Definitive stamps of Russia

Definitive stamps of Russia are the regular postage stamp issues produced in the Russian Empire and RSFSR between 1857 and 1923, and in the Russian Federation since 1992.

Stamp of the RSFSR 3rd definitive issue, 1922, bearing the communist slogan "Workers of the world, unite!"

Russian Empire

edit

The Russian Empire started issuing definitive series of postage stamps since 10 December 1857 when the first Russian stamp went on sale. There were twenty definitive issues produced until 1917 as outlined in a table below.

Issue No.[1] Dates Stamp
example
1
10 December 1857 – March 1858
 
2
19 September 1858
 
10 July 1864
 
5
June 1865
 
6
20 August 1866 – 1875
 
7
18 June – July 1875
 
8
19 March 1879
 
9
25 January 1884
 
10
March 1888
 
11
2 May 1889
 
12
14 December 1889 – 1892
 
13
1902–1904
 
14
1904
 
15
1905
 
16
1 June 1906
 
17
December 1908 – 1917
 
19[b]
1915 – 1917
 
20
10 September 1916 – 1 January 1917
 

RSFSR

edit

The first definitive series of the RSFSR was issued in 1921. It included five designs of new Soviet symbols such as agricultural labour, industrial labour, science and arts, hammer and sickle, and freed proletarian [Wikidata]. The stamps had a minimum wording, Russian: Почта (Pochta (postage)) and the acronym Russian: РСФСР (RSFSR), imparting the Soviet messages solely via pictures.[2]

The first regular issue involved eleven different stamps of denominations ranging between 1- and 1,000 roubles. Among these, five stamps showed the agricultural-labour design, printed in different colours and with face values of 1-, 2-, 100-, 200-, and 300 roubles. The industrial-labour symbol was given in three denominations: 5-, 500-, and 1,000 roubles. The stamp for science-and-arts appeared only once. To a certain degree, designs of the series, focusing more on agriculture and industry, were in conformity with the spirit of the government's New Economic Policy of 1921 aimed at recovering the RSFSR economy.[2] They also followed the same vogue that could be found in Soviet poster art in 1921, when the Soviet government, "having secured its own position, turns to problems of peaceful social and economic development (economic and cultural themes move rapidly to the fore)."[3]

Reflecting new political goals, RSFSR postage stamps provided visual messages of the values and major social groups within Soviet society. Portraying the three social groups, the RSFSR's final definitive issues in 1922 and 1923 depicted the worker, the soldier, and the peasant that constituted the Soviet state. These were stylistic representations in the form of classical busts resembling portraits of monarchs and other heads of state on stamps of other countries.[2]

 
Stamps of the 4th definitive issue of the RSFSR, 1923

Replacing the portraits of the tsars, depiction of the three social groups was on purpose, because the Soviet government "specifically decided to create images which would symbolise the idea of worker-peasant power."[4] The sculptor Ivan Shadr was author of these images. Designing the busts, he created the worker first, then the Red Army soldier. These two stamps appeared in December 1922. The stamp showing the bust of the peasant came out five months later, in May 1923. Among the eleven denominations of the fourth definitive issue, the worker appeared on stamps three times, the soldier six times, and the peasant showed up on two stamps.[2]

The Soviet Russia definitive issues are listed in the following table:

Issue No. Dates CPA Catalogue No.
1
10 August 1921 3–7
2 (1)[c]
25 August – 9 September 1921 8–13
auxiliary
10 February 1922 14–23
3 (2)[d]
4 March – April 1922 38–42
auxiliary
17 March – April 1922 24–24Б
auxiliary
1 November 1922 49
auxiliary
5 December 1922 – March 1923 60–72
4 (3)[e]
December 1922 –
15 August 1923
73–85

Soviet Union

edit

Between 1923 and 1992, definitive stamps were issued by the USSR postal administration. There were 13 definitive issues of the Soviet Union.

Russian Federation

edit

In 1992–2010, the Russian Federation produced six issues of definitive stamps. The first post-Soviet issue appeared in February 1992. It included two stamps with face values of 20- and 30 kopecks that depicted Saint George and the Millennium of Russia monument. In the early and mid 1990s, this definitive series of stamps continuously expanded due to hyperinflation and a corresponding change in postal rates. Many stamps were reissued using the same design but with a modified denomination. For example, the face value of the stamp with the Golden Gate in Vladimir increased from 10 kopecks to 150 roubles, that is, by 1500 times. The maximum stamp denomination reached 5,000 roubles.[5]

The second and third issues of definitive stamps came out in 1997–1999. Landscape orientation of stamps was replaced with portrait one. The second series included 12 denominations, and the third one had 15 denominations. By design, stamps of two issues were not different from each other. The need for the third issue was caused by a 1,000-fold of the Russian rouble redenomination followed by withdrawal of the second definitive issue in 1998. The third issue repeated the second one (except the abolished face value of 75 kopecks) and supplemented them with four other denominations. The latter included the denominations of 50- and 100 roubles that did not have practical application.[5]

The fourth series of 2002–2003 was different from the previous issues because of introduction of self-adhesive stamps. The new stamp motives included palaces and parks of Russia. Number of denominations was reduced to nine, from 1- to 10 roubles. The problem of fractional postal rates was solved by using the remaining stamps of the third issue.[5][6]

 
Examples of used stamps of the Russian Federation 4th definitive issue, 2002. Postmark of St. Petersburg

Stamps of the fifth, "animalistic" issue of 2008 were not self-adhesive and went back to standard size. Number of denominations again increased to 15, with certain fractional denominations (15, 25, and 30 kopecks) being of dubious practical value. Maximum stamp denomination increased to 25 roubles.[5]

 
Russian Kremlins. Sheetlet of the 6th definitive issue of the Russian Federation, 2009

The sixth series of 2009, "Russian Kremlins", represented a return to the self-adhesive stamps with most used denominations. The difference from the fourth issue, of a close topic, was the expansion of denominations up to 100 roubles as well as the availability of additional security features to protect against counterfeiting.[5]

Definitive issues of the Russian Federation are summarised in a table below:

Issue No. Dates CPA Catalogue No. Denominations
1
26 February 1992 – 30 April 1992
20 April 1992
26 May 1992
25 June 1992
11 August 1992
10 September 1992
25 December 1992
25 January 1993
4 June 1993
30 December 1993
26 January 1995
21 February 1995
22 June 1999
6–7
12–14
19–21
32–34
41–43
47–49
59–62
68–69
94–95
138–139
195
199–202
518
20- and 30 kopecks;

10- and 60 kopecks, 2 roubles
10-, 25-, and 100 roubles
1-, 112-, and 5 roubles
50-, 55-, and 80 kopecks
15- and 25 kopecks, 3 roubles
15-, 50-, 250-, and 500 roubles
45- and 75 roubles
4- and 6 roubles
150- and 300 roubles
1,000 roubles
750-, 1,500=, 2,500=, and 5,000 roubles
1.20-ruble surcharge on 5000 roubles

2
31 March 1997 – 10 June 1997 341–345
347–353
500-, 750-, 1,000-, 1,500-, 2,500 roubles
100-, 150-, 250-, 300-,
2,000-, 3,000-, and 5,000 roubles
3
1 January 1998 – 26 October 1999
24 January 2001
407–417

653–656
10, 15, 25, 30 & 50 kopecks,
1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, 3 & 5 rubles

10, 25, 50 & 100 rubles

16 December 2002 – 15 April 2004
5 December 2003
813–817

898–901
2-, 212-, 3-, 4-, and 5 roubles

1-, 112-, 6-, and 10 roubles

5
29 August 2008 1250–1264 10-, 15-, 25-, 30=, and 50 kopecks,
1, 112-, 2-, 212-, 3-, 4-, 5-, 6-, 10-, and 25 roubles
6
1 October 2009 1360–1371 1-, 112-, 2-, 212-, 3-, 4-, 5-, 6-,
10-, 25-, 50,- and 100 roubles

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ The 3rd issue of the Russian Empire was a local stamp of August 1863 for internal mail in St. Petersburg and Moscow.[1]
  2. ^ The 18th issue of the Russian Empire was a series of 1913 commemorating the 300th anniversary of the Romanov dynasty.[1]
  3. ^ Number varies depending on catalogue.
  4. ^ Number varies depending on catalogue.
  5. ^ Number varies depending on catalogue.

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c Каталог-справочник отечественных знаков почтовой оплаты: Сб. из 3 т. [Catalogue Handbook of Home Valuable Postal Matters: In 3 Vols] (in Russian). Vol. 1. М. [Moscow]: ИТЦ «Марка» [Federal State Unitary Enterprise Publishing and Trading Centre “Marka”]. 1990. pp. 7–32. (Прил. к журн. «Филателия СССР» и «Филателия») [Suppl. to Filateliya SSSR and Filateliya].
  2. ^ a b c d Grant, J. (July 1995). "The socialist construction of philately in the early Soviet era". Comparative Studies in Society and History. 37 (3): 476–493. doi:10.1017/S0010417500019770. ISSN 0010-4175. JSTOR 179216. S2CID 143458562.
  3. ^ White, S. (12 September 1990) [1988]. The Bolshevik Poster (reprint ed.). New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. 152 p. pp. 231–233. ISBN 978-0300048698. JSTOR 40921359. LCCN 88014275. OCLC 17874233. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  4. ^ Бухаров, О.Н. [Bukharov, O. N.] (1982). Marki – svideteli istorii [Stamps As Witnesses of History] (in Russian). Moskva [Moscow]: Радио и связь [Izdatel'stvo Radio i Sviaz']. p. 12.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ a b c d e Загорский, В. Б., ed. (2011). Каталог почтовых марок 1992—2010. Российская Федерация [Catalogue of Postage Stamps 1992–2010. Russian Federation] (in Russian) (7th ed.). St. Petersburg: Standard-Collection. 248 p. ISBN 978-5-902275-47-3. Archived from the original on 2015-06-17. Retrieved 2015-06-14.
  6. ^ a b Голованов, А. Г. [Golovanov, A. G.] (2009). Е. А. Обухов (ed.). Четвёртый выпуск стандартных марок Российской Федерации [The Fourth Issue of Definitive Stamps of the Russian Federation] (in Russian). М. [Moscow]: ИТЦ «Марка» [Federal State Unitary Enterprise Publishing and Trading Centre “Marka”]. 79 p. (Прил. к журн. «Филателия», № 12, 2009) [Suppl. to Filateliya, 2009, No. 12].{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
edit