Basel Dove: Difference between revisions

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Corrected mixed tenses. Also tidied, tightened and arranged paras in a more logical order
 
imported>Squawk7700
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{{Short description|Swiss postage stamp, world's first tricolor stamp}}
{{Short description|Rare Swiss postage stamp, world's first tricolor stamp}}
{{Infobox rare stamps   
{{Infobox rare stamps   
|  common_name            =  Basel Dove
|  common_name            =  Basel Dove
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The '''Basel Dove''' ([[Basel German]]: ''Basler Dybli'', {{Langx|de|Basler Taube}}) is a notable stamp issued by the [[Switzerland|Swiss]] [[Basel (canton)|canton of Basel]] on 1 July 1845<ref name="hertsch">Hertsch, Max. ''Famous Stamps of the World''. Berne: Hallwag Ltd., 1968, p.12.</ref> with a value of 2½-rappen. The stamp was printed in black, crimson and blue and was the first tricolor stamp in the world and the only postage stamp issued by Basel.  
The '''Basel Dove''' ([[Basel German]]: ''Basler Dybli'', {{Langx|de|Basler Taube}}) is a notable stamp issued by the [[Switzerland|Swiss]] [[Basel (canton)|canton of Basel]] on 1 July 1845<ref name="hertsch">Hertsch, Max. ''Famous Stamps of the World''. Berne: Hallwag Ltd., 1968, p.12.</ref> with a value of 2½-rappen. The stamp was printed in black, crimson and blue and was the first tricolor stamp in the world and the only postage stamp issued by Basel.  


The stamp, designed by the architect [[Melchior Berri]], featured a white [[Embossing (paper)|embossed]] dove carrying a letter in its beak, and was inscribed "STADT POST BASEL".<ref name="hertsch"/> It was valid for use until 30 September 1854, by which time 41,480 stamps had been printed.<ref>http://www.swiss-philately.co.uk/stamps_cantonal_basel.html {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120315162620/http://www.swiss-philately.co.uk/stamps_cantonal_basel.html |date=2012-03-15 }} Retrieved 26 August 2009.</ref>
The stamp, designed by the architect [[Melchior Berri]], featured a white [[Embossing (paper)|embossed]] dove carrying a letter in its beak, and was inscribed {{lang|de|STADT POST BASEL}} ("City Post Office Basel").<ref name="hertsch"/> It was valid for use until 30 September 1854, by which time 41,480 stamps had been printed.<ref>http://www.swiss-philately.co.uk/stamps_cantonal_basel.html {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120315162620/http://www.swiss-philately.co.uk/stamps_cantonal_basel.html |date=2012-03-15 }} Retrieved 26 August 2009.</ref>


At the time, each [[Cantons of Switzerland|canton]] was responsible for its own postal service.  There were no uniform postal rates for Switzerland until after the establishment of a countrywide postal service on 1 January 1849. The only other cantons to issue their own stamps were [[Canton of Zürich|Zürich]] and [[Canton of Geneva|Geneva]].
At the time, each [[Cantons of Switzerland|canton]] was responsible for its own postal service.  There were no uniform postal rates for Switzerland until after the establishment of a countrywide postal service on 1 January 1849. The only other cantons to issue their own stamps were [[Canton of Zürich|Zürich]] and [[Canton of Geneva|Geneva]].

Latest revision as of 21:32, 15 June 2025

Template:Short description Template:Infobox rare stamps

The Basel Dove (Basel German: Basler Dybli, Template:Langx) is a notable stamp issued by the Swiss canton of Basel on 1 July 1845[1] with a value of 2½-rappen. The stamp was printed in black, crimson and blue and was the first tricolor stamp in the world and the only postage stamp issued by Basel.

The stamp, designed by the architect Melchior Berri, featured a white embossed dove carrying a letter in its beak, and was inscribed Script error: No such module "Lang". ("City Post Office Basel").[1] It was valid for use until 30 September 1854, by which time 41,480 stamps had been printed.[2]

At the time, each canton was responsible for its own postal service. There were no uniform postal rates for Switzerland until after the establishment of a countrywide postal service on 1 January 1849. The only other cantons to issue their own stamps were Zürich and Geneva.

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".

External links

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  1. a b Hertsch, Max. Famous Stamps of the World. Berne: Hallwag Ltd., 1968, p.12.
  2. http://www.swiss-philately.co.uk/stamps_cantonal_basel.html Template:Webarchive Retrieved 26 August 2009.