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Marketplace or open your free listing direct supply
store, you have come to the right place. We offer
collectors, private sellers and dealers a place where to
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price offering buyers a complete line, a huge variety of
products they can choose from.
Chinese and Taiwanese Postage , Definitive and Commemorative stamps Pictorials ,
Revenue stamps ,
Postal stationery; Sheetlets , Miniature sheets ,
Souvenir sheets , Corner blocks or plate blocks , First day covers -
(FDCs) ,
First Day Ceremony Programs "FDCPs" and Souvenir pages
Regular government postal servicein China is known from the Zhou Dynasty in the
1st millennium BC. The 1727 Treaty of
Kyakhta with Russia provided for the first regular exchange of mail.
on 1 May 1878, and China's first postage stamps, the "Large
Dragons", were issued .The stamps were inscribed "CHINA" in both Latin
and Chinese characters.
The first new stamps, inscribed "IMPERIAL CHINESE POST" went on sale 16
August 1897. The 3c blue-green of the 1898 series was first issued in
1910, one of the last stamps of imperial China.In 1898, these were
superseded by similar designs produced by engraving in London, and
inscribed "CHINESE IMPERIAL POST" on a Chinese supplied watermarked
paper of varying thickness.
The first commemorative stamps of China were issued in 1909 to mark the
1st year of the reign of the Xuantong Emperor.
.The revolution of 1911 resulted in
overprints on the imperial stamps in 1912; at Foochow to indicate that
the post office was effectively a neutral area available to both sides,
and at Nanking and Shanghai reading "Republic of China". .
The first new designs of the Republic were two commemorative sets of 12
each
issued on 14 December, 1912.
China produced five new commemorative issues, of four stamps each,
during the 1920s.
New definitives in 1931 depicted Sun Yat-sen. but 1931 also saw the
invasion of Manchuria by the Japanese and the formation of Manchukuo,
which issued its own stamps.
after the war severe inflation required a steady stream of overprints .
1947 saw a number of commemorative issues, and further inflation.In
1948, a gold yuan standard was adopted- Next year the government adopted
a silver yuan standard, and overprinted still more stamps as well as
reissuing the Sun Yat-sen design valued in 1-500 cents.
Philatelists conventionally split into two separate topics at this
point:
Postage stamps and postal history of the People's Republic of China
Postage stamps and postal history of the Republic of China
Postage stamps and postal history of Hong Kong
Postage stamps and postal history of Macau
Sun Yat-sen stamps
People's Republic of China Regional Issues
Central China (People's Post) , East China (People's Post) , North China
(People's Post) ,
North East China (People's Post) , North West China (People's Post) ,
Port Arthur and Dairen , Shensi-Kansu-Ninghsia , South China (People's
Post) , South West China (People's Post) .
Taiwan is an island in East Asia. "Taiwan" is also commonly
used to refer to the territories governed by the Republic of China (ROC)
and to ROC itself.
Taiwan is also currently claimed by the People's Republic of China (PRC)
although the PRC has never controlled Taiwan or any of the current ROC
territory commonly referred to as "Taiwan".
The main island of Taiwan, also known as Formosa , is located in East Asia off the
coast of mainland China. The island is 245 miles long and 89 miles wide and
consists of steep mountains covered by tropical and subtropical
vegetation.
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