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Wikipedia

Mail

The mail or post is a system for physically transporting postcards, letters, and parcels.[1] A postal service can be private or public, though many governments place restrictions on private systems. Since the mid-19th century, national postal systems have generally been established as a government monopoly, with a fee on the article prepaid. Proof of payment is usually in the form of an adhesive postage stamp, but a postage meter is also used for bulk mailing.

A postman collecting mail for delivery

Postal authorities often have functions aside from transporting letters. In some countries, a postal, telegraph and telephone (PTT) service oversees the postal system, in addition to telephone and telegraph systems. Some countries' postal systems allow for savings accounts and handle applications for passports.

The Universal Postal Union (UPU), established in 1874, includes 192 member countries and sets the rules for international mail exchanges as a Specialized Agency of the United Nations.

Etymology edit

 
Mail envelope (back to back)

The word mail comes from the Middle English word male, referring to a travelling bag or pack.[2] It was spelled in that manner until the 17th century and is distinct from the word male. The French have a similar word, malle, for a trunk or large box, and mála is the Irish term for a bag. In the 17th century, the word mail began to appear as a reference for a bag that contained letters: "bag full of letter" (1654). Over the next hundred years the word mail began to be applied strictly to the letters themselves and the sack as the mailbag. In the 19th century, the British typically used mail to refer to letters being sent abroad (i.e. on a ship) and post to refer to letters for domestic delivery. The word Post is derived from Old French poste, which ultimately stems from the past participle of the Latin verb ponere 'to lay down or place'.[3] So in the U.K., the Royal Mail delivers the post, while in North America both the U.S. Postal Service and Canada Post deliver the mail.

The term email, short for "electronic mail", first appeared in the 1970s.[4][5] The term snail mail is a retronym to distinguish it from the quicker email. Various dates have been given for its first use.[6][7][8]

History edit

 
Many early post systems consisted of fixed courier routes. Here, a post house on a postal route in the 19th century Finland

The practice of communication by written documents carried by an intermediary from one person or place to another almost certainly dates back nearly to the invention of writing. However, the development of formal postal systems occurred much later. The first documented use of an organized courier service for the dissemination of written documents is in Egypt, where Pharaohs used couriers to send out decrees throughout the territory of the state (2400 BCE).[9] The earliest surviving piece of mail is also Egyptian, dating to 255 BCE.[10]

Persia (Iran) edit

The first credible claim for the development of a real postal system comes from Ancient Persia. The best-documented claim (Xenophon) attributes the invention to the Persian King Cyrus the Great (550 BCE), who mandated that every province in his kingdom would organize reception and delivery of post to each of its citizens. Other writers credit his successor Darius I of Persia (521 BCE). Other sources claim much earlier dates for an Assyrian postal system, with credit given to Hammurabi (1700 BCE) and Sargon II (722 BCE). Mail may not have been the primary mission of this postal service, however. The role of the system as an intelligence gathering apparatus is well documented, and the service was (later) called angariae, a term that in time came to indicate a tax system. The Old Testament (Esther, VIII) makes mention of this system: Ahasuerus, king of Medes, used couriers for communicating his decisions.

The Persian system worked using stations (called Chapar-Khaneh), whence the message carrier (called Chapar) would ride to the next post, whereupon he would swap his horse with a fresh one for maximum performance and delivery speed. Herodotus described the system in this way: "It is said that as many days as there are in the whole journey, so many are the men and horses that stand along the road, each horse and man at the interval of a day's journey; and these are stayed neither by snow nor rain nor heat nor darkness from accomplishing their appointed course with all speed".[11] The verse prominently features on New York's James Farley Post Office, although it uses the translation "Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds".

India edit

 
The use of the Scinde Dawk adhesive stamps to signify the prepayment of postage began on 1 July 1852 in the Scinde/Sindh district,[12] as part of a comprehensive reform of the district's postal system.

The economic growth and political stability under the Mauryan Empire (322–185 BCE) stimulated sustained development of civil infrastructure in ancient India. The Mauryans developed early Indian mail service as well as public wells, rest houses, and other facilities for the public.[13] Common chariots called Dagana were sometimes used as mail chariots in ancient India.[14] Couriers were used militarily by kings and local rulers to deliver information through runners and other carriers. The postmaster, the head of the intelligence service, was responsible for ensuring the maintenance of the courier system. Couriers were also used to deliver personal letters.[15]

In South India, the Wodeyar dynasty (1399–1947) of the Kingdom of Mysore used mail service for espionage purposes thereby acquiring knowledge related to matters that took place at great distances.[16]

By the end of the 18th century, a postal system in India was in operation. Later this system underwent complete modernization when the British Raj established its control over most of India. The Post Office Act XVII of 1837 provided that the Governor-General of India in Council had the exclusive right of conveying letters by post for hire within the territories of the East India Company. The mails were available to certain officials without charge, which became a controversial privilege as the years passed. On this basis the Indian Post Office was established on October 1, 1837.[17]

Rome edit

The first well-documented postal service was that of Rome. Organized at the time of Augustus Caesar (62 BCE – 14 CE), the service was called cursus publicus and was provided with light carriages (rhedæ) pulled by fast horses. By the time of Diocletian, a parallel service was established with two-wheeled carts (birotæ) pulled by oxen. This service was reserved for government correspondence. Yet another service for citizens was later added.[citation needed][dubious ]

Vietnam edit

In 1802, the first Vietnamese postal service was established under the Nguyen dynasty, under the Ministry of Rites.[18][19][20] During the Nguyen dynasty, official documents were transported by horse and other primitive means to stations built about 25-30 kilometers apart.[21] In 1904, three wireless communication offices were established, and in early 1906 they were merged with the postal service to form the Post and Wireless Office.[22][23] In 1945, after the August Revolution, the Post and Wireless Office was renamed the Post Office under the Ministry of Transportation.[24][25][26] In 1955, the Post Office was upgraded to the Ministry of Post.[27][28][29]

China edit

 
China 4-cent on 100-dollar silver overprint of 1949

Some Chinese sources claim mail or postal systems dating back to the Xia or Shang dynasties, which would be the oldest mailing service in the world. The earliest credible system of couriers was initiated by the Han Dynasty (206 BCE – 220 CE), who had relay stations every 30 li (about 15km) along major routes.

The Tang dynasty (618 to 907 AD) operated a recorded 1,639 posthouses, including maritime offices, employing around 20,000 people. The system was administered by the Ministry of War and private correspondence was forbidden from the network. The Ming dynasty (1368 to 1644) sought a postal system to deliver mail quickly, securely, and cheaply. Adequate speed was always a problem, because of the slow overland transportation system, and underfunding. Its network had 1,936 posthouses every 60 li along major routes, with fresh horses available every 10 li between them.[30] The Qing operated 1,785 posthouses throughout their lands. More efficient, however, was the system linking the international settlements, centered around Shanghai and the Treaty ports. It was the main communication system for China's international trade.[31]

Mongol Empire edit

Genghis Khan installed an empire-wide messenger and postal station system named Örtöö within the Mongol Empire. During the Yuan Dynasty under Kublai Khan, this system also covered the territory of China. Postal stations were used not only for the transmission and delivery of official mail but were also available for travelling officials, military men, and foreign dignitaries. These stations aided and facilitated the transport of foreign and domestic tribute specifically and the conduct of trade in general.

By the end of Kublai Khan's rule, there were more than 1400 postal stations in China alone, which in turn had at their disposal about 50,000 horses, 1,400 oxen, 6,700 mules, 400 carts, 6,000 boats, more than 200 dogs, and 1,150 sheep.[32]

The stations were 25 to 65 km (16 to 40 mi) apart and had reliable attendants working for the mail service. Foreign observers, such as Marco Polo, have attested to the efficiency of this early postal system.[32]

Each station was maintained by up to twenty five families. Work for postal service counted as military service. The system was still operational in 18th century when 64 stations were required for a message to cross Mongolia from the Altai Mountains to China.[33]

Japan edit

The modern Japanese system was developed in the mid-19th century, closely copying European models. Japan was highly innovative in developing the world's largest and most successful postal savings system and later a postal life insurance system as well. Postmasters play a key role in linking the Japanese political system to local politics. The postmasters are high prestige, and are often hereditary.[34] To a large extent, the postal system generated the enormous funding necessary to rapidly industrialize Japan in the late 19th century.[35]

Other systems edit

 
An example of a main post office building in Kraków, Poland
 
Delivery by bicycle in Germany

Another important postal service was created in the Islamic world by the caliph Mu'awiyya; the service was called barid, for the name of the towers built to protect the roads by which couriers travelled.[36]

By 3000 BC, Egypt was using homing pigeons for pigeon post, taking advantage of a singular quality of this bird, which when taken far from its nest is able to find its way home due to a particularly developed sense of orientation. Messages were then tied around the legs of the pigeon, which was freed and could reach its original nest. By the 19th century, homing pigeons were used extensively for military communications.[37]

Charlemagne extended to the whole territory of his empire the system used by Franks in northern Gaul and connected this service with that of missi dominici.[38][failed verification]

In the mid-11th century, flax traders known as the Cairo Geniza Merchants from Fustat, Egypt wrote about using a postal service known as the kutubi. The kutubi system managed routes between the cities of Jerusalem, Ramla, Tyre, Ascalon, Damascus, Aleppo, and Fustat with year-round, regular mail delivery.[39]

Many religious orders had a private mail service. Notably, the Cistercians had one which connected more than 6,000 abbeys, monasteries, and churches. The best organization, however, was created by the Knights Templar.[40][failed verification]

In 1716, Correos y Telégrafos was established in Spain as public mail service, available to all citizens. Delivery postmen were first employed in 1756 and post boxes were installed firstly in 1762.[41]

Thurn und Taxis edit

In 1505, Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I established a postal system in the Empire, appointing Franz von Taxis to run it. This system, originally the Kaiserliche Reichspost, is often considered the first modern postal service in the world, which initiated a revolution in communication in Europe.[42][43][44] The system combined contemporary technical and organization means to create a stable transcontinental service which was also the first to offer (fee-based) public access.[45][46][47][48]

The Thurn und Taxis family, then known as Tassis, had operated postal services between Italian city-states from 1290 onward.

 
Postmaster Anselm Franz, 2nd Prince of Thurn and Taxis (1681–1739) still today part of the logo of the Whitepages in many countries

For 500 years the postal business based in Brussels and in Frankfurt was passed from one generation to another. Following the abolition of the Empire in 1806, the Thurn-und-Taxis Post system continued as a private organization into the postage stamp era before being absorbed into the postal system of the new German Empire after 1871.

 
Postmaster Maximilian Karl, 6th Prince of Thurn and Taxis (1802–1871) last Postmaster

1867 July 1 the State of Prussia had to make a compensation payment of 3.000.000 Thalers reinvested by Helene von Thurn & Taxis, daughter-in-law of the last postmaster, Maximilian Karl, 6th Prince of Thurn and Taxis, into real estate, most of it continuing to exist today. The Phone Book of the World has its roots in the long history of the avant-garde telecommunications family Thurn & Taxis.[49][unreliable source?] The directory is the result of Johannes, 11th Prince of Thurn & Taxis transmitting PTT culture to a student and helping with the opening of a small Telephone Boutique next to a historic Postal mansion his ancestors used to go to centuries earlier.[50][unreliable source?]

 
Johannes, 11th Prince of Thurn & Taxis (1926–1990) heir of the Postal fortune

Several European Post Carriers like Deutsche Post or Österreichische Post continue to use the Thurn & Taxis Post Horn in their company logo just like the global Phone Book of the World based in the old Postal mansion of King Louis XIV in Paris.[51][unreliable source?]

Postal reforms edit

 
The Penny Black, the world's first postage stamp

In the United Kingdom, prior to 1840 letters were paid for by the recipient and the cost was determined by the distance from sender to recipient and the number of sheets of paper rather than by a countrywide flat rate with weight restrictions. Sir Rowland Hill reformed the postal system based on the concepts of penny postage and prepayment.[52] In his proposal, Hill also called for official pre-printed envelopes and adhesive postage stamps as alternative ways of getting the sender to pay for the postage, at a time when prepayment was optional, which led to the invention of the postage stamp, the Penny Black.

Modern transport and technology edit

 
The first airmail flight in Germany, 1912.

The postal system was important in the development of modern transportation. Railways carried railway post offices. During the 20th century, air mail became the transport of choice for inter-continental mail. Postmen started to use mail trucks. The handling of mail became increasingly automated.

The Internet came to change the conditions for physical mail. Email (and in recent years social networking sites) became a fierce competitor to physical mail systems, but online auctions and Internet shopping opened new business opportunities as people often get items bought online through the mail.

Modern mail edit

Modern mail is organized by national and privatized services, which are reciprocally connected by international regulations, organizations and international agreements. Paper letters and parcels can be sent to almost any country in the world relatively easily and cheaply. The Internet has made the process of sending letter-like messages nearly instantaneous, and in many cases and situations correspondents use email where they previously would have used letters. The volume of paper mail sent through the U.S. Postal Service has declined by more than 15% since its peak at 213 billion pieces per annum in 2006.[53][54]

Organization edit

Some countries have organized their mail services as public limited liability corporations without a legal monopoly.

The worldwide postal system constituting the individual national postal systems of the world's self-governing states is coordinated by the Universal Postal Union, which among other things sets international postage rates, defines standards for postage stamps and operates the system of international reply coupons.

In most countries a system of codes has been created (referred to as ZIP codes in the United States, postcodes in the United Kingdom and Australia, eircodes in Ireland and postal codes in most other countries) in order to facilitate the automation of operations. This also includes placing additional marks on the address portion of the letter or mailed object, called "bar coding". Bar coding of mail for delivery is usually expressed either by a series of vertical bars, usually called POSTNET coding or a block of dots as a two-dimensional barcode. The "block of dots" method allows for the encoding of proof of payment of postage, exact routing for delivery, and other features.

 
An automated postal machine

The ordinary mail service was improved in the 20th century with the use of planes for a quicker delivery. The world's first scheduled airmail post service took place in the United Kingdom between the London suburbs of Hendon and Windsor, Berkshire, on 9 September 1911.[55] Some methods of airmail proved ineffective, however, including the United States Postal Service's experiment with rocket mail.

Receipt services were made available in order to grant the sender a confirmation of effective delivery.

Payment edit

Before about the mid-nineteenth century, in regions where postal systems existed, the payment models varied, but most mail was sent unpaid requiring the recipient to pay the postage fee. In some regions a partial payment was made by the sender. Today, worldwide, the most common method of prepaying postage is by buying an adhesive postage stamp to be applied to the envelope before mailing; a much less common method is to use a postage-prepaid envelope. Franking is a method of creating postage-prepaid envelopes under licence using a special machine. They are used by companies with large mail programs, such as banks and direct mail companies.

In 1998, the U.S. Postal Service authorised the first tests of a secure system of sending digital franks via the Internet to be printed out on a PC printer, obviating the necessity to license a dedicated franking machine and allowing companies with smaller mail programs to make use of the option; this was later expanded to test the use of personalized postage. The service provided by the U.S. Postal Service in 2003 allows the franks to be printed out on special adhesive-backed labels.

In 2004 the Royal Mail in the United Kingdom introduced its SmartStamp Internet-based system, allowing printing on ordinary adhesive labels or envelopes. Similar systems are being considered by postal administrations around the world.

When the pre-paid envelope or package is accepted into the mail by an agent of the postal service, the agent usually indicates by means of a cancellation that it is no longer valid for pre-payment of postage. The exceptions are when the agent forgets or neglects to cancel the mailpiece, for stamps that are pre-cancelled and thus do not require cancellation and for, in most cases, metered mail. (The "personalized stamps" authorized by the USPS and manufactured by Zazzle and other companies are in fact a form of meter label and thus do not need to be cancelled.)

Privacy and censorship edit

 
"The Steamboat" – mobile steaming equipment used by Czech StB for unsticking of envelopes during correspondence surveillance

Documents should generally not be read by anyone other than the addressee; for example, in the United States of America it is a violation of federal law for anyone other than the addressee and the government to open mail.[56] There are exceptions however: executives often assign secretaries or assistants the task of handling their mail; and postcards do not require opening and can be read by anyone. For mail contained within an envelope, there are legal provisions in some jurisdictions allowing the recording of identities of sender and recipient.[57]

The privacy of correspondence is guaranteed by the constitutions of Mexico, Colombia, Brazil and Venezuela, and is alluded to in the European Convention on Human Rights[58] and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.[57] The control of the contents inside private citizens' mail is censorship and concerns social, political, and legal aspects of civil rights. International mail and packages are subject to customs control, with the mail and packages often surveyed and their contents sometimes edited out (or even in).[citation needed]

There have been cases over the millennia of governments opening and copying or photographing the contents of private mail.[57][59] Subject to the laws in the relevant jurisdiction, correspondence may be openly or covertly opened, or the contents determined via some other method, by the police or other authorities in some cases relating to a suspected criminal conspiracy, although black chambers (largely in the past, though there is apparently some continuance of their use today) opened extralegally.

The mail service may be allowed to open the mail if neither addressee nor sender can be located, in order to attempt to locate either. Mail service may also open the mail to inspect if it contains materials that are hazardous to transport or violate local laws.

While in most cases mail censorship is exceptional, military mail to and from soldiers is often subject to surveillance.[60] The mail is censored to prevent leaking tactical secrets, such as troop movements or weather conditions.[60] Depending on the country, civilian mail containing military secrets can also be monitored and censored.[60]

Mail sent to and from inmates in jails or prisons within the United States is subject to opening and review by jail or prison staff to determine if the mail has any criminal action dictated or provides means for an escape. The only mail that is not able to be read is attorney client mail, which is covered under the attorney-client confidentiality laws in the United States.[61]

Rise of electronic correspondence edit

Modern alternatives, such as the telegraph, telephone, telex, facsimile, and email, have reduced the attractiveness of paper mail for many applications. These modern alternatives have some advantages: in addition to their speed, they may be more secure, e.g., because the general public cannot learn the address of the sender or recipient from the envelope, and occasionally traditional items of mail may fail to arrive, e.g. due to vandalism to mailboxes, unfriendly pets, and adverse weather conditions. Mail carriers due to perceived hazards or inconveniences, may refuse, officially or otherwise, to deliver mail to a particular address (for instance, if there is no clear path to the door or mailbox). On the other hand, traditional mail avoids the possibility of computer malfunctions and malware, and the recipient does not need to print it out if they wish to have a paper copy, though scanning is required to make a digital copy.

Physical mail is still widely used in business and personal communications for such reasons as legal requirements for signatures, requirements of etiquette, and the requirement to enclose small physical objects.

Since the advent of email, which is almost always much faster, the postal system has come to be referred to in Internet slang by the retronym "snail mail". Occasionally, the term "white mail" has also been used as a neutral term for postal mail.

Mainly during the 20th century, experimentation with hybrid mail has combined electronic and paper delivery. Electronic mechanisms include telegram, telex, facsimile (fax), email, and short message service (SMS). There have been methods which have combined mail and some of these newer methods, such as temporary emails, that combine facsimile transmission with overnight delivery.[62][63] These vehicles commonly use a mechanical or electro-mechanical standardised writing (typing), that on the one hand makes for more efficient communication, while on the other hand makes impossible characteristics and practices that traditionally were in conventional mail, such as calligraphy.

This epoch[when?] is undoubtedly mainly dominated by mechanical writing, with a general use of no more of half a dozen standard typographic fonts from standard keyboards. However, the increased use of typewritten or computer-printed letters for personal communication and the advent of email have sparked renewed interest in calligraphy, as a letter has become more of a "special event". Long before email and computer-printed letters, however, decorated envelopes, rubber stamps and artistamps formed part of the medium of mail art.[64]

In the 2000s (decade) with the advent of eBay and other online auction sites and online stores, postal services in industrialized nations have seen a major shift to item shipping. This has been seen as a boost to the system's usage in the wake of lower paper mail volume due to the accessibility of email.

Online post offices have emerged to give recipients a means of receiving traditional correspondence mail in a scanned electronic format.

Collecting edit

 
Le Philateliste by François Barraud (1929).

Postage stamps are also object of a particular form of collecting. Stamp collecting has been a very popular hobby. In some cases, when demand greatly exceeds supply, their commercial value on this specific market may become enormously greater than face value, even after use. For some postal services the sale of stamps to collectors who will never use them is a significant source of revenue; for example, stamps from Tokelau, South Georgia & South Sandwich Islands, Tristan da Cunha, Niuafoʻou and many others. Stamp collecting is commonly known as philately, although strictly the latter term refers to the study of stamps.

Another form of collecting regards postcards, a document written on a single robust sheet of paper, usually decorated with photographic pictures or artistic drawings on one of the sides, and short messages on a small part of the other side, that also contained the space for the address. In strict philatelic usage, the postcard is to be distinguished from the postal card, which has a pre-printed postage on the card. The fact that this communication is visible by other than the receiver often causes the messages to be written in jargon.

Letters are often studied as an example of literature, and also in biography in the case of a famous person. A portion of the New Testament of the Bible is composed of the Apostle Paul's epistles to Christian congregations in various parts of the Roman Empire. See below for a list of famous letters.

A style of writing, called epistolary, tells a fictional story in the form of the correspondence between two or more characters.

A makeshift mail method after stranding on a deserted island is a message in a bottle.

Deregulation edit

 
In the United States, private companies, such as FedEx and UPS, compete with the federal government's United States Postal Service, particularly for package delivery. Different mailboxes are also provided for local and express service. (The USPS has a legal monopoly on First Class and Standard Mail delivery.)

Numerous countries, including Sweden (1 January 1993),[65][66] New Zealand (1998 and 2003), Germany (2005 and 2007), Argentina and Chile opened up the postal services market to new entrants. In the case of New Zealand Post Limited, this included (from 2003) its right to be the sole New Zealand postal administration member of the Universal Postal Union, thus the ending of its monopoly on stamps bearing the name New Zealand.

Types edit

Letters edit

 
Pillar boxes on the island of Madeira, Portugal. (1st class mail in blue and 2nd class in red)

Letter-sized mail constitutes the bulk of the contents sent through most postal services. These are usually documents printed on A4 (210×297 mm), Letter-sized (8.5×11 inches), or smaller paper and placed in envelopes.

Handwritten correspondence, while once a major means of communications between distant people, is now used less frequently[67] due to the advent of more immediate forms of communication, such as the telephone or email. Traditional letters, however, are often considered to hark back to a "simpler time" and are still used when someone wishes to be deliberate and thoughtful about their communication. An example would be a letter of sympathy to a bereaved person.

Bills and invoices are often sent through the mail, like regular billing correspondence from utility companies and other service providers. These letters often contain a self-addressed envelope that allows the receiver to remit payment back to the company easily. While still very common, many people now opt to use online bill payment services, which eliminate the need to receive bills through the mail. Paperwork for the confirmation of large financial transactions is often sent through the mail. Many tax documents are as well.

New credit cards and their corresponding personal identification numbers are sent to their owners through the mail. The card and number are usually mailed separately several days or weeks apart for security reasons.

Bulk mail is mail that is prepared for bulk mailing, often by presorting, and processing at reduced rates. It is often used in direct marketing and other advertising mail, although it has other uses as well. The senders of these messages sometimes purchase lists of addresses (which are sometimes targeted towards certain demographics) and then send letters advertising their product or service to all recipients. Other times, commercial solicitations are sent by local companies advertising local products, like a restaurant delivery service advertising to their delivery area or a retail store sending their weekly advertising circular to a general area. Bulk mail is also often sent to companies' existing subscriber bases, advertising new products or services.

First-Class edit

First-Class Mail in the U.S. includes postcards, letters, large envelopes (flats), and small packages, providing each piece weighs 13 ounces (370 g) or less. Delivery is given priority over second-class (newspapers and magazines), third class (bulk advertisements), and fourth-class mail (books and media packages). First-Class Mail prices are based on both the shape and weight of the item being mailed. Pieces over 13 ounces can be sent as Priority Mail.[68] As of 2011 42% of First-Class Mail arrived the next day, 27% in two days, and 31% in three. The USPS expected that changes to the service in 2012 would cause about 51% to arrive in two days and most of the rest in three.[69] The Canada Post counterpart is Lettermail.[70]

The British Royal Mail's 1st Class, as it is styled, is simply a priority option over 2nd Class, at a slightly higher cost. Royal Mail aims (but does not guarantee) to deliver all 1st Class letters the day after posting.[71]

In Austria priority delivery mail is called Prio, in Switzerland A-Post.[72]

Registered and recorded mail edit

 
Multi-franked registered mail from Crete using Greek stamps during the Union with Greece to Egypt in 1914 showing numbered registration label

Registered mail allows the location and in particular the correct delivery of a letter to be tracked. It is usually considerably more expensive than regular mail, and is typically used for valuable items. Registered mail is constantly tracked through the system.

Recorded mail is handled just like ordinary mail with the exception that it has to be signed for on receipt. This is useful for legal documents where proof of delivery is required.

In the United Kingdom recorded delivery mail (branded as signed for by the Royal Mail) is covered by The Recorded Delivery Services Act 1962. Under this legislation any document which its relevant law requires service by registered post[73] can also be lawfully served by recorded delivery.

Repositionable notes edit

The United States Postal Service introduced a test allowing "repositionable notes" (for example, 3M's Post-it notes) to be attached to the outside of envelopes and bulk mailings,[74] afterwards extending the test for an unspecified period.[75] The repositionable note may be fixed directly to the address side of First-Class Mail and Standard Mail letter-size mailpieces. These mailpieces must meet the standards in 7.2 through 7.6. The note is included as an integral part of the mailpiece for weight and postage rate and must be accounted for in pricing.

Postal cards and postcards edit

Postal cards and postcards are small message cards that are sent by mail unenveloped; the distinction often, though not invariably and reliably, drawn between them is that "postal cards" are issued by the postal authority or entity with the "postal indicia" (or "stamp") preprinted on them, while postcards are privately issued and require affixing an adhesive stamp (though there have been some cases of a postal authority's issuing non-stamped postcards). Postcards are often printed to promote tourism, with pictures of resorts, tourist attractions or humorous messages on the front and allowing for a short message from the sender to be written on the back. The postage required for postcards is generally less than postage required for standard letters; however, certain technicalities such as their being oversized or having cut-outs,[76] may result in payment of the first-class rate being required.

Postcards are also used by magazines for new subscriptions. Inside many magazines are postage-paid subscription cards that a reader can fill out and mail back to the publishing company to be billed for a subscription to the magazine. In this fashion, magazines also use postcards for other purposes, including reader surveys, contests or information requests.

Postcards are sometimes sent by charities to their members with a message to be signed and sent to a politician (e.g. to promote fair trade or third world debt cancellation).

Other mail services edit

 
This antique "letter-box" style U.S. mailbox is both on display and in use at the Smithsonian Institution Building.

Small packets are usually less than 2 kg (4 lb).

Larger envelopes are also sent through the mail. These are often composed of a stronger material than standard envelopes and are often used by businesses to transport documents that may not be folded or damaged, such as legal documents and contracts. Due to their size, larger envelopes are sometimes charged additional postage.

Packages are often sent through some postal services, usually requiring additional postage than an average letter or postcard. Many postal services have limitations as to what a package may or may not contain, usually placing limits or bans on perishable, hazardous or flammable materials. Some hazardous materials in limited quantities may be shipped with appropriate markings and packaging, like an ORM-D label. Additionally, as a result of terrorism concerns, the U.S. Postal Service subjects their packages to numerous security tests, often scanning or x-raying packages for materials that might be found in biological materials or mail bombs.

Newspapers and magazines are also sent through postal services. Many magazines are simply placed in the mail normally (but in the U.S., they are printed with a special bar code that acts as pre-paid postage – see POSTNET), but many are now shipped in shrinkwrap to protect the loose contents of the magazine. During the second half of the 19th century and the first half of the 20th century, newspapers and magazines were normally posted using wrappers with a stamp imprint.

Hybrid mail, sometimes referred to as L-mail, is the electronic lodgement of mail from the mail generator's computer directly to a Postal Service provider. The Postal Service provider is then able to use electronic means to have the mail piece sorted, routed and physically produced at a site closest to the delivery point. It is a type of mail growing in popularity with some Post Office operations and individual businesses venturing into this market. In some countries, these services are available to print and deliver emails to those who are unable to receive email, such as the elderly or infirm. Services provided by Hybrid mail providers are closely related to that of mail forwarding service providers.

See also edit

Components of a postal system:

Notes edit

  1. ^ In Australia, Canada, and the U.S., the term "mail" is commonly used for the postal system and for the letters, postcards, and parcels it carries; in New Zealand, "post" is more common for the postal system and "mail" for the material delivered; in the UK, "post" prevails in both senses. However, the British, American, Australian, and Canadian national postal services are called, respectively, the "Royal Mail", the "United States Postal Service", "Australia Post", and "Canada Post"; in addition, such fixed phrases as "post office" or "junk mail" are found throughout the English-speaking world.
  2. ^ "mail, n.2". Dictionary.com (Unabridged (v 1.1) ed.). 2007. from the original on 2007-02-19.
  3. ^ Webster's Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam Company, 1963, pp. 662–63.
  4. ^ "email, n.2". OED Online. Oxford University Press. 2019.
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Further reading edit

  • Aiyangar, Sakkottai Krishnaswami; S. Krishnaswami A. (2004). Ancient India: Collected Essays on the Literary and Political History of Southern India. Asian Educational Services. ISBN 978-0-8018-8359-0.
  • Almási, Gábor (2010). Humanistic Letter-Writing. Mainz: Institute of European History.
  • Dorn, Harold; MacClellan, James E. (2006). Science and Technology in World History: An Introduction. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-8359-0.
  • Daunton, M. J. Royal Mail: The Post Office Since 1840 (Athlone, 1985), Great Britain.
  • Heaton, J. Henniker (1905). "Imperial Postal Services" . The Empire and the century. London: John Murray. pp. 288–317.
  • Hemmeon, Joseph Clarence. The history of the British post office (Harvard University Press, 1912) online.
  • John, Richard R. Spreading the News: The American Postal System from Franklin to Morse (1995) excerpt
  • Le Roux, Muriel, et al. eds. A Concise History of the French Post Office: From Its Origins to the Present Time (2018)
  • Lowe, Robson (1951). Encyclopedia of British Empire Postage Stamps (v. III). London.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Mazumdar, Mohini Lal (1990). The Imperial Post Offices of British India. Calcutta: Phila Publications.
  • Mote, Frederick W.; John K. Fairbank (1998). The Cambridge History of China. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-24333-9.
  • Prasad, Prakash Chandra (2003). Foreign Trade and Commerce in Ancient India. Abhinav Publications. ISBN 978-81-7017-053-2.

External links edit

  • A Hundred Years by Post by J. Wilson Hyde
  • Potts, Albert, "US19,578 (First U.S. street mailbox patent)". US patent office. 1858
  • The British Postal Museum & Archive
  • From Thurn & Taxis to Phone Book of the World - 7 centuries of Telecom History
  • British Army Postal Services History
  • James Meek, London Review of Books, 28 April 2011, In the Sorting Office, 33(9)
  • U.S. National Postal Museum, a part of the Smithsonian Institution
  • Universal Postal Union, a part of the United Nations

mail, other, uses, email, disambiguation, postal, service, disambiguation, snail, disambiguation, postage, album, mail, post, system, physically, transporting, postcards, letters, parcels, postal, service, private, public, though, many, governments, place, res. For other uses see Email Mail disambiguation Postal service disambiguation Snail Mail disambiguation and Postage album The mail or post is a system for physically transporting postcards letters and parcels 1 A postal service can be private or public though many governments place restrictions on private systems Since the mid 19th century national postal systems have generally been established as a government monopoly with a fee on the article prepaid Proof of payment is usually in the form of an adhesive postage stamp but a postage meter is also used for bulk mailing A postman collecting mail for deliveryPostal authorities often have functions aside from transporting letters In some countries a postal telegraph and telephone PTT service oversees the postal system in addition to telephone and telegraph systems Some countries postal systems allow for savings accounts and handle applications for passports The Universal Postal Union UPU established in 1874 includes 192 member countries and sets the rules for international mail exchanges as a Specialized Agency of the United Nations Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Persia Iran 2 2 India 2 3 Rome 2 4 Vietnam 2 5 China 2 6 Mongol Empire 2 7 Japan 2 8 Other systems 2 9 Thurn und Taxis 2 10 Postal reforms 2 11 Modern transport and technology 3 Modern mail 3 1 Organization 3 2 Payment 3 3 Privacy and censorship 3 4 Rise of electronic correspondence 3 5 Collecting 3 6 Deregulation 4 Types 4 1 Letters 4 1 1 First Class 4 1 2 Registered and recorded mail 4 1 3 Repositionable notes 4 2 Postal cards and postcards 4 3 Other mail services 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Further reading 8 External linksEtymology edit nbsp Mail envelope back to back The word mail comes from the Middle English word male referring to a travelling bag or pack 2 It was spelled in that manner until the 17th century and is distinct from the word male The French have a similar word malle for a trunk or large box and mala is the Irish term for a bag In the 17th century the word mail began to appear as a reference for a bag that contained letters bag full of letter 1654 Over the next hundred years the word mail began to be applied strictly to the letters themselves and the sack as the mailbag In the 19th century the British typically used mail to refer to letters being sent abroad i e on a ship and post to refer to letters for domestic delivery The word Post is derived from Old French poste which ultimately stems from the past participle of the Latin verb ponere to lay down or place 3 So in the U K the Royal Mail delivers the post while in North America both the U S Postal Service and Canada Post deliver the mail The term email short for electronic mail first appeared in the 1970s 4 5 The term snail mail is a retronym to distinguish it from the quicker email Various dates have been given for its first use 6 7 8 History edit nbsp Many early post systems consisted of fixed courier routes Here a post house on a postal route in the 19th century FinlandThe practice of communication by written documents carried by an intermediary from one person or place to another almost certainly dates back nearly to the invention of writing However the development of formal postal systems occurred much later The first documented use of an organized courier service for the dissemination of written documents is in Egypt where Pharaohs used couriers to send out decrees throughout the territory of the state 2400 BCE 9 The earliest surviving piece of mail is also Egyptian dating to 255 BCE 10 Persia Iran edit Main articles Royal Road Chapar Khaneh and Angarium The first credible claim for the development of a real postal system comes from Ancient Persia The best documented claim Xenophon attributes the invention to the Persian King Cyrus the Great 550 BCE who mandated that every province in his kingdom would organize reception and delivery of post to each of its citizens Other writers credit his successor Darius I of Persia 521 BCE Other sources claim much earlier dates for an Assyrian postal system with credit given to Hammurabi 1700 BCE and Sargon II 722 BCE Mail may not have been the primary mission of this postal service however The role of the system as an intelligence gathering apparatus is well documented and the service was later called angariae a term that in time came to indicate a tax system The Old Testament Esther VIII makes mention of this system Ahasuerus king of Medes used couriers for communicating his decisions The Persian system worked using stations called Chapar Khaneh whence the message carrier called Chapar would ride to the next post whereupon he would swap his horse with a fresh one for maximum performance and delivery speed Herodotus described the system in this way It is said that as many days as there are in the whole journey so many are the men and horses that stand along the road each horse and man at the interval of a day s journey and these are stayed neither by snow nor rain nor heat nor darkness from accomplishing their appointed course with all speed 11 The verse prominently features on New York s James Farley Post Office although it uses the translation Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds India edit nbsp The use of the Scinde Dawk adhesive stamps to signify the prepayment of postage began on 1 July 1852 in the Scinde Sindh district 12 as part of a comprehensive reform of the district s postal system Main article Postal history of India The economic growth and political stability under the Mauryan Empire 322 185 BCE stimulated sustained development of civil infrastructure in ancient India The Mauryans developed early Indian mail service as well as public wells rest houses and other facilities for the public 13 Common chariots called Dagana were sometimes used as mail chariots in ancient India 14 Couriers were used militarily by kings and local rulers to deliver information through runners and other carriers The postmaster the head of the intelligence service was responsible for ensuring the maintenance of the courier system Couriers were also used to deliver personal letters 15 In South India the Wodeyar dynasty 1399 1947 of the Kingdom of Mysore used mail service for espionage purposes thereby acquiring knowledge related to matters that took place at great distances 16 By the end of the 18th century a postal system in India was in operation Later this system underwent complete modernization when the British Raj established its control over most of India The Post Office Act XVII of 1837 provided that the Governor General of India in Council had the exclusive right of conveying letters by post for hire within the territories of the East India Company The mails were available to certain officials without charge which became a controversial privilege as the years passed On this basis the Indian Post Office was established on October 1 1837 17 Rome edit Main article cursus publicus The first well documented postal service was that of Rome Organized at the time of Augustus Caesar 62 BCE 14 CE the service was called cursus publicus and was provided with light carriages rhedae pulled by fast horses By the time of Diocletian a parallel service was established with two wheeled carts birotae pulled by oxen This service was reserved for government correspondence Yet another service for citizens was later added citation needed dubious discuss Vietnam edit In 1802 the first Vietnamese postal service was established under the Nguyen dynasty under the Ministry of Rites 18 19 20 During the Nguyen dynasty official documents were transported by horse and other primitive means to stations built about 25 30 kilometers apart 21 In 1904 three wireless communication offices were established and in early 1906 they were merged with the postal service to form the Post and Wireless Office 22 23 In 1945 after the August Revolution the Post and Wireless Office was renamed the Post Office under the Ministry of Transportation 24 25 26 In 1955 the Post Office was upgraded to the Ministry of Post 27 28 29 China edit Main article Postal history of China nbsp China 4 cent on 100 dollar silver overprint of 1949Some Chinese sources claim mail or postal systems dating back to the Xia or Shang dynasties which would be the oldest mailing service in the world The earliest credible system of couriers was initiated by the Han Dynasty 206 BCE 220 CE who had relay stations every 30 li about 15km along major routes The Tang dynasty 618 to 907 AD operated a recorded 1 639 posthouses including maritime offices employing around 20 000 people The system was administered by the Ministry of War and private correspondence was forbidden from the network The Ming dynasty 1368 to 1644 sought a postal system to deliver mail quickly securely and cheaply Adequate speed was always a problem because of the slow overland transportation system and underfunding Its network had 1 936 posthouses every 60 li along major routes with fresh horses available every 10 li between them 30 The Qing operated 1 785 posthouses throughout their lands More efficient however was the system linking the international settlements centered around Shanghai and the Treaty ports It was the main communication system for China s international trade 31 Mongol Empire edit Main article Ortoo Genghis Khan installed an empire wide messenger and postal station system named Ortoo within the Mongol Empire During the Yuan Dynasty under Kublai Khan this system also covered the territory of China Postal stations were used not only for the transmission and delivery of official mail but were also available for travelling officials military men and foreign dignitaries These stations aided and facilitated the transport of foreign and domestic tribute specifically and the conduct of trade in general By the end of Kublai Khan s rule there were more than 1400 postal stations in China alone which in turn had at their disposal about 50 000 horses 1 400 oxen 6 700 mules 400 carts 6 000 boats more than 200 dogs and 1 150 sheep 32 The stations were 25 to 65 km 16 to 40 mi apart and had reliable attendants working for the mail service Foreign observers such as Marco Polo have attested to the efficiency of this early postal system 32 Each station was maintained by up to twenty five families Work for postal service counted as military service The system was still operational in 18th century when 64 stations were required for a message to cross Mongolia from the Altai Mountains to China 33 Japan edit The modern Japanese system was developed in the mid 19th century closely copying European models Japan was highly innovative in developing the world s largest and most successful postal savings system and later a postal life insurance system as well Postmasters play a key role in linking the Japanese political system to local politics The postmasters are high prestige and are often hereditary 34 To a large extent the postal system generated the enormous funding necessary to rapidly industrialize Japan in the late 19th century 35 Other systems edit nbsp An example of a main post office building in Krakow Poland nbsp Delivery by bicycle in GermanyAnother important postal service was created in the Islamic world by the caliph Mu awiyya the service was called barid for the name of the towers built to protect the roads by which couriers travelled 36 By 3000 BC Egypt was using homing pigeons for pigeon post taking advantage of a singular quality of this bird which when taken far from its nest is able to find its way home due to a particularly developed sense of orientation Messages were then tied around the legs of the pigeon which was freed and could reach its original nest By the 19th century homing pigeons were used extensively for military communications 37 Charlemagne extended to the whole territory of his empire the system used by Franks in northern Gaul and connected this service with that of missi dominici 38 failed verification In the mid 11th century flax traders known as the Cairo Geniza Merchants from Fustat Egypt wrote about using a postal service known as the kutubi The kutubi system managed routes between the cities of Jerusalem Ramla Tyre Ascalon Damascus Aleppo and Fustat with year round regular mail delivery 39 Many religious orders had a private mail service Notably the Cistercians had one which connected more than 6 000 abbeys monasteries and churches The best organization however was created by the Knights Templar 40 failed verification In 1716 Correos y Telegrafos was established in Spain as public mail service available to all citizens Delivery postmen were first employed in 1756 and post boxes were installed firstly in 1762 41 Thurn und Taxis edit In 1505 Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I established a postal system in the Empire appointing Franz von Taxis to run it This system originally the Kaiserliche Reichspost is often considered the first modern postal service in the world which initiated a revolution in communication in Europe 42 43 44 The system combined contemporary technical and organization means to create a stable transcontinental service which was also the first to offer fee based public access 45 46 47 48 The Thurn und Taxis family then known as Tassis had operated postal services between Italian city states from 1290 onward nbsp Postmaster Anselm Franz 2nd Prince of Thurn and Taxis 1681 1739 still today part of the logo of the Whitepages in many countriesFor 500 years the postal business based in Brussels and in Frankfurt was passed from one generation to another Following the abolition of the Empire in 1806 the Thurn und Taxis Post system continued as a private organization into the postage stamp era before being absorbed into the postal system of the new German Empire after 1871 nbsp Postmaster Maximilian Karl 6th Prince of Thurn and Taxis 1802 1871 last Postmaster1867 July 1 the State of Prussia had to make a compensation payment of 3 000 000 Thalers reinvested by Helene von Thurn amp Taxis daughter in law of the last postmaster Maximilian Karl 6th Prince of Thurn and Taxis into real estate most of it continuing to exist today The Phone Book of the World has its roots in the long history of the avant garde telecommunications family Thurn amp Taxis 49 unreliable source The directory is the result of Johannes 11th Prince of Thurn amp Taxis transmitting PTT culture to a student and helping with the opening of a small Telephone Boutique next to a historic Postal mansion his ancestors used to go to centuries earlier 50 unreliable source nbsp Johannes 11th Prince of Thurn amp Taxis 1926 1990 heir of the Postal fortuneSeveral European Post Carriers like Deutsche Post or Osterreichische Post continue to use the Thurn amp Taxis Post Horn in their company logo just like the global Phone Book of the World based in the old Postal mansion of King Louis XIV in Paris 51 unreliable source Postal reforms edit nbsp The Penny Black the world s first postage stampSee also Uniform Fourpenny Post and Uniform Penny Post In the United Kingdom prior to 1840 letters were paid for by the recipient and the cost was determined by the distance from sender to recipient and the number of sheets of paper rather than by a countrywide flat rate with weight restrictions Sir Rowland Hill reformed the postal system based on the concepts of penny postage and prepayment 52 In his proposal Hill also called for official pre printed envelopes and adhesive postage stamps as alternative ways of getting the sender to pay for the postage at a time when prepayment was optional which led to the invention of the postage stamp the Penny Black Modern transport and technology edit nbsp The first airmail flight in Germany 1912 The postal system was important in the development of modern transportation Railways carried railway post offices During the 20th century air mail became the transport of choice for inter continental mail Postmen started to use mail trucks The handling of mail became increasingly automated The Internet came to change the conditions for physical mail Email and in recent years social networking sites became a fierce competitor to physical mail systems but online auctions and Internet shopping opened new business opportunities as people often get items bought online through the mail Modern mail editModern mail is organized by national and privatized services which are reciprocally connected by international regulations organizations and international agreements Paper letters and parcels can be sent to almost any country in the world relatively easily and cheaply The Internet has made the process of sending letter like messages nearly instantaneous and in many cases and situations correspondents use email where they previously would have used letters The volume of paper mail sent through the U S Postal Service has declined by more than 15 since its peak at 213 billion pieces per annum in 2006 53 54 Organization edit Some countries have organized their mail services as public limited liability corporations without a legal monopoly The worldwide postal system constituting the individual national postal systems of the world s self governing states is coordinated by the Universal Postal Union which among other things sets international postage rates defines standards for postage stamps and operates the system of international reply coupons In most countries a system of codes has been created referred to as ZIP codes in the United States postcodes in the United Kingdom and Australia eircodes in Ireland and postal codes in most other countries in order to facilitate the automation of operations This also includes placing additional marks on the address portion of the letter or mailed object called bar coding Bar coding of mail for delivery is usually expressed either by a series of vertical bars usually called POSTNET coding or a block of dots as a two dimensional barcode The block of dots method allows for the encoding of proof of payment of postage exact routing for delivery and other features nbsp An automated postal machineThe ordinary mail service was improved in the 20th century with the use of planes for a quicker delivery The world s first scheduled airmail post service took place in the United Kingdom between the London suburbs of Hendon and Windsor Berkshire on 9 September 1911 55 Some methods of airmail proved ineffective however including the United States Postal Service s experiment with rocket mail Receipt services were made available in order to grant the sender a confirmation of effective delivery Payment edit Before about the mid nineteenth century in regions where postal systems existed the payment models varied but most mail was sent unpaid requiring the recipient to pay the postage fee In some regions a partial payment was made by the sender Today worldwide the most common method of prepaying postage is by buying an adhesive postage stamp to be applied to the envelope before mailing a much less common method is to use a postage prepaid envelope Franking is a method of creating postage prepaid envelopes under licence using a special machine They are used by companies with large mail programs such as banks and direct mail companies In 1998 the U S Postal Service authorised the first tests of a secure system of sending digital franks via the Internet to be printed out on a PC printer obviating the necessity to license a dedicated franking machine and allowing companies with smaller mail programs to make use of the option this was later expanded to test the use of personalized postage The service provided by the U S Postal Service in 2003 allows the franks to be printed out on special adhesive backed labels In 2004 the Royal Mail in the United Kingdom introduced its SmartStamp Internet based system allowing printing on ordinary adhesive labels or envelopes Similar systems are being considered by postal administrations around the world When the pre paid envelope or package is accepted into the mail by an agent of the postal service the agent usually indicates by means of a cancellation that it is no longer valid for pre payment of postage The exceptions are when the agent forgets or neglects to cancel the mailpiece for stamps that are pre cancelled and thus do not require cancellation and for in most cases metered mail The personalized stamps authorized by the USPS and manufactured by Zazzle and other companies are in fact a form of meter label and thus do not need to be cancelled Privacy and censorship edit Main article Postal censorship nbsp The Steamboat mobile steaming equipment used by Czech StB for unsticking of envelopes during correspondence surveillanceDocuments should generally not be read by anyone other than the addressee for example in the United States of America it is a violation of federal law for anyone other than the addressee and the government to open mail 56 There are exceptions however executives often assign secretaries or assistants the task of handling their mail and postcards do not require opening and can be read by anyone For mail contained within an envelope there are legal provisions in some jurisdictions allowing the recording of identities of sender and recipient 57 The privacy of correspondence is guaranteed by the constitutions of Mexico Colombia Brazil and Venezuela and is alluded to in the European Convention on Human Rights 58 and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights 57 The control of the contents inside private citizens mail is censorship and concerns social political and legal aspects of civil rights International mail and packages are subject to customs control with the mail and packages often surveyed and their contents sometimes edited out or even in citation needed There have been cases over the millennia of governments opening and copying or photographing the contents of private mail 57 59 Subject to the laws in the relevant jurisdiction correspondence may be openly or covertly opened or the contents determined via some other method by the police or other authorities in some cases relating to a suspected criminal conspiracy although black chambers largely in the past though there is apparently some continuance of their use today opened extralegally The mail service may be allowed to open the mail if neither addressee nor sender can be located in order to attempt to locate either Mail service may also open the mail to inspect if it contains materials that are hazardous to transport or violate local laws While in most cases mail censorship is exceptional military mail to and from soldiers is often subject to surveillance 60 The mail is censored to prevent leaking tactical secrets such as troop movements or weather conditions 60 Depending on the country civilian mail containing military secrets can also be monitored and censored 60 Mail sent to and from inmates in jails or prisons within the United States is subject to opening and review by jail or prison staff to determine if the mail has any criminal action dictated or provides means for an escape The only mail that is not able to be read is attorney client mail which is covered under the attorney client confidentiality laws in the United States 61 Rise of electronic correspondence edit Modern alternatives such as the telegraph telephone telex facsimile and email have reduced the attractiveness of paper mail for many applications These modern alternatives have some advantages in addition to their speed they may be more secure e g because the general public cannot learn the address of the sender or recipient from the envelope and occasionally traditional items of mail may fail to arrive e g due to vandalism to mailboxes unfriendly pets and adverse weather conditions Mail carriers due to perceived hazards or inconveniences may refuse officially or otherwise to deliver mail to a particular address for instance if there is no clear path to the door or mailbox On the other hand traditional mail avoids the possibility of computer malfunctions and malware and the recipient does not need to print it out if they wish to have a paper copy though scanning is required to make a digital copy Physical mail is still widely used in business and personal communications for such reasons as legal requirements for signatures requirements of etiquette and the requirement to enclose small physical objects Since the advent of email which is almost always much faster the postal system has come to be referred to in Internet slang by the retronym snail mail Occasionally the term white mail has also been used as a neutral term for postal mail Mainly during the 20th century experimentation with hybrid mail has combined electronic and paper delivery Electronic mechanisms include telegram telex facsimile fax email and short message service SMS There have been methods which have combined mail and some of these newer methods such as temporary emails that combine facsimile transmission with overnight delivery 62 63 These vehicles commonly use a mechanical or electro mechanical standardised writing typing that on the one hand makes for more efficient communication while on the other hand makes impossible characteristics and practices that traditionally were in conventional mail such as calligraphy This epoch when is undoubtedly mainly dominated by mechanical writing with a general use of no more of half a dozen standard typographic fonts from standard keyboards However the increased use of typewritten or computer printed letters for personal communication and the advent of email have sparked renewed interest in calligraphy as a letter has become more of a special event Long before email and computer printed letters however decorated envelopes rubber stamps and artistamps formed part of the medium of mail art 64 In the 2000s decade with the advent of eBay and other online auction sites and online stores postal services in industrialized nations have seen a major shift to item shipping This has been seen as a boost to the system s usage in the wake of lower paper mail volume due to the accessibility of email Online post offices have emerged to give recipients a means of receiving traditional correspondence mail in a scanned electronic format Collecting edit nbsp Le Philateliste by Francois Barraud 1929 Postage stamps are also object of a particular form of collecting Stamp collecting has been a very popular hobby In some cases when demand greatly exceeds supply their commercial value on this specific market may become enormously greater than face value even after use For some postal services the sale of stamps to collectors who will never use them is a significant source of revenue for example stamps from Tokelau South Georgia amp South Sandwich Islands Tristan da Cunha Niuafoʻou and many others Stamp collecting is commonly known as philately although strictly the latter term refers to the study of stamps Another form of collecting regards postcards a document written on a single robust sheet of paper usually decorated with photographic pictures or artistic drawings on one of the sides and short messages on a small part of the other side that also contained the space for the address In strict philatelic usage the postcard is to be distinguished from the postal card which has a pre printed postage on the card The fact that this communication is visible by other than the receiver often causes the messages to be written in jargon Letters are often studied as an example of literature and also in biography in the case of a famous person A portion of the New Testament of the Bible is composed of the Apostle Paul s epistles to Christian congregations in various parts of the Roman Empire See below for a list of famous letters A style of writing called epistolary tells a fictional story in the form of the correspondence between two or more characters A makeshift mail method after stranding on a deserted island is a message in a bottle Deregulation edit nbsp In the United States private companies such as FedEx and UPS compete with the federal government s United States Postal Service particularly for package delivery Different mailboxes are also provided for local and express service The USPS has a legal monopoly on First Class and Standard Mail delivery Numerous countries including Sweden 1 January 1993 65 66 New Zealand 1998 and 2003 Germany 2005 and 2007 Argentina and Chile opened up the postal services market to new entrants In the case of New Zealand Post Limited this included from 2003 its right to be the sole New Zealand postal administration member of the Universal Postal Union thus the ending of its monopoly on stamps bearing the name New Zealand Types editLetters edit nbsp Pillar boxes on the island of Madeira Portugal 1st class mail in blue and 2nd class in red Letter sized mail constitutes the bulk of the contents sent through most postal services These are usually documents printed on A4 210 297 mm Letter sized 8 5 11 inches or smaller paper and placed in envelopes Handwritten correspondence while once a major means of communications between distant people is now used less frequently 67 due to the advent of more immediate forms of communication such as the telephone or email Traditional letters however are often considered to hark back to a simpler time and are still used when someone wishes to be deliberate and thoughtful about their communication An example would be a letter of sympathy to a bereaved person Bills and invoices are often sent through the mail like regular billing correspondence from utility companies and other service providers These letters often contain a self addressed envelope that allows the receiver to remit payment back to the company easily While still very common many people now opt to use online bill payment services which eliminate the need to receive bills through the mail Paperwork for the confirmation of large financial transactions is often sent through the mail Many tax documents are as well New credit cards and their corresponding personal identification numbers are sent to their owners through the mail The card and number are usually mailed separately several days or weeks apart for security reasons Bulk mail is mail that is prepared for bulk mailing often by presorting and processing at reduced rates It is often used in direct marketing and other advertising mail although it has other uses as well The senders of these messages sometimes purchase lists of addresses which are sometimes targeted towards certain demographics and then send letters advertising their product or service to all recipients Other times commercial solicitations are sent by local companies advertising local products like a restaurant delivery service advertising to their delivery area or a retail store sending their weekly advertising circular to a general area Bulk mail is also often sent to companies existing subscriber bases advertising new products or services First Class edit First Class Mail in the U S includes postcards letters large envelopes flats and small packages providing each piece weighs 13 ounces 370 g or less Delivery is given priority over second class newspapers and magazines third class bulk advertisements and fourth class mail books and media packages First Class Mail prices are based on both the shape and weight of the item being mailed Pieces over 13 ounces can be sent as Priority Mail 68 As of 2011 42 of First Class Mail arrived the next day 27 in two days and 31 in three The USPS expected that changes to the service in 2012 would cause about 51 to arrive in two days and most of the rest in three 69 The Canada Post counterpart is Lettermail 70 The British Royal Mail s 1st Class as it is styled is simply a priority option over 2nd Class at a slightly higher cost Royal Mail aims but does not guarantee to deliver all 1st Class letters the day after posting 71 In Austria priority delivery mail is called Prio in Switzerland A Post 72 Registered and recorded mail edit Further information Registered mail nbsp Multi franked registered mail from Crete using Greek stamps during the Union with Greece to Egypt in 1914 showing numbered registration labelRegistered mail allows the location and in particular the correct delivery of a letter to be tracked It is usually considerably more expensive than regular mail and is typically used for valuable items Registered mail is constantly tracked through the system Recorded mail is handled just like ordinary mail with the exception that it has to be signed for on receipt This is useful for legal documents where proof of delivery is required In the United Kingdom recorded delivery mail branded as signed for by the Royal Mail is covered by The Recorded Delivery Services Act 1962 Under this legislation any document which its relevant law requires service by registered post 73 can also be lawfully served by recorded delivery Repositionable notes edit The United States Postal Service introduced a test allowing repositionable notes for example 3M s Post it notes to be attached to the outside of envelopes and bulk mailings 74 afterwards extending the test for an unspecified period 75 The repositionable note may be fixed directly to the address side of First Class Mail and Standard Mail letter size mailpieces These mailpieces must meet the standards in 7 2 through 7 6 The note is included as an integral part of the mailpiece for weight and postage rate and must be accounted for in pricing Postal cards and postcards edit Postal cards and postcards are small message cards that are sent by mail unenveloped the distinction often though not invariably and reliably drawn between them is that postal cards are issued by the postal authority or entity with the postal indicia or stamp preprinted on them while postcards are privately issued and require affixing an adhesive stamp though there have been some cases of a postal authority s issuing non stamped postcards Postcards are often printed to promote tourism with pictures of resorts tourist attractions or humorous messages on the front and allowing for a short message from the sender to be written on the back The postage required for postcards is generally less than postage required for standard letters however certain technicalities such as their being oversized or having cut outs 76 may result in payment of the first class rate being required Postcards are also used by magazines for new subscriptions Inside many magazines are postage paid subscription cards that a reader can fill out and mail back to the publishing company to be billed for a subscription to the magazine In this fashion magazines also use postcards for other purposes including reader surveys contests or information requests Postcards are sometimes sent by charities to their members with a message to be signed and sent to a politician e g to promote fair trade or third world debt cancellation Other mail services edit nbsp This antique letter box style U S mailbox is both on display and in use at the Smithsonian Institution Building Small packets are usually less than 2 kg 4 lb Larger envelopes are also sent through the mail These are often composed of a stronger material than standard envelopes and are often used by businesses to transport documents that may not be folded or damaged such as legal documents and contracts Due to their size larger envelopes are sometimes charged additional postage Packages are often sent through some postal services usually requiring additional postage than an average letter or postcard Many postal services have limitations as to what a package may or may not contain usually placing limits or bans on perishable hazardous or flammable materials Some hazardous materials in limited quantities may be shipped with appropriate markings and packaging like an ORM D label Additionally as a result of terrorism concerns the U S Postal Service subjects their packages to numerous security tests often scanning or x raying packages for materials that might be found in biological materials or mail bombs Newspapers and magazines are also sent through postal services Many magazines are simply placed in the mail normally but in the U S they are printed with a special bar code that acts as pre paid postage see POSTNET but many are now shipped in shrinkwrap to protect the loose contents of the magazine During the second half of the 19th century and the first half of the 20th century newspapers and magazines were normally posted using wrappers with a stamp imprint Hybrid mail sometimes referred to as L mail is the electronic lodgement of mail from the mail generator s computer directly to a Postal Service provider The Postal Service provider is then able to use electronic means to have the mail piece sorted routed and physically produced at a site closest to the delivery point It is a type of mail growing in popularity with some Post Office operations and individual businesses venturing into this market In some countries these services are available to print and deliver emails to those who are unable to receive email such as the elderly or infirm Services provided by Hybrid mail providers are closely related to that of mail forwarding service providers See also editSee Category Postal organizations examples being Deutsche Post DHL Group Germany La Poste France Poste Italiane Italy Royal Mail British Post Office Limited British United States Postal ServiceExpress mail EPPML Parcel package Shipping insurance Universal Postal Union List of postal entities Components of a postal system Fire sign address Letter box Mail carrier Mail bag Mail train Packstation Post box Post office Post office box Postage rate Postal codeNotes edit In Australia Canada and the U S the term mail is commonly used for the postal system and for the letters postcards and parcels it carries in New Zealand post is more common for the postal system and mail for the material delivered in the UK post prevails in both senses However the British American Australian and Canadian national postal services are called respectively the Royal Mail the United States Postal Service Australia Post and Canada Post in addition such fixed phrases as post office or junk mail are found throughout the English speaking world mail n 2 Dictionary com Unabridged v 1 1 ed 2007 Archived from the original on 2007 02 19 Webster s Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary G amp C Merriam Company 1963 pp 662 63 email n 2 OED Online Oxford University Press 2019 Bauer Patricia 31 December 2018 Ray Tomlinson Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on 12 March 2017 Retrieved 22 January 2020 Radden Gunter Dirven Rene 1 January 2007 Cognitive English Grammar John Benjamins Publishing p 4 ISBN 978 1556196638 Archived from the original on 14 April 2023 Retrieved March 1 2017 via Google Books Fraser s Magazine for Town and Country 1843 p 662 Archived from the original on 2023 04 14 Retrieved 2016 02 16 Snail Mail Life November 22 1968 p NY3 Archived from the original on April 14 2023 Retrieved March 1 2017 via Google Books Altaweel Mark Andrea Squitieri 2018 Long Distance Trade and Economy before and during the Age of Empires Revolutionizing a World From Small States to Universalism in the Pre Islamic Near East University College London Press p 177 doi 10 2307 j ctt21c4td4 10 ISBN 978 1 911576 65 5 JSTOR j ctt21c4td4 10 Archived from the original on 2022 01 21 Retrieved 2022 01 21 About UPU History Universal Postal Union 2 October 2013 Archived from the original on 10 January 2022 Retrieved 10 January 2022 Herodotus Herodotus trans A D Godley vol 4 book 8 verse 98 pp 96 97 1924 First Issues Collectors Club of stamps and philatelic material Archived from the original on 2012 09 04 Retrieved 2007 07 28 First Issues Collectors Club retrieved 25 September Dorn 2006 145 Prasad 2003 104 Mazumdar 1990 1 Aiyangar 2004 302 Lowe 1951 134 Tran Lanh Lịch sử Bưu điện Việt Nam Hanh trinh từ thời Nguyễn đến thời Phap thuộc VietNamNet News in Vietnamese Retrieved 2023 12 28 Lịch sử Bưu điện Việt Nam Hanh trinh từ thời Nguyễn đến thời Phap thuộc lamdong gov vn Retrieved 2023 12 28 Lịch sử Bưu điện Việt Nam Hanh trinh từ thời Nguyễn đến thời Phap thuộc 2022 08 25 Retrieved 2023 12 28 Tran Lanh Lịch sử Bưu điện Việt Nam Hanh trinh từ thời Nguyễn đến thời Phap thuộc VietNamNet News in Vietnamese Retrieved 2023 12 28 70 năm truyền thống của Nganh Bưu điện Những dấu ấn lịch sử dangcongsan vn Retrieved 2023 12 28 Kỷ niệm 75 năm Ngay truyền thống nganh Bưu điện hcmcpv org vn Retrieved 2023 12 28 Cong tac thong tin lien lạc từ sau Cach mạng thang 8 năm 1945 đến năm 1954 hanoi vnpt vn Retrieved 2023 12 28 Trần Lanh 2021 08 15 Nhật Minh Expresss thanhnien vn in Vietnamese Retrieved 2023 12 28 ictvietnam vn 2015 11 03 70 năm Nganh Bưu điện Việt Nam Thong tin lien lạc trong 9 năm khang chiến chống thực dan Phap Tạp chi điện tử Thong tin va Truyền thong in Vietnamese Retrieved 2023 12 28 Dấu mốc nganh Bưu điện từ thời khang chiến đến thời tach quản ly nha nước va kinh doanh Retrieved 2023 12 28 Nganh TT amp TT Tiếp bước cội nguồn Khởi tạo tương lai lamdong gov vn Retrieved 2023 12 28 Lịch sử 70 năm phat triển của nganh GTVT Việt Nam mt gov vn Retrieved 2023 12 28 Chelsea Zi Wang More Haste Less Speed Sources of Friction in the Ming Postal System Late Imperial China 40 2 2019 89 140 Lane J Harris Stumbling towards empire the Shanghai Local Post Office the transnational British community and informal empire in China 1863 97 Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 46 3 2018 418 445 a b Mote 1978 450 Weatherford Jack 2004 Genghis Khan and the Making of the Modern World Patricia L Maclachlan The people s post office The history and politics of the Japanese postal system 1871 2010 Brill 2012 Sheldon Garon Beyond Our Means Why America Spends While the World Saves 2012 pp 143 67 Silverstein Adam 2006 Post or Barid In Meri Josef W ed Medieval Islamic Civilization An Encyclopedia Volume 2 L Z Index Leiden and New York Routledge pp 631 632 ISBN 0 415 96692 2 Carter W Clarke Signal Corps Pigeons The Military Engineer 25 140 1933 133 138 Online Archived 2020 02 29 at the Wayback Machine Francois L Ganshof The impact of Charlemagne on the institutions of the Frankish realm Speculum 40 1 1965 47 62 Online Archived 2020 07 27 at the Wayback Machine Goldberg Jessica Trade and Institutions in the Medieval Mediterranean The Geniza Merchants and Their Business World Cambridge University Press 2012 189 193 Marco Mostert New approaches to medieval communication in New approaches to medieval communication 1999 pp 15 37 Alvaro Escribano Patricia Gonzalez and Julio Lasheras Evolution and Analysis of the Market Structure of Postal Services in Spain in Competitive Transformation of the Postal and Delivery Sector Springer 2003 pp 287 309 Metzig Gregor 21 November 2016 Kommunikation und Konfrontation Diplomatie und Gesandtschaftswesen Kaiser Maximilians I 1486 1519 in German Walter de Gruyter GmbH amp Co KG pp 98 99 ISBN 978 3 11 045673 8 Retrieved 7 February 2022 Meinel Christoph Sack Harald 2014 Digital Communication Communication Multimedia Security Springer Science amp Business Media p 31 ISBN 9783642543319 Archived from the original on 26 September 2021 Retrieved 20 September 2021 Pavlac Brian A Lott Elizabeth S 1 June 2019 The Holy Roman Empire A Historical Encyclopedia 2 volumes ABC CLIO p 255 ISBN 978 1 4408 4856 8 Retrieved 7 February 2022 Stollberg Rilinger Barbara 11 May 2021 The Holy Roman Empire A Short History Princeton University Press pp 46 47 ISBN 978 0 691 21731 4 Retrieved 24 February 2022 Rossum Gerhard Dohrn van Dohrn Gerhard 1996 History of the Hour Clocks and Modern Temporal Orders University of Chicago Press p 336 ISBN 978 0 226 15511 1 Retrieved 24 February 2022 Fang Irving E 2008 Alphabet to Internet Mediated Communication in Our Lives Rada Press p 2008 ISBN 978 1 933011 90 5 Retrieved 14 March 2022 Thurn and Taxis postal system European history Britannica www britannica com Thurn amp Taxis pushing a comeback of Telecom activities in Paris next to the last still existing historic Postal mansion Archived from the original on 2021 02 27 Retrieved 2022 01 12 The Paris Hotel de la Poste VB mansion connecting point of the Post in the Bourbon territories and operated by the Pajot amp Rouille family and the Post in the Habsburg territories operated by the Thurn amp Taxis family Archived from the original on 2021 02 27 Retrieved 2022 01 12 Phone Book of the World using the Thurn amp Taxis Posthorn in the company logo Archived from the original on 2021 10 17 Retrieved 2022 01 12 Rowland Hill s Postal Reforms The British Postal Museum amp Archive Archived from the original on 22 January 2023 Retrieved 22 January 2023 USPS volume report by The Boston Consulting Group on USPS public website PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2015 10 25 Retrieved 2019 09 02 First Class Mail Volume 1926 2010 Archived 2012 01 14 at the Wayback Machine Baldwin N C 1960 p 5 Fifty Years of British Air Mails Francis J Field Ltd United States Code Title 18 1702 Obstruction of correspondence Legal Information Institute of Cornell University Law School Archived from the original on September 4 2010 Retrieved September 14 2010 a b c Back when spies played by the rules Archived 2007 03 11 at the Wayback Machine Deccan Herald January 17 2006 Retrieved 29 December 2006 Article 8 1 Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life his home and his correspondence European Convention on Human Rights PDF Archived PDF from the original on 2009 01 04 Retrieved 2007 01 18 179 KB CIA Intelligence Collection About Americans Archived 2008 12 27 at the Wayback Machine 400 KB download a b c History comes to life with censored covers Linns Stamp News Archived from the original on 2022 10 28 Retrieved 2022 10 28 A Blind Spot in Attorney Client Confidentiality www americanbar org Archived from the original on 2022 07 01 Retrieved 2022 07 01 Significant Years in U S Postal History United States Postal Service 2015 Archived from the original on 27 February 2015 Retrieved 13 May 2015 Treaties Postal Matters United States Embassy Bulgaria 25 June 1990 Archived from the original on 19 September 2015 Retrieved 13 May 2015 Kordic Angie How Did Mail Art Develop into a Global Art Movement Widewalls Widewalls Modern amp Contemporary Art Source Retrieved 24 June 2023 City Mail Sweden Archived 2005 07 30 at archive today Frycklund Jonas Private Mail in Sweden Cato Journal Vol 13 No 1 1993 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2007 01 29 511 KB Coleman John 2013 04 05 Handwritten Notes Are a Rare Commodity They re Also More Important Than Ever Harvard Business Review ISSN 0017 8012 Archived from the original on 2019 05 29 Retrieved 2019 05 29 First Class Mail USPS Archived from the original on 2011 10 15 Retrieved 2009 01 09 Postal service cuts mean slower mail in 2012 CBS News Associated Press 2011 12 05 Archived from the original on 8 October 2013 Retrieved 8 July 2013 Lettermail Canada Post Archived from the original on 2018 04 23 Retrieved 2018 04 22 Sending Mail Royal Mail Archived from the original on 2018 04 23 Retrieved 2018 04 22 Comparison of services Swiss Post Archived from the original on 2022 05 29 Retrieved 2022 05 31 for example documents served under The Law of Property Act 1925 Postal Service Helps Businesses Stick to their Message 2005 04 05 Archived from the original on 2007 09 29 Retrieved 2007 07 17 Marketing Notes Extended for Additional Year U S Postal Service Governors Issue Decision on Repositionable Notes 2007 07 06 Archived from the original on 2007 07 11 Retrieved 2007 07 17 Cut Out Postcard Postage Due Members aol com Archived from the original on 2006 03 09 Retrieved 2008 10 24 Further reading editAiyangar Sakkottai Krishnaswami S Krishnaswami A 2004 Ancient India Collected Essays on the Literary and Political History of Southern India Asian Educational Services ISBN 978 0 8018 8359 0 Almasi Gabor 2010 Humanistic Letter Writing Mainz Institute of European History Dorn Harold MacClellan James E 2006 Science and Technology in World History An Introduction Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 8359 0 Daunton M J Royal Mail The Post Office Since 1840 Athlone 1985 Great Britain Heaton J Henniker 1905 Imperial Postal Services The Empire and the century London John Murray pp 288 317 Hemmeon Joseph Clarence The history of the British post office Harvard University Press 1912 online John Richard R Spreading the News The American Postal System from Franklin to Morse 1995 excerpt Le Roux Muriel et al eds A Concise History of the French Post Office From Its Origins to the Present Time 2018 Lowe Robson 1951 Encyclopedia of British Empire Postage Stamps v III London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Mazumdar Mohini Lal 1990 The Imperial Post Offices of British India Calcutta Phila Publications Mote Frederick W John K Fairbank 1998 The Cambridge History of China Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 24333 9 Prasad Prakash Chandra 2003 Foreign Trade and Commerce in Ancient India Abhinav Publications ISBN 978 81 7017 053 2 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Mail nbsp Look up mail or post in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Postal service nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Post A Hundred Years by Post by J Wilson Hyde Potts Albert US19 578 First U S street mailbox patent US patent office 1858 The British Postal Museum amp Archive From Thurn amp Taxis to Phone Book of the World 7 centuries of Telecom History Royal Engineers Museum British Army Postal Services History James Meek London Review of Books 28 April 2011 In the Sorting Office 33 9 U S National Postal Museum a part of the Smithsonian Institution Universal Postal Union a part of the United Nations Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mail amp oldid 1195964592, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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