ticino that<br />
manages all stages of production.<br />
The estate’s vineyards in southern Ticino provide<br />
the grapes that are vinified in Mendrisio in<br />
the historic winery carved directly into the rock<br />
of Monte Generoso. Here the wines are created,<br />
refined and bottled in the best conditions. The<br />
passion for this craft, curiosity and interest in<br />
new production practices, has allowed Valsangiacomo<br />
to create wines of great personality always<br />
in step with the times.<br />
Examples of this are the “Piccolo Ronco”, a wine<br />
with character produced from grapes grown<br />
in the vineyards of Pedrinate, the southernmost<br />
part of Switzerland, and the “Mattirolo”, an example<br />
of the versatility of the Merlot grape, which<br />
has found in white vinification the freshness and<br />
fruit that distinguishes it. These two wines are<br />
presented “dressed” with a unique label created<br />
especially for this event.<br />
Valsangiacomo F.lli SA<br />
Viale alle Cantine 6<br />
6850 Mendrisio<br />
091 6836053<br />
info@valswine.ch<br />
www.valswine.ch
EXHIBITION<br />
CATALOGUE