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Persia 1929, If the old Royal family isn’t working out, lets declare an upstart commoner Royal

Persia was a wounded country with a young incompetent King and Britain exploiting the resourses and Russia a short march from the capital. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

I should like this stamp. A pompous ruler, pretending to be King, wearing an elaborate uniform with a sash. He even sports a silly mustache. What is not to like? Just that Persia was once a great country and a string of rulers like Reza Kahn, er ah Reza Shah Pahlavi, have left this country a backward…. well I won’t say shithole, but the President would.

Todays stamp is issue A42, a 6 Centimes stamp issued by the Kingdom of Persia in 1929. It was part of a sixteen stamp issue in various denominations and showed Reza Shah Pahlavi. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents.

The Qajar Dynasty had ruled Persia since the late 18th century. By the early 20th Century. the dynasty was about played out. Ahmad Shah had taken the thrown at age 11 in 1909 after his father was forced to abdicate. At first there was a regency, but the boy took power in 1914 at age 16. Persia had a deal that provided oil to the Royal Navy at a low rate and the northern Capital at Tehran was a short march from Russia. When the Czarist Russian army marched to the capital, the Shah’s Army did not put up a fight but mountain warlords did pushing out the Russians. The discredited the boy Shah if he ever had any credibility.

After World War I, the province nearest Russia declared itself the Persian Soviet Socialist Republic. The signaled their intent to march to Tehran with the support of the Red Army. Knowing Ahmad Shah was incapable of meeting this challenge the Persian Army rebelled under an officer named Reza Kahn. Kahn had been made an officer earlier by being the only person in his unit that could figure out how to use and keep functional a Russian made machine gun. The Shah was stripped first of his power and sent on an extended European tour that amounted to exile. The British then suggested that the national assembly name Kahn the new Shah which they did in 1925. The new Shah kept the oil deal with the British and signed a treaty of friendship with the Soviet Union. Everyone was happy, well perhaps not the people. He did request in 1935 that other countries refer to Persia as Iran as it is known in the native language. His wife Queen Taj got wearing the veil banned in 1936.

World War II saw Reza Shah Pahlavi try to stay neutral and keep out all foreign troops. This was not acceptable to the British nor the Soviets and both invaded from north and south in 1941. The Army again refused to fight. Even after the Shah beat his General with his walking stick and put him in prison. Britain considered putting the son of the last Qajar Shah on the throne but he was a British national who did not speak Persian. So similar to 1909, Reza Shah’s son was put on the throne and the current Reza Shah Pahlavi abdicated and went into exile in South Africa. Queen Taj did not join him. Eventually his remains were returned to Iran in 1950 and placed in a mausoleum. During the 1979 revolution, the mausoleum was ransacked but the former Shah’s remains were not found. Recently what were believed to be his remains were found nearby the mausoleum and reburied. His third of five wives, Queen Now Mother Taj,  fled Iran before the Shah and attempted to stay at a family owned mansion in Beverly Hills. Two days after her arrival, Iranian students in the USA attacked the house and attempted to burn it. She had to flee again and spent her last days in Acapulco, Mexico.

Well my drink is empty and I am left wondering if Iran will ever have a decent government. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.

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Armenia 1921,the Soviet Republic gets some iffy stamps out before the inevitable integration

Armenians had a terrible time around the time of this stamp. Armenians had suffered a horrible massacre in the hands of the Ottoman Turks. Finally a little hope when the Russian Revolution for a short period lost grip of Armenia. Only to have that grip come back a few years later. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

With it’s unusual paper and being imperferate, there is an air of this being a fake stamp. There is some reason to think this even though catalogs recognize them. The very short lived republic of Armenia ordered stamps printed in Paris but never actually delivered as the government fell so fast. Than the Soviet Republic that put out this issue was quickly folded into the Transcaucasian Socialist Federation with Georgia and Azerbaijan. They also had a few stamps till the Soviets just made them use the Russian issues. In fact only one denomination, the 25 Ruble, of this series even made it into post offices. The catalog does not even list a canceled version but urges the stamp collector to be on the lookout for fakes. I think perhaps sympathy for the Armenians plight might have lead the catalog to list a fake stamp. Just my opinion…

Todays stamp is issue A16, a 1000 Ruble stamp issued by the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic in 1921. The stamp displays a fisherman on the Aras River. It was part of a 17 stamp issue in various denominations. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 40 cents. There is also a perforated version of the stamp but that does not effect it’s value either way. One can see the high denomination, later once the rampant inflation of the time was dealt with, there were overstamps of this issue with the new denominations. These tend to have a slightly higher value.

Armenia tried to get itself free from both Turkey and Russia at the end of World War I. The Turkish genocide of Armenians, many who had fought for czarist Russia, caused a migration of ethnic Armenians to the new country. The peace treaty between the Bolsheviks and the new nation of Turkey left certain areas in Turk hands that Armenians thought belonged to them. Soon the Red Army arrived in the area to bring Armenia and the other new countries back into the fold. After fighting a deal was struck with Armenia becoming an autonomous Soviet Republic in return for the Red Army guaranteeing the borders and no persecution of former non communists. When this last part was reneged upon, a new Armenian mountainous republic rebelled and held out for another year but without stamps.

The Soviet Union then had the idea of merging Christian Armenia and Georgia with Muslim Azerbiajan as the Transcaucasian Democratic Federative Republic.  With atheism and Soviet nationalism being promoted, the Soviets had hope for this. Of course the divisions were too deep and eventually in 1936 the states were allowed to be separate Soviet Republics.

Interestingly, in 1922 the Soviets appointed Alexander Martuni as their leader on site. He was a scholor of Armenian arts and literature and even wrote books and articles promoting it. This allowed a separate Armenian culture to flourish and did much to lessen opposition. However Moscow began to worry that Martuni was not Sovietizing the place fast enough. In 1925 he was killed in a suspicious plane crash of the Junkers F.13 he was flying in. Some believe Minister of State Security Beria was behind the crash. Unusually for a Soviet era official, Martuni is still revered in modern independent Armenia, even getting a stamp issue honoring him in 2012. Armenia achieved independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.

Well my drink is empty ao I will open the conversation in the below comment section. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.

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Iceland honors King Christian one last time before the union with Denmark ends

Iceland had a rough time in the later years as a part of Denmark. So it might be natural for Iceland to go it alone, especially when Denmark is not in a place to contest. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

Todays stamp is just not the best. It just shows the then Danish King Christian X and the unfortunately generic to English speakers place name of Island. Sorry but world wide philatelists will need more information to get excited by a stamp. Iceland corrected this in a stamp issue a few years later with a stamp displaying a Viking sacrifice to the Norse God Thor. That is perhaps a little fantastic but at least puts you in a time and place.

Todays stamp is issue A8, a one Eyrir stamp issued by Iceland in 1920. It features Danish and then still Icelandic King Christian X and was part of a 21 stamp issue in various denominations, According to the Scott Catalog, the stamp is worth $1.25 used.

The climate and volcanic activity had been rough on the Danish territory of Iceland in the eighteenth and nineteenth century. There had been a heavy migration out, often to the Canadian province of Manitoba. Danish power was on the decline with the separation of Norway and then the interruption of contact with Denmark in World War I and again in World War II. The Danes had granted ever more self rule and by 1918 only the Danish King was still the ceremonial leader of Iceland. Even this ended during World War II with Denmark falling unopposed to Germany and Britain  invading Iceland also unopposed. Iceland then declared King Christian incapable of fulfilling his duties to Iceland and removed him as King.

King Christian was trying hard to hold together a greater Denmark but not having much luck. The territory of Schleswig had both ethnic Germans and Danes but was in the possession of Germany. Denmark hoped to reclaim most of it after WWI and indeed the northern portion voted to join Denmark, the rest voted to stay German. This was not enough for the King and he ordered the elected Prime Minister to include the city Flensburg in the reunification. The Danish Prime Minister refused and resigned and the King appointed a new cabinet that would follow his wishes. What followed was a constitutional crisis that saw the King back down and call new elections and in future confine himself to ceremonial functions.

World War II saw another crisis for King Christian. Denmark did not resist the 1940 German invasion and the King and government remained in place in cooperation with the Germans. This was not good pr and the King hit on a way to appear to be resisting. He would ride daily through Copenhagen on a horse alone in full Danish Military uniform. The German occupiers allowed it and it got the peoples spirits up to see him. One legend as the King stopping his ride in front of a big hotel flying the Nazi flag as it was being used as a administrative center. The King confronted the German sentry stating that the flag must come down as it violated the armistice agreement. The sentry refused the King. The King then stated that a Danish soldier will come and pull down the Nazi flag if he did not. The German sentry then stated that the Danish soldier would be shot. The King then said that the He was the Danish soldier  and the sentry then took down the flag. Allied wartime propaganda ate this stuff up.

King Christian X during one of his wartime rides

The horse rides did not end well for the now elderly King. He took a spill in late 1942 that left him an invalid for the rest of his life, dying in 1947. His rides had restored his popularity and insulated him from the obvious charge of collaboration with the German invader. Iceland also aquiest to British occupation with Americans following and traditional Iceland neutrality was replaced by NATO membership postwar.

Well my drink is empty and faced with the choice of a horse ride of another drink, you can guess my choice. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.