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Postage stamps and postal history of Yugoslavia

The story of the postage stamps and postal history of Yugoslavia officially begins with the formation of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes on 1 December 1918.

A 1931 stamp of Yugoslavia

Formation edit

 
Verigar issue of the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs, 1919 issued in Slovenia

Prior to the formation of the Kingdom, each of the constituent territories had their own postal systems and history. Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia-Slavonia actually issued stamps for the new regime in November, before it was formally created. In the former case the Austrian-issued pictorial stamps of 1910 were overprinted, some in Latin characters reading "DRZAVA S.H.S. / 1918 1918 / Bosna j Hercegovina" and others in their Cyrillic equivalent. In Croatia-Slavonia, stamps of Hungary overprinted with "HRVATSKA / SHS" went on sale 18 November. In Slovenia, design work began at this time, with the first stamps of the Verigar issue going on sale 3 January 1919.

Croatia-Slavonia issued their own designs of stamps in 1919 as well, using various allegorical designs. Slovenia issued additional allegorical designs in 1919, along with high values depicting King Peter I.

First stamps edit

The first stamps intended for use throughout the kingdom were issued 16 January 1921.[1] The lower values depicted Crown Prince Alexander, and the higher values (1 dinar and up), King Peter. In January 1923, the higher values were replaced by the image of now-King Alexander. Variations on the design appeared in issues of 1924 (different portrait) and 1926 (facing right instead of left, typographed instead of engraved).

Yugoslavia edit

The name of the state was changed to "Kingdom of Yugoslavia" on 3 October 1929. In 1931, a new series was the first to be inscribed "JUGOSLAVIA". The old series of 1926 was also overprinted with the new name, in 1933. Just a week after Alexander's assassination in 1934, the 1931 issues were re-issued with black borders, and in 1935, the first anniversary of his death was marked by an issue of five stamps. In the meantime, new definitives depicted the young King Peter II.

In 1936, Serbian-American inventor Nikola Tesla, honored on his 80th birthday, became the first non-royal on a Yugoslavian stamp.

A new definitive series of 1939 showed an older Peter II; it would be the last series issued by the kingdom.

World War II edit

During the occupations of World War II, a variety of issues were in use. Slovenia was under Italian and then German occupation; the Italians overprinted Yugoslavian stamps, while the Germans overprinted Italian stamps and then in 1945 issued a series of 16 stamps depicting local scenery and inscribed "PROVINZ LAIBACH" and "LJUBLJANSKA POKRAJINA". Serbia was under German occupation, which overprinted Yugoslav stamps with "SERBIEN", and later its own stamps. Croatia became a puppet state issuing its own stamps.

Federal Yugoslavia edit

 
German occupation stamps of Serbia overpinted "Democratic Federative Yugoslavia"

Yugoslavia resumed its stamp issues in December 1944 with overprints of German occupation stamps of Serbia, followed in early 1945 by a series depicting Josip Broz Tito. In October, stamps with a different depiction of Tito were joined with view of partisans and the city of Jajce in a definitive series that would continue in use for the rest of the 1940s.

 
1946 stamp of the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia

The republic began frequent issues of pictorial and propaganda stamps from 1947 on. The definitive series of 1950 featured workers in a variety of industries, and was followed by additional stamps in different denominations and colors as late as 1955. Beginning in 1958, the definitives depicted industrial progress in various forms, with several re-issues, the last in 1966. In 1967, the 75th birthday of Tito was marked with a series of his profile, and new stamps of this design appeared until 1972.

Breakup of Yugoslavia edit

In the aftermath of the Yugoslav Wars, two of the Yugoslav republics, Serbia and Montenegro, reconstituted as the "Federal Republic of Yugoslavia" in 1992. The breakup of Yugoslavia had little effect on its stamp issues, although most were sold only to collectors; the Scott catalog stops pricing used stamps dating from 1992 and later, a practice indicating lack of evidence for postal usage.

Serbia and Montenegro edit

 
A 2005 stamp of Serbia and Montenegro

On 4 February 2003, a loose state union or confederacy, the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro, was created. On 3 April 2003, two stamps were issued with the new name of the state “Srbija i Crna Gora”. Since Montenegro had adopted the euro in 2002, stamps of the confederation were denominated in both the Serbian dinar and the euro.

Following Montenegro's declaration of independence, the confederation was dissolved in June 2006.

Istria issues edit

After the war, from 1945 to 1947, the former Italian-held Venezia Giulia was occupied by Allied Anglo-American troops (Zone “A” - the territory with the city of Trieste) and troops of the Yugoslav People's Army (Zone “B” - Istria and the Slovene Littoral). The zones of occupation were demarcated along the so-called Morgan Line. In Zone B, stamps inscribed "Istra Slovensko Primorje/Istria Littorale Sloveno" were issued in August 1945. Italy ceded most of those lands under Yugoslav administration to Yugoslavia following the Paris Peace Treaty in 1947.

Free Territory of Trieste edit

 
A stamp for Zone B of the Free territory of Trieste, 1950

The 1947 Peace Treaty established Trieste and the surrounding area as the Free Territory of Trieste, also divided into zones A and B, under Allied military administration and Yugoslav military administration, respectively. In Zone B, stamps inscribed "STT VUJA" ("Free territory of Trieste, Military Administration of the Yugoslav Army") were issued. The Free Territory was divided between Italy and Yugoslavia in 1954, with Zone B joining Yugoslavia.[citation needed]

List of definite issues of Yugoslavia edit

Definite issues[2][3]
Issue no. Issue theme Dates issued Stamp

example

Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
1 Regent Alexander and King Peter 16 January 1921  
2 King Alexander 23 January 1923 - 5 March 1924  
3 King Alexander 1 July 1924 - 5 June 1925  
4 King Alexander 25 January 1926 - 5 September 1933  
Kingdom of Yugoslavia
5 King Alexander 1 September 1931 - 4 November 1935  
6 King Peter II 6 September 1935 - 1 August 1938  
7 King Peter II 9 October 1939 - 1 November 1940  
Yugoslav government-in-exile
8 King Peter II 27 March 1943  
Democratic Federal Yugoslavia
9 Marshal Tito 21 February 1945 - 15 May 1945  
10 Partisan motives 10 October 1945 - February 1950  
Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia
11 Economy of Yugoslavia 1 September 1950 - 28 February 1955  
12 Capital cities and industry 24 March 1958 - 8 December 1976  
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
13 Marshal Tito 25 May 1967 - 13 November 1978  
14 Touristic motives 21 June 1971 - 16 April 1986  
15 Monuments of the Revolution 30 January 1974 - 1 June 1983  
16 Marshal Tito 26 March 1974 - 13 November 1978  
17 Postal traffic 17 March 1986 - 18 October 1993  
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
18 Fountains 25 March 1992 - 28 November 2002  
19 Monasteries 15 August 1994 - 19 December 2002  

See also edit

References and sources edit

References
  1. ^ Yugoslavia Stamp Atlas, Sandafayre, 2012. Retrieved 21 December 2013.
  2. ^ "Jugoslavija". Katalog poštanskih maraka jugoslovenskih zemalja. 1991. ISSN 0351-4447.
  3. ^ "Jugoslavija". Katalog poštanskih maraka Jugoslavije. 2001. ISSN 0354-7841.
Sources

Further reading edit

  • Fleck, Vladimir. Die Briefmarken von Jugoslawien. Frankfurt am Main: [Arbeitsgemeinschaft Neues Handbuch der Briefmarkenkunde], 1964 126p.
  • Fleck, Vladimir. Priručnik maraka jugoslavenskih zemalja = Manuel de timbres-poste des pays yougoslaves. Zagreb: Hrvatski filatelistički savez, 1947-1954

External links edit

  • Stamp Domain collection of links to Yugoslavian philately pages
  • Yugoslavia Stamps on Banatul.com

postage, stamps, postal, history, yugoslavia, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, book. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Postage stamps and postal history of Yugoslavia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2013 Learn how and when to remove this message You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Russian February 2015 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Russian article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 1 248 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Russian Wikipedia article at ru Istoriya pochty i pochtovyh marok Yugoslavii see its history for attribution You may also add the template Translated ru Istoriya pochty i pochtovyh marok Yugoslavii to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The story of the postage stamps and postal history of Yugoslavia officially begins with the formation of the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes on 1 December 1918 A 1931 stamp of Yugoslavia Contents 1 Formation 2 First stamps 3 Yugoslavia 4 World War II 5 Federal Yugoslavia 6 Breakup of Yugoslavia 7 Serbia and Montenegro 8 Istria issues 9 Free Territory of Trieste 10 List of definite issues of Yugoslavia 11 See also 12 References and sources 13 Further reading 14 External linksFormation edit nbsp Verigar issue of the State of Slovenes Croats and Serbs 1919 issued in Slovenia See also Postage stamps and postal history of Bosnia and Herzegovina Postage stamps and postal history of Croatia Postage stamps and postal history of Serbia and Postage stamps and postal history of Slovenia Prior to the formation of the Kingdom each of the constituent territories had their own postal systems and history Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia Slavonia actually issued stamps for the new regime in November before it was formally created In the former case the Austrian issued pictorial stamps of 1910 were overprinted some in Latin characters reading DRZAVA S H S 1918 1918 Bosna j Hercegovina and others in their Cyrillic equivalent In Croatia Slavonia stamps of Hungary overprinted with HRVATSKA SHS went on sale 18 November In Slovenia design work began at this time with the first stamps of the Verigar issue going on sale 3 January 1919 Croatia Slavonia issued their own designs of stamps in 1919 as well using various allegorical designs Slovenia issued additional allegorical designs in 1919 along with high values depicting King Peter I First stamps editThe first stamps intended for use throughout the kingdom were issued 16 January 1921 1 The lower values depicted Crown Prince Alexander and the higher values 1 dinar and up King Peter In January 1923 the higher values were replaced by the image of now King Alexander Variations on the design appeared in issues of 1924 different portrait and 1926 facing right instead of left typographed instead of engraved Yugoslavia editThe name of the state was changed to Kingdom of Yugoslavia on 3 October 1929 In 1931 a new series was the first to be inscribed JUGOSLAVIA The old series of 1926 was also overprinted with the new name in 1933 Just a week after Alexander s assassination in 1934 the 1931 issues were re issued with black borders and in 1935 the first anniversary of his death was marked by an issue of five stamps In the meantime new definitives depicted the young King Peter II In 1936 Serbian American inventor Nikola Tesla honored on his 80th birthday became the first non royal on a Yugoslavian stamp A new definitive series of 1939 showed an older Peter II it would be the last series issued by the kingdom World War II editDuring the occupations of World War II a variety of issues were in use Slovenia was under Italian and then German occupation the Italians overprinted Yugoslavian stamps while the Germans overprinted Italian stamps and then in 1945 issued a series of 16 stamps depicting local scenery and inscribed PROVINZ LAIBACH and LJUBLJANSKA POKRAJINA Serbia was under German occupation which overprinted Yugoslav stamps with SERBIEN and later its own stamps Croatia became a puppet state issuing its own stamps Federal Yugoslavia edit nbsp German occupation stamps of Serbia overpinted Democratic Federative Yugoslavia Yugoslavia resumed its stamp issues in December 1944 with overprints of German occupation stamps of Serbia followed in early 1945 by a series depicting Josip Broz Tito In October stamps with a different depiction of Tito were joined with view of partisans and the city of Jajce in a definitive series that would continue in use for the rest of the 1940s nbsp 1946 stamp of the Federal People s Republic of Yugoslavia The republic began frequent issues of pictorial and propaganda stamps from 1947 on The definitive series of 1950 featured workers in a variety of industries and was followed by additional stamps in different denominations and colors as late as 1955 Beginning in 1958 the definitives depicted industrial progress in various forms with several re issues the last in 1966 In 1967 the 75th birthday of Tito was marked with a series of his profile and new stamps of this design appeared until 1972 Breakup of Yugoslavia editIn the aftermath of the Yugoslav Wars two of the Yugoslav republics Serbia and Montenegro reconstituted as the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1992 The breakup of Yugoslavia had little effect on its stamp issues although most were sold only to collectors the Scott catalog stops pricing used stamps dating from 1992 and later a practice indicating lack of evidence for postal usage Serbia and Montenegro edit nbsp A 2005 stamp of Serbia and Montenegro On 4 February 2003 a loose state union or confederacy the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro was created On 3 April 2003 two stamps were issued with the new name of the state Srbija i Crna Gora Since Montenegro had adopted the euro in 2002 stamps of the confederation were denominated in both the Serbian dinar and the euro Following Montenegro s declaration of independence the confederation was dissolved in June 2006 Istria issues editAfter the war from 1945 to 1947 the former Italian held Venezia Giulia was occupied by Allied Anglo American troops Zone A the territory with the city of Trieste and troops of the Yugoslav People s Army Zone B Istria and the Slovene Littoral The zones of occupation were demarcated along the so called Morgan Line In Zone B stamps inscribed Istra Slovensko Primorje Istria Littorale Sloveno were issued in August 1945 Italy ceded most of those lands under Yugoslav administration to Yugoslavia following the Paris Peace Treaty in 1947 Free Territory of Trieste edit nbsp A stamp for Zone B of the Free territory of Trieste 1950 The 1947 Peace Treaty established Trieste and the surrounding area as the Free Territory of Trieste also divided into zones A and B under Allied military administration and Yugoslav military administration respectively In Zone B stamps inscribed STT VUJA Free territory of Trieste Military Administration of the Yugoslav Army were issued The Free Territory was divided between Italy and Yugoslavia in 1954 with Zone B joining Yugoslavia citation needed List of definite issues of Yugoslavia editDefinite issues 2 3 Issue no Issue theme Dates issued Stamp example Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes 1 Regent Alexander and King Peter 16 January 1921 nbsp 2 King Alexander 23 January 1923 5 March 1924 nbsp 3 King Alexander 1 July 1924 5 June 1925 nbsp 4 King Alexander 25 January 1926 5 September 1933 nbsp Kingdom of Yugoslavia 5 King Alexander 1 September 1931 4 November 1935 nbsp 6 King Peter II 6 September 1935 1 August 1938 nbsp 7 King Peter II 9 October 1939 1 November 1940 nbsp Yugoslav government in exile 8 King Peter II 27 March 1943 nbsp Democratic Federal Yugoslavia 9 Marshal Tito 21 February 1945 15 May 1945 nbsp 10 Partisan motives 10 October 1945 February 1950 nbsp Federal People s Republic of Yugoslavia 11 Economy of Yugoslavia 1 September 1950 28 February 1955 nbsp 12 Capital cities and industry 24 March 1958 8 December 1976 nbsp Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 13 Marshal Tito 25 May 1967 13 November 1978 nbsp 14 Touristic motives 21 June 1971 16 April 1986 nbsp 15 Monuments of the Revolution 30 January 1974 1 June 1983 nbsp 16 Marshal Tito 26 March 1974 13 November 1978 nbsp 17 Postal traffic 17 March 1986 18 October 1993 nbsp Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 18 Fountains 25 March 1992 28 November 2002 nbsp 19 Monasteries 15 August 1994 19 December 2002 nbsp See also editPostage stamps and postal history of Bosnia and Herzegovina Postage stamps and postal history of Croatia Postage stamps and postal history of Macedonia Postage stamps and postal history of Montenegro Postage stamps and postal history of Serbia Postage stamps and postal history of SloveniaReferences and sources editReferences Yugoslavia Stamp Atlas Sandafayre 2012 Retrieved 21 December 2013 Jugoslavija Katalog postanskih maraka jugoslovenskih zemalja 1991 ISSN 0351 4447 Jugoslavija Katalog postanskih maraka Jugoslavije 2001 ISSN 0354 7841 Sources Scott catalogue Rossiter Stuart amp John Flower The Stamp Atlas London Macdonald 1986 pp 117 119 ISBN 0 356 10862 7Further reading editFleck Vladimir Die Briefmarken von Jugoslawien Frankfurt am Main Arbeitsgemeinschaft Neues Handbuch der Briefmarkenkunde 1964 126p Fleck Vladimir Prirucnik maraka jugoslavenskih zemalja Manuel de timbres poste des pays yougoslaves Zagreb Hrvatski filatelisticki savez 1947 1954External links editStamp Domain collection of links to Yugoslavian philately pages Yugoslavia Stamps on Banatul com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Postage stamps and postal history of Yugoslavia amp oldid 1217588060, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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