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Saturday, November 21, 2015

Rare Kehlen Communal Revenue Used in 1948


006

5 Fr. Green
used to pay an Identity Card fee
 in 1948


007


In future years, Kehlen’s communal revenue stamps became progressively more attractive:

image
5F Key type 

image
 Lovely Coat of Arms Pictorial
 in 1988!

Monday, October 5, 2015

Esch-sur-Alzette: the 5-franc on 1-franc Allegory surcharges



The Post-WW2 5F Surcharges



During the World War 2 occupation, the Esch-sur-Alzette Allegory communal revenue stamps were issued in Reich pfennig and Reich mark denominations.  When the occupation ended in 1945, surviving stocks of the pre-occupation 1-franc Allegory were surcharged to five francs.
The surcharge is known in three different fonts, as shown below:

EschAlzette3

Left:  sans serif
Center:  Thin '5'
Right: Fat '5'
 
The identity card seen below shows two of the surcharge with the sans serif ‘5’ used to pay the card issuance fee on 30 June 1945 for Mathias Roth, a master plasterer (maitre-plafonneur).  Notice that the French language, banned during the occupation, is again in use by the government.
EschAlzette2.

EschAlzette1


003



Here are the Esch-sur-Alzette German-language Allegories issued during the occupation:

EschAlzette4

Friday, October 2, 2015

Communal Revenue from the Former Commune of Clemency


Clemency_2
Clemency5-franc Pictorial
Extract from the Civil Register
Administration Communale
28 April 1969
Clemency_1
Dead countries?  Yes, but there are also “dead” communes.  Since 2012, Clemency has been part of the commune of Käerjeng, in the canton of Capellen.  The Käerjeng commune was formed from the merger of the Clemency and Bascharage communes.

Monday, August 17, 2015

Identity Card Issued at Differedange During the WW2 Occupation Showing Extensive French Language Deletion


Differdange_a

2 Fr. Hotel de Ville
29 Oct 1940
Taxe Communale & Differdange
Crossed Out
Cancel:  Meldeamt Differdingen
[Differdange Registration Office]


Differdange_b




Differdange

All French text has been crossed out, because the occupiers strictly enforced their German-only language law.  Even the Coat-of-Arms on the cover has been crossed out.  Imagine the resentment that this law surely engendered among the Luxembourgeoise. 

You can read my earlier article entitled Luxembourg Communal Revenue Stamps: Currency Surcharges and French Language Obliteration during the World War II Occupation here:

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Effets de Commerce--The 1928 Arabesque Provisional Surcharges

In 1928, Luxembourg surcharged the 45c and 50c 1917 small green Effets de Commerce revenues for provisional use pending production of the new 1928 Effets de Commerce definitives.  Barefoot in Benelux Revenues [2nd ed.] lists only a 2F on 45c, 2F on 50c, and 3F on 50c.  But other denominations exist (below, I show a 10F on 45c).  Moreover, the abbreviation Fr. for Franc is found both serifed and sans serif, and the numerals differ in minor respects.

But even more interesting are the pairs of arabesque squares used as part of the surcharges.   A small arabesque obliterates the denomination of the stamp; a larger arabesque obliterates the monetary range.  

The orientation of each arabesque can vary.  In theory, the following orientations are possible, such that many different pairings of the small and the large arabesques could exist.
Small Arabesque Types
small_normal_contrasted small_-90 small_ 90 small_180
Type A base Type A +90 Type A -90 Type A +180
Small_flip1 Small_flip1_90 Small_flip1_-90 8-Type A (flip 180)
Type A base flip Type A flip +90 Type A flip -90 Type A flip +180
           
 Large Arabesque Types
001a_contrast_-90 001a_contrast 001a_contrast_180 001a_contrast_ 90
Type AA (base)
Type AA +90
Type AA -90
Type AA +180
Fix
Normal_flip_90 Type LA (flip -90) Type LA (base-flop)
Type AA (flip)
Type AA (flip) +90
Type AA (flip) –90
Type AA (flip) +180

Abbreviations of Franc
serifed sans serif
Serifed
Sans Serif


Due to the paucity of material available for study, we may never know the full range of possibilities.  If you have these surcharges in your collection, I’d be grateful to add scans to my small database!  In particular, I would like to know whether other revenue stamps were surcharged to denominations between 2F and 10F or to more than 10F.  Here are examples from my collection and the collection of Martien Zwitserloot in The Netherlands.
 
 
2 Fr. on 45c
Range: 1000-2000F
2 Fr. on 45c
Range 1000-2000F
2fr serif 2fr sans serif
Serifed Fr.

Type A base and 
Type AA Flip -90
Sans serif Fr.

Type A base flip and 
Type AA +90


10 Fr. on 45c
Range:  9000-10000 F
10fr
Type A + Type AA +90 with san serif Fr.
(Unlisted in Barefoot)
3 Fr. on 50c
Range: 2000-3000 F
3fr
Serifed Fr. and short, thin  arm on ‘3’
Type A base and Type AA +90
3 Fr. on 50c
Range: 2000-3000 F
3fr
Serifed Fr. and long, thick arm on ‘3’
Type A flip +180 and Type AA +90
3 Fr. on 50c
Range: 2000-3000 F
3franc
Serifed Fr.; long, thick arm on ‘3’ Type A flip +180; Type AA flip -90


3 Fr. on 50c
 Range 2000-3000F
used in 1930 on a 2210F Draft
003x
001
Type A Base; Type AA flip -90
Garage Wengler, Ettelbrück
28 Jun 1930, payable 28 Mar 1931
004
3 Fr. on 50c
Range: 2000-3000F
Used in 1930 on a similar draft
3fr on doc
Type A base and Type AA +90

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Pétange—Use of Self-Adhesive Communal Revenues

 

001

Here is an example of an imperforate self-adhesive communal revenue used at Pétange to pay an identity card fee.  What other communes have introduced self-adhesives?

003

Thursday, March 19, 2015

Rare Weiler-la-Tour communal revenue

 

Weiler la Tour_xx

Few would disagree that this 10F communal revenue, canceled with the cachet of the Administration Communale – Weiler-La-Tour, is among the scarcest of Luxembourg’s communal revenue stamps.  In some ways, its beauty flows from its simplicity enhanced by the commune’s elegant cachet.

Thanks to Bruno Vincent in France for sharing a scan of this fiscal gem from his collections of France, Belgium, and Luxembourg fiscals.  He publishes a beautiful, scholarly revenue blog entitled Collection Passion les Timbres Fiscaux at www.timbres-fiscaux.fr .  Be sure to have a look if you haven’t already enjoyed this fine blog!

Communal Meter Imprint from Mersch

 

Mersch_02

3€ Population Tax
Meter Impression
19 May 2010

Once upon a time, the Mersch commune used beautiful pictorials.  Sadly, they have now been superseded by unattractive meter imprints, as seen above, produced by a franking machine.  These days convenience trumps beauty, that’s for sure.

This is what Mersch communals used to look like:

Mersch_01b

Which do you prefer?  Which would you collect?

Wednesday, February 25, 2015

5c 1898 Imperforate Effets de Commerce with U-shaped Ornament – 1902 Use

 

005a
005aa
005
006

An issue of imperforate Effets on cream paper with a two-pronged u-shaped ornament appeared in 1898.  Barefoot claims that only six low denominations (5c, 10c, 15c, 20c, 25c and 50c) and two higher  denominations (1F and 10F) were issued.  However, my collection contains a few used examples of red-color denominations with values between 1F and 10F, albeit such examples are scarce.  So we really don’t know for sure how many denominations this issue included.  Perhaps a sufficient supply of denominations between 1F and 10F was available such that the intermediate denominations were printed but not widely distributed, as Barefoot lists the 2F50, 3F, 4F, 4F50, and 5F red as having been surcharged in 1920 (Barefoot No. 143, 144, 146, 147 and 148).

Here the lowest denomination—the 5 centime—is used on a bank draft by Chemiserie Strasbourgeoise J. Heymann for 72.25 francs dated 3 November 1902 and drawn on the Société Général Alsacienne de Banque Luxembourg in favor of a payee in Niederwiltz.  The stamp is pen canceled “J.H. 3 Nov. 1902.”

I previously posted a 1906 use of the 1898 imperforate one-franc red here.