Postage stamps and postal history of Russia
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This is a survey of the
Postal history
Early history
Records mention a system of messengers in the 10th century. Early letters were carried in the form of a roll, with a
By the 16th century, the postal system included 1,600 locations, and mail took 3 days to travel from
, becoming Russia's first regular international service.Russian Empire
Mailcoaches appeared in 1820. In 1833, the St. Petersburg City Post was created, and the city was divided into 17 districts with 42 correspondence offices, which were located in trade stores. In 1834, reception offices appeared in the suburbs (in St. Petersburg there were as many as 108). Periodical press delivery in Russia was organized in St. Petersburg in 1838. The Department of Coaches and T-carts was opened in 1840 at the Moika Embankment; light cabriolets carried surplus-post, coaches delivered light post, and T-carts dealt with “heavy" post. Green coloured street mailboxes were installed in 1848, the same year stamped envelopes were issued; orange mailboxes for same-day service appeared near railway stations in 1851, and postage stamps appeared in 1857. In 1864, the City Post started sending printed matter and catalogues, and in 1866, they sent packages.
Postal stationery made its first appearance in 1845, in the form of envelopes that paid the 5-kopeck fee for local mail in St. Petersburg and Moscow. The idea worked well and was extended throughout Russia on December 1, 1848.
Local postal systems used stamps referred to as Zemstvo stamps, from the term for local government begun under Alexander II in 1864.[1]
Russian Post is a founding member of the
Soviet Union
During the
In the postwar years, the mail service has undergone quantitative and qualitative changes. In 1946, the People's Commissariat for Communications of the USSR was transformed into the Ministry of Communications of the USSR. The postal service was carried out by the Post Office, which was part of the Ministry of Communications, along with other offices of the telecommunications industries. By 1950, the postal industry, destroyed by the war, was restored and brought to the pre-war level.
In subsequent years, the network of communication enterprises was significantly expanded, especially in rural areas, in the cities and a network of liaison offices, post offices, and subordinate communication centers. Most businesses combined postal, telegraph and telephone services. These communications were typically located in the same building and under single management. A huge network of mailboxes was established not only in cities but also in rural areas, stations, railway sidings and at freeway junctions.
Further development of the postal service followed the path of mechanization and automation of mail processing, improving the organization of its transportation and delivery. For this, the old postal equipment was modernized and the production of brand new designs developed - mail processing and handling machines and equipment for container transport, means of mechanization and postal inventory, as well as equipment for customer service.
Leningrad post office
By the late 1930s, 203 post offices operated in Leningrad. During the Great Patriotic War of 1941–45, communication between the front line and the rear was provided by the Field Post. In the first year of the Siege, there were 108 post offices working in Leningrad. The Leningrad Postal Association was created in 1988 and included the General Leningrad Post Office, 13 regional post offices, 345 post offices, 11 automated post offices, and a fleet of vehicles.
Russian Federation
In 1993 the Russian Post became a part of the
Given the role of the Russian Post in the historical development of the state, in 1994, Russian President Boris Yeltsin established a professional public holiday for postal workers - "The Day of the Russian Post", which is celebrated annually on the 2 July. Another
Loss of monopoly
In 1996, the Ministry of Communications for the first time decided to break the state postal monopoly on some postal services, resulting in Russia having commercial mailing companies.
2002 reform
Since the Soviet Union was dissolved, the Federal Postal Service consisted of a network of 90 disparate entities which were mainly listed as state institutions or federal state unitary enterprises. In legal terms, they were completely independent concerns. They were linked to the Federal Postal Network only by a trunk intrazonal and inter-district transmission and delivery system. The most ridiculous part of the whole system was that different parts of the same system connected by a single mechanism in adjacent regions were competing against each other, which mainly involved trying to lure big corporate clients away from the other competitors often at dumping prices. Also, there were no uniform budgeting, planning or other processes. These companies operated using outdated and worn-out postal facilities representing about 50 different IT solutions in terms of industry technology. In accordance with the concept of restructuring the federal postal service, adopted by the Government Decree on 28 June 2002, the postal industry in the Russian Federation carried out the reorganization, aimed at creating a single, highly efficient and competitive company able to make a significant contribution to the solution of urgent problems on the accelerated development of the economy and resulted in the establishment of a single unified operator- Federal Unitary Enterprise Russian Post. By 2005 the reform was completed.
In 2004 Elsag Datamat won the tender to build Russian Post's first automated sorting center.[2]
Growing inefficiency in the 2010s
The early 2010s saw a rise in complaints. The number of parcels from foreign online retailers had been rising steadily for several years and was certain to rise further.[3] According to the Russian Post's own estimates, orders from Internet shops are delivered to Russia mostly in ordinary or registered parcels; in 2009 there were 2.3 million, in 2012 the amount soared to 17 million. On March 6, 2012, five trucks from Germany were in a queue to be unloaded at Vnukovo. At the International Post Office there had piled up 12,300 parcels, 5,300 EMS packages, and 36,000 minor incoming parcels. And two thousand parcels were waiting for customs clearance at Sheremetyevo International Airport.[4]
The year 2012 saw the creation of a new resource called "anti-Russianpost.ru" emerge in the World Wide Web. The users highlight all instances of Russian Post's bad work. In the middle of March, the clients of on-line retailers launched a massive spam attack on the Moscow office of the Roskomnadzor watchdog. In this period the company received up to 1,000 messages from individuals with complaints about delayed deliveries of purchases made at
2013 collapse and reform
In March 2013 Russian Post reported the unfavorable state of affairs to the authorities. In a special message Russian Post's deputy general director, Nina Fetisova, told the
In order to improve the services,
The company's new management, in October 2013, stated an ambitious goal of doubling revenues to make the company ready for an initial public offering in 2018 by allowing it to provide banking services, reducing the number of unprofitable branches and focusing on providing deliveries from online retailers.[7]
In order to handle the growth of parcels, production capacity has been expanded regional seats of international postal exchange centers, with the company opening new international mail processing centers in Moscow at the Kazan station and in Yekaterinburg and Novosibirsk. In addition, Russian Post agreed with foreign postal operators sorting international mail delivery by region even in the country of the sender (pre-sorting began in China, the largest importer), which allows to reduce the delivery of international mail. For example, after opening Exchange center in Yekaterinburg, parcel from China to residents of the Sverdlovsk Oblast is delivered in five days, including all customs clearance.[8]
In August 2013 Russian Post had launched its first regional flight in the far eastern Russian republic of Yakutia. The company held a ceremony at Yakutsk Airport to launch its second new airmail plane under a program to expand links to remote areas, its first being a flight in the Khabarovsk Krai territory on Russia's east coast. Russian Post deputy director-general Alexei Skatin said that "The mail must be delivered on time despite the difficult geography of the region. We are starting to improve the postal logistics in the remote regions of Russia".[9]
2014 takeover of Crimea by Russia
In March 2014, following the
Postage stamps
First stamps
The postage stamp idea had already swept much of the world when, in September 1856, the Russian authorities decided to follow suit.
The first Russian postal stamp was issued on December 10, 1857, by the circular of the Postal Department "On the bringing of postal stamps for the common use" with the following content: "Starting from the 1st January of the next year 1858 ordinary private letters to all the places of the Empire, the Kingdom of Poland, the Grand Duchy of Finland brought to the post in ordinary envelopes or without envelope at all just with addresses written on the letter itself should be sent only with the stamp corresponding to the letter weight". The first stamps went on sale on 10 December 1857, but officially people started to use stamps to pay internal correspondence in Russia from January 1, 1858 (from March 1, 1858 – in the Caucasus, Transcaucasia, and Siberia). Since this time all private letters have been sent only with postage stamps that were cancelled with two crossed lines.
Since the supply of postmarks to the numerous post offices took a while, the Postal Department ordered that stamps be cancelled with pen and ink, following the example of cancelling postal stationery envelopes.
Later Russian Empire stamps
A 5k stamp for local postage was introduced in 1863, and in the following year new common design, with the coat of arms in an oval, was introduced for the 1k, 3k, and 5k values. These were used to make up complicated rates for international mail, which had previously required cash payments at the post office.
After 1866 the stamps were printed on paper watermarked with a pattern of wavy lines, "EZGB" in Cyrillic plus a set of more or less horizontal lines [13 for the height of the letters!] and vertical lines running through the letters and halfway. Apart from that the "grain" of the paper was always perpendicular to the watermark text! In the early years, the horizontal watermark prevailed, but for a minority of each value, the grain was vertical. In later years the vertical watermark prevailed. Contrary to a common perception among collectors there was NO laid paper involved. The "stripes" were always part of the watermark.
In September 1865, the Shlisselburg district became the first of the zemstvo offices to issue stamps; the system was officially organized by a decree of 27 August 1870.
In 1874, Russia became one of the original 22 countries forming the
The coat of arms design was changed in 1875 and used for 2k and 8k values, and a 7k in 1879. The 7k was also printed on revenue stamp paper watermarked with a hexagonal pattern; these are quite rare.
A new issue of 14 December 1883 featured an updated design, lower values printed in a single color, and new high values - 14k, 35k, and 70k. January 1884 saw the introduction of 3.50-ruble and 7-ruble stamps, physically much larger than the existing stamps.
In 1889 the designs were changed again, this time to introduce
At the end of 1904, Russia issued its first semi-postal stamps. The four values were each sold at 3k over the face to provide for orphans of casualties in the Russo-Japanese War.
In 1909 a new series came out, using a mix of old and new designs, all printed on unwatermarked wove paper, and with lozenges on the face to discourage postage stamp reuse.
Russia's first series of
Revolution and Civil War period
The period of the
Entities issuing their own stamps include:
- Armenia
- Azerbaijan
- Army of the Northwest
- Batum
- Belarus
- Estonia
- Far Eastern Republic
- Georgia
- Latvia
- Lithuania
- Siberia
- South Russia
- Transcaucasian SFSR
- West Ukrainian National Republic
In 1917 the
In the years of the Civil War, postage stamps served as a kind of currency in a number of regions. During the later famine, postage stamps were used as a means of exchange for products. The Pravda newspaper issue of 9 March 1922 "urged the population “not to throw away stamps” and called on all citizens and children of the RSFSR to gather and send all canceled stamps, stamp collections, and anything they had on hand to be exchanged for chocolate and other products for starving children."[11]
The next stamps appeared in 1921, after inflation had taken hold. The set's values range from 1 to 1,000 rubles. By the next year, these stamps were being surcharged in various ways, with face values of up to 100,000 rubles.
A currency reform in 1922 that exchanged money at a 10,000-to-1 rate enabled new stamps in the 5r to 200r range, including a set marking the 5th anniversary of the October Revolution, Tsarist stamps surcharged with a five-pointed star containing a
Finnish occupation of Aunus
At 1919–1921 there was Aunus expedition where a group of Finnish volunteers occupied parts of East Karelia (Aunus in Finnish, Olonets Karelia in Russian). There were stamps issued for Aunus troops by local authorities. They were Finnish definitives from 1917 with overprint Aunus.
Stamps of the Soviet Union
Postage stamps of the
Stamps of the Russian Federation
See also
- 70r Red Army Soldier error
- A.S. Popov Central Museum of Communications
- British Society of Russian Philately
- Definitive stamps of Russia
- Definitive stamps of the Soviet Union
- First stamp of the Russian Empire
- First USSR stamps
- Gold Standard issue
- International trading tax stamp
- Joint issue
- List of postage stamps
- Pochtovo-Telegrafnyi Zhurnal
- Postage stamps and postal history of Karelia
- Rossica Society of Russian Philately
- Russian philatelic forgeries
- Russian Post
- Soviet and post-Soviet postage rates
- Soviet Union stamp catalogue
- Zemstvo stamp
References
Citations
- ^ See, for example, http://zemstvo.com/russia-zemstvos Archived 2017-02-02 at the Wayback Machine .
- ^ "Russian Post and Poste Italiane to develop joint e-commerce platform". Post & Parcel. Archived from the original on 24 March 2016. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
- ^ "Почта России: во всем виновата таможня". tvrain.ru. Retrieved 10 April 2013.
- ^ Itar Tass. Retrieved 10 April 2013.
- Itar Tass. Retrieved 20 April 2013.
- Itar Tass. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
- Moscow Times. Retrieved 22 November 2013.
- ^ ""Почте России" покой только снится. Объем зарубежных посылок в этом году удвоится". comnews.ru. Retrieved 22 November 2013.
- ^ "Postal Digest – Postal news from Canada, Israel, Russia, Brazil and Portugal". Post & Parcel. Archived from the original on 3 December 2013. Retrieved 30 November 2013.
- ITAR TASS. 21 March 2014. Archived from the originalon 24 March 2014. Retrieved 24 March 2013.
- S2CID 143458562. Archived from the original on 2015-05-15. Retrieved 2015-05-15. Archived from the original and another sourceon 2015-05-15.
Sources
- ISBN 9785853870222
- "Encyclopaedia of Postal Authorities". Archived from the original on October 10, 2012. Retrieved August 15, 2006.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ISBN 0-356-10862-7
- Stanley Gibbons Ltd: various catalogues
- Скропышева, В. Г. (1990). Карлова Е. Л. К вашим услугам - почта: Справ. пособие [Charles E.L.K. at your service - the post] (in Russian). 2-е изд., перераб. и доп. М.
- Кутьин, В. А. (1997). Санкт-Петербургский почтамт. СПб [St. Petersburg Post Office] (in Russian). I. A. Bogdanov.
Further reading
Catalogues
- Gurevich, Iurii Efimovich. Katalog marok zemskikh pocht Rossii 1866-1919 = Stamps of the Zemstvo posts of Russia - catalog, 1866-1919. Moscow: The Authors, 2004 ISBN 5856461487556p.
- Moens, J. B. Les timbres de Russie. Bruxelles: Moens, 1893 62p.
- Pevzner, A. IA. Katalog Pochtovykh Marok Rossii, 1857-1995. Moscow: T︠S︡entrpoligraf, 1995 ISBN 5700102412473p.
- Riep, Oscar. Russland: Sonder-Katalog: enthalt alle Postwertzeichen von Russland, und allen neuen Staaten, die vor 1914 zu Russland gehorten, oder nach 1914 auf russischem Territorium neu entstanden sind, sowie alle Besetzungsausgaben in Russland, wahrend des Weltkrieges. Mit uber 600 abbildungen im Text und mehreren Tafeln. Berlin: Oscar Riep, 1925 224p.
- Solov'ev, V. IU. Pochtovye marki Rossii i SSSR spetsializirovannyi katalog = Postage stamps of Russia & USSR specialized catalogue. Vol. 1: Russia 1857-1919; Vol. 2: RSFSR, USSR 1923-1960; Vol. 3: USSR 1961-1991.
- Stanley Gibbons Stamp Catalogue: Pt.10 Russia. Ringwood: Stanley Gibbons Publications, 2014 (7th edition) ISBN 9780852598924832p.
- White, Godfrey M. An annotated list of the postage stamps of the Soviet Republics: 1917-1925. London: Harris Publications, 1925 56p. Series Title: Philatelic magazine handbook; no. 7.
- Zagorskogo, V. B. Pervye pochtovye marki Rossii : istori︠i︡a vypuska : katalog = The first Russian postage stamps : history of the issue : catalogue. Sankt-Peterburg: Standart-Kollek︠t︡si︠i︡a, 2007 ISBN 590227527X84p.
- Zagorsky, V. B. Postage Stamp Catalogue: Russia 1857-1917, RSFSR 1918-1923, USSR 1923-1991. Hallandale, FL.: Zagorsky, Inc., 2013 ISBN 5902275563560p.
Monographs
- Aksenova, S. V. Populi︠a︡rnai︠a︡ ėnt︠s︡iklopedii︠a︡ marok Rossii i SSSR. Rostov-na-Donu: Vladis, 2009 ISBN 5956708107400p.
- Artuchov, Alex. The Zemstvo Postage Stamps of Imperial Russia. Toronto: Canadian Society of Russian Philately, 1987-2008 6 vols.
- Baillie, Ian L. G. & Eric G. Peel. St. Petersburg: The Imperial Post: its postmarks and other postal markings 1765-1914. Beckenham: published for the British Society of Russian Philately by Chancery House Press, 2001 ISBN 0900246898374p.
- Ceresa, R. J. The Postage Stamps of Russia, 1917-1923: Vol. 5: R.S.F.S.R. Gorsley: Russian Philatelic D.T.P.
- Kiryushkin, A.V. and P.E. Robinson. List of post offices in the Russian Empire. Sheffield: Philip E. Robinson, 1999 270p.
- Kiryushkin, A.V. and P.E. Robinson. Russian Postmarks: An Introduction and Guide. York: J. Barefoot Ltd., 1989 ISBN 0-906845-43-2110p.
- Skipton, David M. and Steve Volis. Soviet Clandestine Mail Surveillance, 1917-1991. Chicago: Collectors Club of Chicago, 2016 ISBN 9780982735749554p.
- Tchilinghirian, S. D. and W. S. E. Stephen. Stamps of the Russian Empire used abroad. Bristol: British Society of Russian Philately, 1957-60 576p. in 6 pts.