Opinion:
I agree with Johan, possibly cancelled in the receiving country, the article may have been in a despatch satchel etc.
In 2007 we had a curly one, Germany cancelled in Scotland. (A Brunswick Star)
Commentary:
Dear Rodney
Re: German Stamp
I was surprised to learn that these were also produced with the town
numbers with letters under horizontal lines. Here is what I found out:
1. This cancel was never applied in Germany but in the UK.
"320" = Tain.
2. I suspect that the cover was sent to the UK where the mail may or
may not have been properly canceled. The post office clerk may
have simply canceled the stamp in the UK, if un-canceled, or the
cover was forwarded to some other location in the UK or returned to
Germany. Since you do not have the cover, you cannot determine the
real history.
3. The 9 Kreuzer = 25 Pfennig (rate overseas..UPU) and applicable
for 1874 or early 1875 only. Stamp was issued on January 1, 1874,
and new 'Pfennige' issue appeared on January 1, 1875. Kreuzer
monetary values were used only in southern Germany (of a united
Germany) until the currency was unified into Pfennig and Marks in
1975.
Without question, the cover on which this stamp was used would
probably have been spectacular postal history.
Best regards,
Tim Burgess
