The Basel Dove (Basel German: Basler Dybli, German: Basler Taube) is a notable stamp issued by the Swiss canton of Basel on 1 July 1845[1] with a value of 2½-rappen. It was the first tricolor stamp in the world and the only postage stamp issued by Basel. At the time each canton was responsible for its own postal service. There were no uniform postal rates for Switzerland until after the establishment of a countrywide postal service on 1 January 1849. The only other cantons to issue their own stamps were Zürich and Geneva.

Basel Dove
Country of productionSwitzerland
Location of productionBasel
Date of production1 July 1845
Nature of rarityExtremely rare
No. in existenceUnknown
Face valuerappen
Estimated valueCHF 18,000
CHF 37,500 on cover

The stamp, designed by the architect Melchior Berri, featured a white embossed dove carrying a letter in its beak, and was inscribed "STADT POST BASEL". The stamp is printed in black, crimson and blue, making it the world's first tri-coloured stamp.[1] It was valid for use until 30 September 1854, by which time 41,480 stamps had been printed.[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Hertsch, Max. Famous Stamps of the World. Berne: Hallwag Ltd., 1968, p.12.
  2. ^ http://www.swiss-philately.co.uk/stamps_cantonal_basel.html Archived 2012-03-15 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 26 August 2009.

Further reading

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  • Bach, Jean-Paul; Winterstein, Felix (1995). Basler Taube (in German). Reinach: Multipress. ISBN 3952083720.
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