Stamp: Mosque of Klang handstamped with Chop (Japanese occupations during WWII 1942)

Mosque of Klang handstamped with Chop (Japanese occupations during WWII 1942)

03 April (Japanese occupations during WWII ) within release Malaya: Selangor goes into circulation Stamp Mosque of Klang handstamped with Chop face value 1 Straits cent

Stamp Mosque of Klang handstamped with Chop in catalogues
Michel: Mi: JP-MY SE 1Ia
Stanley Gibbons: Sg: MY-SE J206U

Stamp is square format.

Handstamped in black, Upright Orientation Specialists recognize 9 varieties of overprint depending on degree of completeness of the characters resembling "EP" in bottom left corner of chop.

Also in the issue Malaya: Selangor:

Data entry completed
56%
Stamp Mosque of Klang handstamped with Chop in digits
Country: Japanese occupations during WWII
Date: 1942-04-03
Print: Typography
Perforation: 14
Emission: Definitive
Format: Stamp
Face Value: 1 Straits cent

Stamp Mosque of Klang handstamped with Chop it reflects the thematic directions:

Mosquitoes, the Culicidae, are a family of small flies consisting of 3,600 species. The word mosquito (formed by mosca and diminutive -ito) is Spanish and Portuguese for little fly. Mosquitoes have a slender segmented body, one pair of wings, three pairs of long hair-like legs, and specialized, highly elongated, piercing-sucking mouthparts. All mosquitoes drink nectar from flowers; females of some species have in addition adapted to drink blood. The group diversified during the Cretaceous period. Evolutionary biologists view mosquitoes as micropredators, small animals that parasitise larger ones by drinking their blood without immediately killing them. Medical parasitologists view mosquitoes instead as vectors of disease, carrying protozoan parasites or bacterial or viral pathogens from one host to another.

Stamp, Mosque of Klang handstamped with Chop, Japanese occupations during WWII,  , Mosque