Mythical Beast and Soviet Star, surcharged (Armenia 1923)
01 May (Armenia )
within release Local Motifs (IV)
goes into circulation Stamp Mythical Beast and Soviet Star, surcharged face value 200,000 Armenian ruble
Stamp Mythical Beast and Soviet Star, surcharged in catalogues |
Michel:
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Mi: AM 188
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Stamp is square format.
Black, violet or red surcharge
Type II: initial digit is bigger than zeros
Also in the issue Local Motifs (IV):
-
Stamp -
Star, Hammer and Sickle, surcharged
face value 100,000;
-
Stamp -
Crane, surcharged
face value 25,000;
-
Stamp -
Ox-driver on the fields, surcharged
face value 500,000;
-
Stamp -
Mythical Beast and Soviet Star, surcharged
face value 200,000;
-
Stamp -
Ox-driver on the fields, surcharged
face value 500,000;
-
Stamp -
Mythical Beast and Soviet Star, surcharged
face value 200,000;
-
Stamp -
Soviet badge, surcharged
face value 25,000;
-
Stamp -
Star, Hammer and Sickle, surcharged
face value 10,000;
-
Stamp -
Harpy, surcharged
face value 100,000;
-
Stamp -
Peasant and Worker, surcharged
face value 300,000;
-
Stamp -
Harpy, surcharged
face value 100,000;
-
Stamp -
Soviet badge, surcharged
face value 25,000;
-
Stamp -
Mount Ararat, surcharged
face value 15,000;
-
Stamp -
Peasant, surcharged
face value 50,000;
-
Stamp -
Mount Ararat, surcharged
face value 15,000;
-
Stamp -
Sower, surcharged
face value 75,000;
-
Stamp -
Peasant, surcharged
face value 50,000;
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Stamp Mythical Beast and Soviet Star, surcharged in digits
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Country: |
Armenia |
Date: |
1923-05-01 |
Print: |
Lithography |
Perforation: |
line 11½ |
Emission: |
Definitive |
Format: |
Stamp |
Face Value: |
200,000 Armenian ruble
|
Stamp Mythical Beast and Soviet Star, surcharged it reflects the thematic directions:
A star is a luminous spheroid of plasma held together by self-gravity. The nearest star to Earth is the Sun. Many other stars are visible to the naked eye at night; their immense distances from Earth make them appear as fixed points of light. The most prominent stars have been categorised into constellations and asterisms, and many of the brightest stars have proper names. Astronomers have assembled star catalogues that identify the known stars and provide standardized stellar designations. The observable universe contains an estimated 1022 to 1024 stars. Only about 4,000 of these stars are visible to the naked eye—all within the Milky Way galaxy.