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German occupied Belgium 1916, Germania tries to divide with Flamenpolotik

Germany tried to occupy Belgium in a way that previewed their view of the post war era after a German victory. This was not of a united Belgium but rather one divided on linguistic lines. Belgium remember was a new country with the Walloons dominating the way the Flemish had under Holland. Was their room for this strategy to work? 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 a very common German stamp around from 1900-1920 featuring Germania, the female personification of the German state. Such female personifications were common in many countries in the 19th century. Where it is used on an occupation stamp, as here from WWI Belgium, it becomes provocative. That said, I am a fan of the old style font of the overprint. The government in exile put out rival stamps  of King Albert wearing a trench warfare style helmet. No mention on that of his German heritage and his German Queen.

Todays stamp is issue N16, a 15 Belgian Cent overprint of the 15 Pfennig issued by the German occupation General Government of Belgium in 1916. It was part of 16 stamp issue of German Germania stamps overprinted in the local currency for use in occupied Belgium. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 65 cents mint. This is double the value of the Germania stamp without the overprint.

Belgium was required by the treaty that allowed for it’s founding to be neutral in Great Power conflicts. Thus it could not allow for the passage of German troops through it’s territory to attack France as Germany requested. The Belgian army resisted the subsequent German invasion in 1914. Almost the entire country was conquered in short order but the resistance gave time for the allies to organize defenses in France and Belgian Army units fought along side them under the personal command of King Albert.

The occupation was described hyperbolically as the rape of Belgium in Western press. This was greatly exaggerated and indeed Germany allowed food shipped to the Belgian people from the then neutral USA financed by a Belgian industrialist Emile Francqui in association with future American President Herbert Hoover. The food was sold to those that could afford it and given to those that could not. One crime that the Germans were guilty of was shipping laborers against their will to work in Germany when volunteer goals fell short. They were paid and returned post war.

What perhaps was most threatening was the German use of Flamenpolitk. This was treating and administering the large number of Dutch speaking Flemish differently that the French speaking Walloons. The Dutch themselves were neutral in WWI but shared a language heritage with Germany and had ruled Belgium previously. The hotbed of strife was the University of Ghent, which had taught in French despite being in a Flemish city. The Germans forced the university to teach in Flemish. King Albert returned  after German defeat and in his first speech he promised a new Flemish University in Ghent. He also retook his oath in Flemish as well as French, which had never been done before. The University of Ghent tried to go back to French but became the only Flemish university in 1930 after King Albert’s death.

Well my drink is empty and I will pour another to toast Herbert Hoover. When an old Belgian railroad rival in China called and asked for help for his people, Hoover was there, as the USA always is. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.

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Siam 1917, a young King modernizes the royal court and adds gay drama and a wild tiger corps

Young Kings are fun to read about and terrible to be ruled by. 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 shows a portrait of a King. It sounds simple. What if the King is young, and effeminate. Do you hide that, or show or even celebrate it. Then add the complication that the stamp is being printed abroad and so the printer has less knowledge of how to proceed. This stamp was first printed in Vienna in 1912 and attempted to play down the King’s youth and flamboyance. This apparently was not correct and the stamp was later redrawn in London with the same portrait modified to show more personality. My stamp is the later London printing.

The stamp today is issue A21, a 15 Satang stamp issued by the Kingdom of Siam on January 1st 1917. It was an 11 stamp issue in various denominations. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth $1.20 used. A version overprinted to celebrate victory in World War I is worth $6.75, if the overprint is not counterfeit.

King Rama VI was born in 1880 and was a member of the Chakri dynasty. He was the first crown prince to study abroad and did short courses at Sandhurst and Christchurch, Oxford. He came away from this education with much knowledge of languages and literature and came home determined to replicate the elite, all male, environments in Siam. He spent much of his time translating foreign literature into Thai and putting on plays with his young male companions.

Rama dressed as Nai Thong-in, a character modeled on Sherlock Holmes that Rama created

When his father died there was an attempted coup by the army who was suspicious of the young King. He stayed in charge and formed a personal “wild tiger corps” of ceremonial guards separate from the army. The country faced many problems and the King did work on railway construction and occasional purges to battle corruption. The cities had a big problem that took on a racial dimension. Merchants of the Chinese minority realized that Thai money contained much silver and that Thai rice could be bought locally and sold for much profit in Singapore. This created a shortage of money and food. The King then penned an article calling the Chinese the East’s Jews and saying that they had no loyalty to Siam and their God was money. A lot of Siamese shared that view but is that any way for a King to describe 14 percent of his subjects. Rice exports were banned and paper money issued. Another big loan from the UK was secured. WWI was better handled, with neutrality until it was obvious Germany was going to lose and then a declaration of war. The Siam expeditionary force arrived in Europe too late to fight but in time to march in the victory parades.

Rama’s lifestyle was creating problems  for the succession. For the first 10 years, he was unmarried although there were four failed engagements. Then he attempted to get more serious and he married 4 times in quick succession. Each time, the girl was named Queen but the quickly demoted to Princess Consort and put under house (palace) arrest. Finally his fourth Queen became pregnant as Rama became ill. If a Prince was born before he died, the baby would become King and if not, the title would pass to his brother, but not the one married to a Russian girl. A baby was born 2 hours before Rama died in 1925 but it was a girl. The Wild Tiger Corps was quietly disbanded after his death.

Well my drink is empty and I will pour another to toast His Majesty King Rama VI. The sense shown during World War I makes up for a lot. Besides, I would not want the Wild Tiger Corps coming for me. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.