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Andorra 1932, we already have 2 foreign Princes, How about a Russian King?

European microstates attract their fair share of adventurers. But some want to do more than mountain climb. 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 looks like a stamp from 1930s’ France. as well it should. It was printed there. Andorra maintains a coadministration of France and of a Spanish Catholic Bishop. Both administrations put out stamps. The Spanish issues are much more church centered than Spain’s non Franco era issues.

Todays stamp is issue A50 a 1 Centime stamp issued by the French administration of Andorra in 1932. It was part of 56 stamp issue in various denominations that were the first stamps of the French administration that were not merely overprints of French issues. The stamp features the Church of Our Lady of Meritxell. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 55 cents mint. The violet 1.75 Franc stamp from this issue is worth $120.

Andorra was formed by Holy Roman Emporer Charlemagne as a border buffer state in the Pyrenees mountains to guard against Moor penetration into France. Through inheritences the adninistation became divided between The Spanish Catholic Bishop of Urgell and the President of France. It is a small landlocked country that was fairly impoverished until recently as improved transportation  allowed for more integration with Europe and tourism.

In 1931, a White, (Czar supporter) Russian from Vilneas named Boris Skossyreff was arrested in London for passing bad checks. After being released he made his way to Andorra and obtained citizenship in 1933. He put forth a plan for political reform and requested to be employed to implement them. When this was refused he showed up in Urgell, Spain and declared himself Boris I King of Andorra and Regent to the King of France. He then declared war on the Bishop of Urgell. Remember in 1934, France had not had a King in many years. The  claimed Bourbon Royal connection must have carried some weight as the government began drafting a new constitution. This wildness only lasted a week with King Boris being arrested by the Spanish Guardia Civil. Interestingly his trial was delayed when as a Royal he refused to be transferred to Madrid on a third class train ticket. The Spanish claimed he was really a Dutch Jew who had been in Spain for quite a while. This does not seem to be the case.  He was deported first to Portugal and was later to show up in the civilian employ of the World War II German army on the Russian front. He died in Germany in 1989.

Boris I sans crown
Boris, during his later German Eastern Front service

 

There seems to be a genre of fan fiction in Russia that has King Boris ruling Andorra for several years until being deposed by the German puppet Vichy French. They have him dying in a Vichy prison camp in 1944.

The church on the stamp burned in 1972. Lost in the fire was the statue of Mary with Child that dated from the 12th century. The legend was that villagers on the way to church kept finding an out of season rose with the statue at its base. They would place the statue in churches only to find it the next day back by the rose. Eventually they took it as a suggestion to build a church in Meritxell where the statue of Our Lady of Meritxell then sat. The church was rebuilt after the fire and replica of the statue was recast. Meritxell is still a common first name for Andorran females.

The pre fire icon of Our Lady of Meritxell

Well my drink is empty and so I will pour another to toaste Andorra. It is a small country though so I think two Princes is enough. Sorry Boris. Come again  for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2018.

 

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Andorra Spanish Administration 1972, Suggested foriegn policy for all, speak softly with a smile and carry a giant cigar

This is a funny stamp, but it turns out high quality cigar tobacco is an important crop of this tiny country. What better way to show that off than creating a giant one? So slip on your smoking jacket, light your cigar, take tour first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.

This stamp looks a little different from the last Andorra stamp presented here. That one was from the side of Andorra that has French administration. Here we have the Spanish side and one can see the change in language and currency. The Spanish side was a bishopric subject to the Bishop of Urgel. This changed somewhat in 1993 but there is still seperate Spanish and French stamps.

Todays stamp is issue A17 a 5 Peseta stamp issued by Andorra on December 5th, 1972. It was a 6 stamp issue in various denominations featuring Andorran customs including singers, dancers, cigar smokers, and even a hermit. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 60 cents unused.

Andorra is a tiny mountainous country with only 2 percent of the land being arable. For that reason, most of the food has to be imported. Andorra uses about 8 percent of it’s farmland in the production of tobacco. This is of high quality mostly for cigars and mostly for export. A cigar usually contains various tobacco leaves from different places.

The integration with the EU as been a little problematic for tobacco. The EU allowed Andorra to keep it’s low domestic price but then enforced duty requirements similar to alcohol for a visitor taking it with him.  This perhaps turns a few fans into smugglers. As the economy developed more and more of the workforce shifted to providing tourist services. A reflection of this is the former Reig tobacco factory. this has now been repackaged as a tobacco museum.

Well my cigar burned out, i did not have the guts or stamina to try a giant one, and so I will have to wait till tomorrow when there will be another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.