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Replies: 19 / Views: 5,649 |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
2941 Posts |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
7072 Posts |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
2941 Posts |
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It was never issued. But that's only part of what makes it special.
And no, I don't on one. If only... |
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Pillar Of The Community
Canada
5821 Posts |
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Must be some sort of reprint or nachdruck ? since the date at the bottom looks like 1975 |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
2941 Posts |
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This is Saar D31. In Michel, there are some stamps that don't have a listed value because the publishers don't have enough info to set a value. But of the stamps that do have a listed catalog value...
This stamp has the highest CV in Michel's Germany Specialized catalog. MNH €250,000. |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
7072 Posts |
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This is from a Dreyfus auction in June, 2011. I didn't check to see what it realized. Quote:
SAAR Lot 69
1920 : Bavaria 20 mark brown, overprinted "SARRE" and bars, a mint example of this great rarity with fresh and fine colour, slightest of diagonal bends not apparent on face and full unmounted original gum. A very rare stamp indeed, with just 15 recorded by the Saar ArGe. Signed twice by Dr. Dub. Certificate Herbert Ney (2005). Cat. 31A
Est. 175 000 - 250 000
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Pillar Of The Community
2361 Posts |
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Valued Member
United States
252 Posts |
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A German State Bavaria Scott type A12 ovwerprinted to be issued in Saar. It is not listed under Saar, but Scott notation says, "the 20M Type A12 was also overprinted in small quatities. It did not mention that it was unissued. |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
7072 Posts |
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litho's guess might be right. The image in the 2011 catalogue has nothing at all in that location. |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
7072 Posts |
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Just for fun, here is the image from the 2011 catalogue:  I looked a bit for the auction results and didn't find it (except for the super rarities which sold at the same auction). |
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Valued Member
United States
304 Posts |
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But why, or rather, how, was a Bavarian stamp overprinted for Saar, and using the French spelling? I realize that German geography was complicated, and occasionally topologically implausible, but this is pushing things. |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
7072 Posts |
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After World War I, France and the UK managed the Saar under a League of Nations mandate. Since stamps were needed for overprinting, and Bavaria was right next door, it doesn't seem too farfetched. I could imagine the victors taking what they needed.
[edit: Also, Bavaria's independent postal system ended March 31, 1920, so the stamps were superfluous at that point. All of this is subject to correction or clarification with better information.] |
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| Edited by Cjd - 05/05/2013 12:09 am |
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Pillar Of The Community
Israel
6191 Posts |
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This is a reproduction cut-out from a Miniature sheet given away in the Saar Auction Catalogue 108 by the Arnold Ebel auction house in Frankfurt. Very nice and scarce item. If you want a scan of the sheet, just holler. Londonbus1.....  |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
2941 Posts |
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That's funny. I pulled the image directly from Michel's electronic catalog software. I guess they cheated! |
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Pillar Of The Community
Israel
6191 Posts |
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Pillar Of The Community
Israel
6191 Posts |
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The sheet was printed by a company in Kaiserslautern in 1975  . I have a date of 2.4.76 with question mark for the auction. The year on the stamp reads 1976 not 1975 as suggested earlier.   Londonbus1 |
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| Edited by Londonbus1 - 05/05/2013 02:49 am |
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Replies: 19 / Views: 5,649 |
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