tradition and experience in classic philately since 1919
A Series of books presenting the most beautiful Stamp Collections which have been awarded with International Large Gold or Grand Prix.

Vol. 30: Ceylon 1857-1871 • The Kurt Kimmel Collection

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article number: 376


A 6d. stamp was issued in Ceylon as the country’s first postage stamp. It paid the postage rate to Great Britain for ordinary letters. Although the stamps were already printed and ready by 21 July 1855, these were only issued in mid-1857. It was unique for its time that Ceylon ordered stamps and postal stationery for all postage rates and weight steps! A total of 12 postage stamps and 10 postal stationery items were thus issued in the years 1857-59 in Ceylon (except the first 10d postal stationery item issued in 1868). The Ceylon collection of Kurt Kimmel, RDP, shows all the proofs as well as all the catalogued issues, unused and used, early and earliest usages, the largest blocks, all the single frankings and mail usages both inland and overseas. The collection of Kurt Kimmel is at present undoubtedly the most important of the period of 1857-71, which for Ceylon is of particular importance.



192 pages, of which 162 are full-colour plates showing pages from the collection, hardbound with dust jacket, bilingual in English and German


 79.00 CHF

Vol. 29: Netherlands 1852 - The Bouwe Brandsma Collection

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article number: 373


Bouwe Brandsma dedicates his collection to the first three stamps of the Netherlands. The emergence, printing and usage of the 1852 issue are documented in detail in the collection. The focus is on particularly spectacular and internationally esteemed rarities of Netherlands philately. To do this, Brandsma presents a remarkable collection of overseas letters including rare destinations, also plate studies, postmarks and the various postage rates.



164 pages, of which 138 are full-colour plates showing pages from the collection, hardbound with dust jacket, bilingual in English and German 


 79.00 CHF
out of stock

Vol. 28: Greece - Large Hermes Heads 186-1886 • The Stavros Andreadis 'Kassandra' Collection

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article number: 372


With the aim of postal reform, the Greek Government decided in 1855 on the introduction of postage stamps. However it took another six years for the first postage stamps, the ‘Large Hermes Heads’ to arrive at post office counters. The stamps were designed by the famous French engraver Désiré-Albert Barre, the son of the designer of the French first ‘Ceres’ issues. The artistic execution of Hermes inspires every philatelist up to the present day. Stavros Andreadis shows in his “Kassandra” collection the many different facets of the Large Hermes Heads; beginning with examples of the various printings and colours, the Solferino misprint, usages on covers, newspapers and printed matter with rare destinations, as well as special “combination” frankings.



168 pages, of which 140 are full-colour plates showing pages from the collection, hardbound with dust jacket, bilingual in English and German 


 79.00 CHF
out of stock

Vol. 27: Brazil - 'Bulls Eyes' 1843-1854 • The Luis Alemany Indarte Collection

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article number: 371


After Great Britain and the Swiss canton of Zurich, Brazil was the world’s third country to issue postage stamps. The idea for this came from a German, Jacob Sturz, who was the director of an British mining company. The origin of the rather unusual stamp design, the so-called “Bull’s Eyes”, was probably a banknote of the Brazilian State Bank. Luis Alemany Indarte shows in his collection, which is one of the best collections of the area ever put together, the various printings from six plates with many stamps and blocks, among which is the famous “xiphopagus pair” of two denominations. The study of Brazilian cancellations on the “Bull’s Eyes” had already fascinated the earliest collectors of Brazil. The collection shows almost all the known postmarks.



160 pages, of which 128 are full-colour plates showing pages from the collection, hardbound with dust jacket, bilingual in English and German 


 79.00 CHF

Vol. 26: Chile - The 'Colon'-Issues 1853-1867 • The Joseph Hackmey Collection

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article number: 370


Joseph Hackmey documents in his collection “Chile - ‘Colon’ issues 1853 - 1867” the various issues, printings and colours of the first printings in 1853 until the last printings of 1867 from badly worn and thoroughly cleaned steel plates. Joseph Hackmey has probably succeeded, as never before in history, in bringing together all the great rarities of Chile in one collection. In addition to the classic rarities the postal history part of the collection with covers, postage rates and rare destinations is of paramount importance. Most of the rarities of Chilean philately, from the collections of Col. Green, Joaquin Galvez, Alfred Caspary, Welczek, R.A.G. Lee, du Pont, Norman Hubbard and Gerhard blank are now to be found in the Joseph Hackmey collection.

 



188 pages, of which 160 are full-colour plates showing pages from the collection, hardbound with dust jacket, bilingual in English and German


 79.00 CHF

Vol. 25: German Empire Hyperinflation 1923 • The Horst Jaster Collection

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article number: 357


The inflation in Germany from 1914 to 1923 was the most radical devaluation that an industrialised nation had ever seen up to that time. It concerned the German reichsmark, which from its introduction in 1875 until the beginning of the First World War on 4 August 1914 was a stable currency. One reason for the “stable reichsmark” was its link to the gold standard. This obliged the Reichsbank to offer metallic currency or gold in exchange for the equivalent in paper money at any time. With the beginning of the First World War, the “emergency redemption obligation” of the Reichsbank was lifted. Then many war bonds were issued which were subscribed to by the population. Significantly more money for the financing of the war effort was printed in mid-1916, and was made available to the population. And so it was that consumers had more money to spend, which they required for the purchase and consumption of all the available goods. To obtain these increasingly scarce goods they were willing to pay increasingly high prices - the beginning of inflation. In his collection “German Reich 1923 hyperinflation” Horst Jaster shows by means of a number of postal items of all kinds the dramatic impact of hyperinflation on postal customers, companies and authorities who had relied on the “written letter” for communications even in difficult times. He represents with documentation, but also a warning, the incredible and most terrible chapter of German economic and financial history.



169 pages, of which 145 are full-colour plates showing pages from the collection, hardbound with dust jacket, bilingual in English and German


 79.00 CHF
out of stock

Vol. 24: Russian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic 1918-23 • The Dr. Wolfgang Leupold Collection

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article number: 356


Dr. Wolfgang Leupold shows an almost inexhaustible variety of stamps of the R.S.F.S.R in his collection; old stamps were overprinted, perforations were changed, different types of paper and watermarks, stamps withdrawn soon after their issue and replaced by others, pre-revolutionary stamps used again - partly with overprints due to inflation, also essays and proofs often come on the market. A civil war from early 1918 until 1921 shaped the lives of people in the fledgling R.S.F.S.R. And so it was that the first stamps of the R.S.F.S.R. were issued in late 1921 at the end of the civil war, nearly four years after the establishment of the state. Ordinary stamp issues were immediately supplemented with many commemorative stamps, hunger tax stamps for the victims of the 1921 drought as well as charity stamps, the famous consular stamps and even exchange stamps for controlling the export of postage stamps that was a state monopoly. All of this defines the field of activity of Dr. Wolfgang Leupold, who represents in his collection this incredible postal-political muddle on the basis of stamps, covers and specialities and who has put together the most important collection of this area.



160 pages, of which 129 are full-colour plates showing pages from the collection, hardbound with dust jacket, bilingual in English and German


 79.00 CHF

Vol. 23: Foreign Destination Mail from the Southern German States 1850-1875 • The Dr. Karl Zangerle Collection

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article number: 355


On the eve of the founding of the German-Austrian Postal Union, there were more than a dozen independent postal administrations in Germany alone, which had arranged their exchanges of mail and communications by means of greatly differing treaties. For items of mail in transit through several postal areas, postage was added with each new area that was entered. This collective confusion was first harmonised in 1850-51, by the creation of the DÖPV between the German states. The contractual arrangements with foreign postal administrations remained initially unchanged. The choice of different routes enabled the postal customers to choose the optimum route for them. In the course of his growing preoccupation with postal history, Dr. Karl Zangerle developed the idea to study the foreign postage rates of the southern German states with “guilder” or “kreuzer” currency. The necessary research work in all the archives of the individual postal areas leads to a systematic record of the postal routes from 1850 to 1875 with the sometimes complex charges and postage rates. Several publications are the result, also the collection of “Foreign letters of the South German states 1850-1875”. In addition to numerous frankings of mail sent abroad, the collection is also supplemented by incoming mail from abroad. For these the charges paid on each letter are explained in detail.



175 pages, of which 151 are full-colour plates showing pages from the collection, hardbound with dust jacket, bilingual in English and German


 79.00 CHF

Vol. 22: Cape of Good Hope • The Joseph Hackmey Collection

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article number: 352


Joseph Hackmey documents in his collection the various issues, printings, colours and papers of ‘Cape triangulars’ from the first issue of 1853 to the last printing from badly worn steel plates by the printer De La Rue in June 1864. Joseph Hackmey has succeeded as never before in the history of Cape philately to bring together virtually all the great rarities of the Cape triangulars in one collection: the error of colour of the ‘woodblocks’ unused and used, in pairs and blocks with ‘normal’ adjacent stamps as well as its use on covers. In addition having to the ‘classic’ rarities of Cape triangulars, the collection is also certainly regarded as the most important collection of Cape triangular postal history. The great Cape rarities from the collections of Ferrary, Hind, Pack, Caspary, Stevens, Burrus, Hall, Stevenson, ‘Maria de la Queillerie’, Sir Maxwell Joseph, Dale Lichtenstein, ‘Maximus’, ‘Bonaventure’, ‘Salisbury’, Mrs. Ad Indhusophon and ‘Lady Hope’ are to be found today in the collection of Joseph Hackmey.



172 pages, of which 143 are full-colour plates showing pages from the collection, hardbound with dust jacket, bilingual in English and German


 79.00 CHF

Vol. 21: French Mail in the West Indies • The Dr. Federico Borromeo d'Adda Collection

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article number: 351


In 1860 all the Caribbean mail intended for France was carried by private vessels or British steamers. In 1861 the “Companie Générale Transatlantique” was founded. Mail steamer lines were established serving several islands and cities. Incoming and outgoing French mail of the West Indies is much less common than the comparable British or Spanish mail. Especially Great Britain has always played a major role in the carrying of mail and other goods in the Caribbean. Dr. Federico Borromeo d’Adda shows many rare covers in his collection. Of particular interest are items representing Franco-British postal relations.



196 pages, of which 172 are full-colour plates showing pages from the collection, hardbound with dust jacket, bilingual in English and German


 79.00 CHF