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Worldwide Stamps and Covers RUSSIA Russia - Russian Far East (Asia Pacific Reg
Sale No: 1021
Lot No: 1135
Symbol: e
1866 (7 Apr) large part of cover, franked with 10k brown & blue, tied by cds, sent from Blagoveshchensk to Tammerfors, Finland, postmarked "Blagoveshchensk Amursk.7.4.66", cover faults, otherwise fine, stated to be the earliest recorded mail from Blagoveshchensk, where postal operations began in 1859 (Image)
Est.US$150
Opening US$ 150.00
Sold...US$ 150.00
Closed..Oct-13-2021, 12:16:11 EST
Sold For 150
Sale No: 1021
Lot No: 1136
Symbol: e
1886 (7 May) money letter (opened for display and slightly reduced at top) sent from Khabarovsk on the Amur River to Odessa. The letter contained 5 rubles to be transmitted to a Russian monastery on Mt. Athos. Postage was 17 kopecks (endorsed on back, calculated at 7 kopecks for weight, 3 kopecks for insurance, and 7 kopecks for registration) (Image)
Est.US$150
Opening US$ 140.00
Closed..Oct-13-2021, 12:16:34 EST
Sold For 0
Sale No: 1021
Lot No: 1137
Symbol: e
1903 (10 Mar) registered cover franked on back with 14k, sent from Vilyuisk (Yakutsk Territory) to St. Petersburg, with Moscow transit and arrival pmks. Mail was dispatched on the 10th and 25th of every month via Yakutsk and Irkutsk. Sent by local teacher P. Kh. Starovatov to the Imperial Academy of Sciences Library. These are the earliest recorded postmarks from Vilyuisk (population 700) (Image)
Est.US$150
Opening US$ 525.00
Sold...US$ 525.00
Closed..Oct-13-2021, 12:17:52 EST
Sold For 525
Sale No: 1021
Lot No: 1138
Symbol: e
1911 (21 Mar) a declared-value cover sent to Grunau, Germany from the "Amur-Zeya" volost administration post office in Markovo, franked with 2x10k dark blue, postmarked Amursko-Zeiskoye (17.3.11 and 21.3), Blagoveshchensk (23.4), and Grunau (10.6) on arrival. The letter contained 10 rubles. It was mistakenly treated as a domestic letter and the sender was charged the domestic rate of 20 kopecks (10 kopecks for weight and 10 kopecks for insurance) instead of the foreign rate of 24 kopecks (10 kopecks for weight, 4 kopecks for insurance, and 10 kopecks for registration). This letter left Markovo on 21 March and traveled 28 miles by postal carriage to the Blagoveshchensk post office. Unlike uninsured correspondence, money letters were not transported along the shore of the Amur River while it was freezing or thawing, so the letter remained in the post office until the first postal steamer went upriver. This is the only recorded mail from Amursko-Zeiskoye, where postal operations began in 1902. Illustrated in BJRP No. 53. (Image)