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Netherlands 2006, The problem of extracting Dutch art from the modern

113 years separates the USA stamp I did recently, see https://the-philatelist.com/2020/12/18/usa-1893-a-columbian-exposition-brings-the-worlds-eyes-on-chicago/ , to this one today. They both were trying to do the same thing. Show the past in a patriotic way that gives hope and confidence for the future. On that stamp we sneer at the ideal “white city” even though they clearly meant less pollution not race. Here the Dutch postal service asked modern artists for pleasant renderings of Holland and that request was too much for this artist to bare. 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.

On one hand, there is some room to be impressed with the printing of this stamp. Getting full size works of art on stamps as small as this one must have taken some doing by the lithographer. Obviously the tiny bulk postage stamp is not an ideal venue to view art. I wonder if the decision makers were unimpressed  by the quality of the art submissions and tried to lessen the embarrassment by minimizing the stamp size.

Todays stamp is issue A480, a 39 Euro Cents stamp issued by the Netherlands on January 2nd, 2006. This issue came as booklet panes of 10 self adhesive stamps. According to the Scott Catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents used.

This stamp displays A day in Holland/Holland in a day by artist Barbara Visser. Babs was born in 1966 in Harlem(the Dutch one) and had an extensive education that spanned several countries and stretched into her thirties. Her government grants and prizes included the 30,000 Euro Charlotte Kohler Prize handed out by the Prince Bernhard Culture Fund.

When the call went out from the postal authority for modern works on Dutch subjects, Babs had the idea to pull a little trick on them. The title of the work  gives off a tourism vibe and causes you to not question the presence of the Japanese couple admiring the old windmill. The painting though is not what it seems or what was requested. The windmill on the stamp is an old Dutch windmill that had been disassembled, shipped to Japan and reconstructed. It is the artist who is the tourist and not in the Netherlands.

Artist Barbara Visser

While the stamp from 17 years ago appears to be the height of Babs art career she has other achievements. In 1995 she had a four episode arch on the Lithuanian soap opera Gimines playing herself but married to a Lithuanian/American surgeon named Steve.

Well my drink is empty and I will pour another in commiseration with the postal authority having been shat upon for the crime of trying to display todays well subsidized art to a broad audience. Come again soon for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2020.

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State of Mahra 1968, The Sultan is gone, the communists are here, want to buy a fake stamp for the Winter Olympics

The Mahra Sultinnate occupied the eastern portion of South Yemen and Socotra Island for 700 years prior to falling in 1967. Where does that leave this stamp from 1968? In the state of being fake, though tolerated by the new South Yemen government. Don’t try to mail them. 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.

The Philatelist obviously has no problem with stamps that celebrate the Olympics. This one is just silly and a missed opportunity. The new government was allowing the old Sultanates to continue fake stamp issues. Obviously they were doing this for the money by why not use the stamp issues to show what was going on in Mahra? Some things were changing, some things they hoped to change, and others were staying the same. A license to chronical that with fake but illuminating stamps would attract this collector. Instead we have a fallen Sultanate famous for it’s camels showing you a generic luge team.

Todays stamp was not for postage so has no catalog value. I checked on eBay and they had a 10 stamp issue from this period and were asking $50. Steep.

The Mahra Sultanate had  been ruled by the Banu Afrar dynasty since the 1400s. They also controlled the island of Socotra that attracted more than their share of Europeans. The Portuguese were the first to conquer it as a replenishment stop for it’s ships on the India trade. Once there, they found it less useful than hoped and abandoned it. Prior to getting the nearby colony of Aden up and operating, the British East India company leased a coaling station on Socotra but found the Sultan untrustworthy so again the area was lightly used.

Map of area in period

On the mainland, the region became most famous for mehri camels, who are fast, agile, and tough. Mahri tribesmen on their famous camels played a big part in the capture if the Middle East and North Africa in the name of Islam. Later in a somewhat different cause the French Army prized the mehri camels for their Sahara adventures. This history was remembered by Citroen in 1968 when their jeep version of the 2CV was named Mehari. It lasted 20 years in production and yes many were bought by the French Army.

Citroen Mehari Jeep

When Aden was abandoned by the British in 1967 that was the end of the Federation of South Arabia that included Mahra and all the area Sultans. Initially they did not resist the occupation by pan Arabist from Aden. The Sultans scattered to Saudi Arabia, London, and Switzerland. Those pan Arabist who were hoping for an end to European intrusion were to be disappointed. Starting in 1971, Socotra was open as a replenishment stop not for the Portuguese or the British, but the Soviet Navy. As happened in previous times the Soviets found the island surplus of requirements and abandoned it in 1985.

The island of Socotra is again appearing useful in the civil war in modern Yemen. The United Arab Emirates landed at the airport allegedly to help train the Yemeni army unit on the island. Instead the unit announced to UAE’s approval that they support a separation from Yemen. The current pretender to the Banu Afrar Dynasty has now also arrived on Socotra, he says at the invitation of local tribal chiefs. I humbly suggest that he just rents his old palace instead of buying it. He did bring with him a big supply of the old style flags. Can more fake stamps be far behind?

Current Mahra Sultan pretender Abdulla al Afra greets his subjects? after arriving in Socotra

Well my drink is empty. Come again soon for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2020.

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Portugal 1945, Marshal Carmona wonders if the homeland is sick as it tries it’s best men

Portugal’s first republic was not working with economic strife and anarchy in politics and in the streets. How do you solve it? A military coup perhaps? Won’t the people then be ill served as Generals turn themselves into pagan Caesars in the fascist mode. General/ Marshal/President Carmona tried to find a middle way. 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.

It is interesting that this late in his career pictures Oscar Carmona in a dress military uniform, even though he had served as President for nearly twenty years. The uniform perhaps both recognizes him as a figure head while also acknowledging his right under the Nuevo State to fire the government, an important check the kept Salazar from becoming one of Europe’s pagan Caesars as he himself described the fascist leaders of other European countries.

Todays stamp is issue A149, a 1.75 Escudo stamp issued by Portugal on November 12th, 1945. It was an 8 stamp issue in various denominations. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth $7.50 unused.

Oscar was born the son of a Portuguese Naval Captain who was serving as naval attaché to Brazil in 1869. Despite this he joined the army and married the daughter of a General. In marrying her, he legitimized their three kids. He rose through the ranks and was charged by the republican government with leading a military tribunal that was tasked with prosecuting officers who had conspired in a series of failed coups against the unpopular and unstable, but elected government.

He was perhaps not the best choice as the Prosecutor then dramatically asked in open court if the homeland was sick as it was persecuting it’s best men. One of the few times a prosecutor wins an acquittal of the officers. Soon Carmona is leading 15,000 troops marching into Lisbon demanding and recieving the resignation of the Republican government.

Initially the plan was to install a rival politician in power under the same constitution. Carmona quickly realized the weakness of that and instead crafted a Nuevo State that gave him personally dictator like powers.

The early years of the dictatorship saw a good amount of economic progress as a new Finance Minister Antonio Salazar got the countries very iffy finances in order. This is where Carmona differed from so many military dictators. Seeing the success, he promoted Salazar to Prime Minister as he himself stepped back in a more figurehead role. As a non military leader, Salazar was able to gradually reduce the importance of the military in politics with the acquiesce of Carmona. This reduced role was central to the very delicate task Portugal pulled off by staying out of both the Spanish Civil War and World War II.

There was of course opposition to the absolute power of the Nuevo State. This included both far left and more mainstream elements. A nod to how well the system worked was that both aged Marshal Carmona and his also aged military replacement as President  were repeatedly offered the role of figurehead to proposed opposition governments.

Respect for Carmona extended 20 years after his death and all the way to Angola
The respect didn’t last as Angolan Escudos became Kwanzas, devalued and now offered two unnamed heroes

Well my drink is empty. Come back soon when there will be another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2020.

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French occupied Kamerun 1916, so much for Neukamerun

Germany did their African colonies a little different, They sent settlers and the Kamerun colony was organized around large commercial ventures. In the years leading up to World War I, Germany was able to add considerable territory at the expense of France. After German withdrawl, France was not able to duplicate German success and the colony became a great expense of France. 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.

A note about geography. This is a prewar French issue of Middle Congo overstamped for use in the western French occupied area of wartime Kamerun. The French Middle Congo was not the same as later French Congo or modern Republic of Congo but included the area of the modern Central African Republic and southern Chad.

Todays stamp is issue A1, a 1 Centime stamp issued by the French occupation force in 1916. It was a 17 stamp issue in various denominations. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 40 cents unused. Another overprint of this 1907 Congo issue happened in 1921 after France recieved the official League of Nations mandate over the area. The new overprint just says Cameroun and the stamp magically loses five cents of it’s value.

The earliest inhabitants of the territory of Kamerun were a nomadic pygmy people called the Baka. They were hunter gatherers in the rain forest and very few ever reached 5 feet in height. They tended to stick to the dense rainforest as the much taller neighboring Bantu peoples were mean to them.

A modern Baka chief. In modern Africa, the pygmys are still kept on reservations

Germany was awarded the area under the terms of the Treaty of Berlin. A large German trading and shipping  company named Woermann set up shop. German settlers poured into the interior to set up large farms. It was intended to leave the Baka on reservations. Taking advantage of allowing a large French deployment in Morocco, under the Treaty of Fez, Kamerun was awarded a lot of new territory. This was called Neukamerun and plans were drawn up  to include it in the colonies rapid development. A new Capital, Jaunde, was constructed inland.

When war broke out in Europe, Kamerun hoped that neutrality would hold. This is what the Treaty of Berlin imagined as European colonies were to stick together and remain neutral to what was happening in Europe. This was in hope that there would be inter European aid in the avent of native uprising. France was first to break the treaty by retaking Neukamerun with no fighting. Then the British invaded from the west. All Germans faded up into the northern highlands around Jaunde. They were badly outnumbered but intact and had their families with them. For a while France and Britain didn’t press, assuming the Germans would give up.

A German officer and his African helpers fire a cannon during the defense of Kamerun

Instead the Germans raided neighboring British Nigeria hoping to turn the tide. The Germans were repulsed at the battle of Gurin. The raid scared the British and they sent extra troops into Kamerun, the opposite of what was hoped. German forces and their families withdrew intact into friendly neutral Spanish Rio Mundi, modern Equitorial Guinea. From there they were given passage to Spain and on to Holland and finally home. Interestingly several important native tribal figures evacuated with the Germans and set themselves up permanently in Madrid as visiting dignitaries with ample German funding.

The French tried to replecate the German colony with a French Jewish company taking over the Woermann facilities. They had no colonists though and their atempts to entice Africans into contract labor were not successful and built up much hostility. Neukamerun was never returned to modern Cameroon.

Well my drink is empty. Come again soon when there will be another story that can be learned from stamp collecting. First published in 2020.