Se-tenant: Gurning/Up Helly Aa (United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland 2019)

Gurning/Up Helly Aa (United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland 2019)

09 July (United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland ) within release Curious Customs (2019) goes into circulation Se-tenant Gurning/Up Helly Aa face value 2*1st No Face Value

Se-tenant Gurning/Up Helly Aa in catalogues
Michel: Mi: GB 4416-4417
Stanley Gibbons: Sg: GB 4241a

Se-tenant is horizontal format.

Face value of £0.70 per stamp on day of issue

Also in the issue Curious Customs (2019):

Data entry completed
90%
Se-tenant Gurning/Up Helly Aa in digits
Country: United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland
Date: 2019-07-09
Print: Offset lithography
Size: 74 x 35
Perforation: 14 x 14½
Emission: Commemorative
Format: Se-tenant
Face Value: 2*1st No Face Value

Se-tenant Gurning/Up Helly Aa it reflects the thematic directions:

Customs is an authority or agency in a country responsible for collecting tariffs and for controlling the flow of goods, including animals, transports, personal effects, and hazardous items, into and out of a country. Traditionally, customs has been considered as the fiscal subject that charges customs duties (i.e. tariffs) and other taxes on import and export. In recent decades, the views on the functions of customs have considerably expanded and now covers three basic issues: taxation, security, and trade facilitation

A festival is an event celebrated by a community and centering on some characteristic aspect or aspects of that community and its religion or cultures. It is often marked as a local or national holiday, mela, or eid. A festival constitutes typical cases of glocalization, as well as the high culture-low culture interrelationship. Next to religion and folklore, a significant origin is agricultural. Food is such a vital resource that many festivals are associated with harvest time. Religious commemoration and thanksgiving for good harvests are blended in events that take place in autumn, such as Halloween in the northern hemisphere and Easter in the southern.

A modern sailing ship or sailship is any large wind-powered vessel. Traditionally a sailing ship (or simply ship) is a sailing vessel that carries three or more masts with square sails on each. Large sailing vessels that are not ship-rigged may be more precisely referred to by their sail rig, such as schooner, barque (also spelled "bark"), brig, barkentine, brigantine or sloop. There are many different types of sailing ships, but they all have certain basic things in common. Every sailing ship has a hull, rigging and at least one mast to hold up the sails that use the wind to power the ship. The crew who sail a ship are called sailors or hands. They take turns to take the watch, the active managers of the ship and her performance for a period. Watches are traditionally four hours long. Some sailing ships use traditional ship's bells to tell the time and regulate the watch system, with the bell being rung once for every half hour into the watch and rung eight times at watch end (a four-hour watch). Ocean journeys by sailing ship can take many months, and a common hazard is becoming becalmed because of lack of wind, or being blown off course by severe storms or winds that do not allow progress in the desired direction. A severe storm could lead to shipwreck, and the loss of all hands. Sailing ships are limited in their maximum size compared to ships with heat engines, so economies of scale are also limited. The heaviest sailing ships (limited to those vessels for which sails were the primary means of propulsion) never exceeded 14,000 tons displacement. Sailing ships are therefore also very limited in the supply capacity of their holds, so they have to plan long voyages carefully to include many stops to take on provisions and, in the days before watermakers, fresh water.

 

Se-tenant, Gurning/Up Helly Aa, United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland,  , Customs, Festivals, Sailing Ships