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A trading post in the land of good people, what could go wrong

Welcome readers to todays offering from The Philatelists. 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. Today we wrestle with when a trading post stops benefiting everybody.

The stamp is an issue of Portuguese Africa. The individual colony, in this case Inhambane, is then printed on. Then there is a further overprint which announces republica. In 1910 A republic was declared in Portugal. Then an overprint of a new currency from 1913. The strange part of this is that the underlying stamp celebrates an anniversary from 1898. The post office in Inhambane must have had slow sales to be still pushing the same stamp 15 years after the original issue. Inhambane is located in present day Mozambique which did something similar. In 1975, independence was declared and the new post office sold issues of the colony dating back to 1953 with a new overprint celebrating the independent republic. Perhaps they were new printings but I suspect the post office just had a huge, old inventory.

The stamp today is issue CD25, a seven and one half centavo overprint for Inhambane in 1913 of a Portuguese Africa stamp from 1898.  The original denomination of the stamp was 75 Reis, the earlier currency. The stamp celebrates the 400th anniversary of the voyage of the explorer Vasco de Gama. This was part of an eight stamp issue. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth $2.00 mint. The stamp to look for in the set is the one with the inverted overprint of the new denomination. It is worth $35. There are also versions or this issue with the Inhambane overprint on stamps of Macao and Timor. other Portuguese colonies that got the Vasco de Gama issue.

Inhambane was discovered by Vasco de Gamma in 1498 as it says on the stamp. de Gama landed seeking supplies and labeled the area a “Land of good people.” This catch phrase is still used for the area today. It was already an active trading post with Arab and Persian traders arriving in the 11th century. Trade routes had developed from the interior routing ivory, gold and slaves to the trading post. For the most part the traders, including the Portuguese did not venture much in to the interior. Instead tribute was paid to local chiefs.  Over time, many of the traders were ethnic Indians and Chinese from the Asian Portuguese colonies. Portugal did not feel the need to formalize the colony of Mozambique with protected borders until Britain occupied neighboring Rhodesia. By then the present day capital/port of Maputo had greater economic and administrative importance. The last Inhambane stamp was from 1917 although the city and province retain the name today.

In theory the idea of these sort of international cities/trading posts make a lot of sense. Trading after all benefits all and allows the interior lands to be left to there own to develop in their own way. In old movies such places seem such romantic oasis’s of spies, quick money, and intrigue. To look at the list of what was traded requires one to give additional thought.  Some of this is just modern eyes looking back criticaly, but the trade going on would seem to dirty many hands.

Well my drink is empty and so it is time to open the conversation in the below comment section. Often the incorporation of trading post cities in to the surrounding country leads to their decline. This is the case with present day Inhambane. Should they have been kept international? Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.