Compendium of postage stamp issuers (Brit–British)
Each "article" in this category is a collection of entries about several stamp issuers, presented in alphabetical order. The entries are formulated on the micro model and so provide summary information about all known issuers.
See the Category:Compendium of postage stamp issuers page for details of the project.
Britain
[edit]- Refer
- Great Britain
British Administration Issues
[edit]- Refer
- Eritrea (British Administration);
- Somalia (British Administration);
- Tripolitania (British Military Administration)
- Dates
- 1963 –
- Currency
- (1963) 12 pence = 1 shilling, 20 shillings = 1 pound
- (1971) 100 pence = 1 pound
Territory in southern Africa which was separated from Bechuanaland Protectorate (now Botswana) by the Molopo river. British Bechuanaland became a British colony on 30 September 1885 but was added to Cape Colony on 16 November 1895. It is now the northern part of Cape Province in South Africa.
The first stamps issued were Cape of Good Hope types with an overprint. Specific types were issued in 1887 but subsequently there were further British and Cape types with overprints. Cape of Good Hope stamps were introduced to British Bechuanaland in 1895 but, conversely, British Bechuanaland types were retained for use in the neighbouring Bechuanaland Protectorate from 1890 to 1897.
- Refer
- Cape of Good Hope
- See also
- Bechuanaland Protectorate
- See also
- Malawi;
- Nyasaland Protectorate
British Columbia
[edit]- Dates
- 1865 – 1868
- Capital
- Vancouver
- Currency
- (1865) 12 pence = 1 shilling; 20 shillings = 1 pound
- (1868) 100 cents = 1 dollar
- Main Article
- Postage stamps and postal history of British Columbia
- Includes
- British Columbia and Vancouver Island
- Vancouver Island
- See also
- Canadian Provinces
British Columbia & Vancouver Island
[edit]- Dates
- 1860 only
- Capital
- Vancouver
- Currency
- 12 pence = 1 shilling; 20 shillings = 1 pound
- Refer
- British Columbia
British Commonwealth Occupation of Japan
[edit]British Consular Mail
[edit]British East Africa Company
[edit]- Refer
- British East Africa
British Field Office in Salonika
[edit]British Forces in Egypt
[edit]- Refer
- Egypt (British Forces)
- Dates
- 1850 – 1966
- Capital
- Georgetown
- Currency
- 100 cents = 1 dollar
- See also
- Guyana
British Honduras
[edit]- Dates
- 1866 – 1973
- Capital
- Belize
- Currency
- (1866) 12 pence = 1 shilling; 20 shillings = 1 pound
- (1888) 100 cents = 1 dollar
- Main Article Needed
- See also
- Belize
British Indian Ocean Territory
[edit]- Dates
- 1868 – 1976
- Capital
- Victoria (on Mahe, Seychelles)
- Currency
- 100 cents = 1 rupee
- See also
- Seychelles;
- Zil Elwannyen Sesel
British Levant
[edit]British Middle East Forces
[edit]- Refer
- Middle East Forces
British Military Administration Issues (BMA)
[edit]- Refer
- Eritrea (British Military Administration);
- Malaya (British Military Administration);
- North Borneo (British Military Administration);
- Sarawak (British Military Administration);
- Somalia (British Military Administration);
- Tripolitania (British Military Administration)
British New Guinea
[edit]- Dates
- 1901 – 1906
- Capital
- Port Moresby
- Currency
- 12 pence = 1 shilling; 20 shillings = 1 pound
- Refer
- Papua New Guinea
British Occupation Issues
[edit]- Main Article Needed
- Includes
- Baghdad (British Occupation);
- Batum (British Occupation);
- Bushire (British Occupation);
- Cameroons (British Occupation);
- East Africa Forces;
- German East Africa (British Occupation);
- Iraq (British Occupation);
- Japan (British Commonwealth Occupation);
- Long Island (British Occupation);
- Mafia Island (British Occupation)
- See also
- BA/BMA Issues;
- Egypt (British Forces);
- Germany (Allied Occupation);
- Middle East Forces;
- Togo (Anglo–French Occupation)
British Occupation of Italian Colonies
[edit]British Postal Agencies in Eastern Arabia
[edit]British stamps overprinted with Indian currency; used in Abu Dhabi, Bahrain, Dubai, Kuwait, Muscat and Qatar.
Muscat and Dubai relied on Indian postal administration until 1 April 1948 when the British agencies were established. Two agencies were opened in Qatar: at Doha (August 1950) and Umm Said (February 1956). In Abu Dhabi, an agency was opened on Das Island in December 1960 and in Abu Dhabi City on 30 March 1963. The agencies also supplied stamps to Bahrain until 1960; and to Kuwait during shortages in 1951–1953.
The agency in Dubai issued the Trucial States stamps on 7 January 1961.
As each state took over its own postal administration, the offices closed. Closure dates were: Qatar on 31 March 1957; Dubai on 14 June 1963; Abu Dhabi on 29 March 1964; finally Muscat on 29 April 1966.
- Dates
- 1948 – 1966
- Currency
- (1948) 12 pies = 1 anna; 16 annas = 1 rupee
- (1957) 100 naye paise = 1 rupee
- Main Article Needed
British Post Offices Abroad
[edit]- Main Article Needed
- Includes
- Bangkok (British Post Office);
- China (British Post Offices);
- China (British Railway Administration);
- Crete (British Post Offices);
- Japan (British Post Offices);
- Madagascar (British Consular Mail)
British Post Offices in the Turkish Empire
[edit]- Main Article Needed
British Regional Issues
[edit]British Solomon Islands
[edit]- Refer
- Solomon Islands
British Somaliland
[edit]- Refer
- Somaliland Protectorate
British South Africa Company
[edit]In 1924, the territory was divided into Northern and Southern Rhodesia.
- Main Article Needed
- See also
- Rhodesia
British Virgin Islands
[edit]- Includes
- Virgin Islands
- See also
- Leeward Islands
British Zone
[edit]No separate issues. From 1945 to 1949, always used the same stamps as the American Zone.
- Refer
- American, British & Russian Zones (General Issues);
- Anglo–American Zones (Civil Government);
- Anglo–American Zones (Military Government)
References
[edit]Bibliography
[edit]- Stanley Gibbons Ltd, Europe and Colonies 1970, Stanley Gibbons Ltd, 1969
- Stanley Gibbons Ltd, various catalogues
- Stuart Rossiter & John Flower, The Stamp Atlas, W H Smith, 1989
- XLCR Stamp Finder and Collector's Dictionary, Thomas Cliffe Ltd, c.1960