Talk:Postal savings system: Difference between revisions
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* Denmark only had a giro system, founded in 1920 as "Postgirokontoret", in 1991 it was turned into a government-owned company as Girobank. In 1995, Girobank merged with the savings bank Bikuben, after which the Danish government sold their remaining interest. In 2001, the merged bank was purchased by [[Danske Bank]]. --[[User:BluePlatypus|BluePlatypus]] 00:30, 5 February 2006 (UTC) |
* Denmark only had a giro system, founded in 1920 as "Postgirokontoret", in 1991 it was turned into a government-owned company as Girobank. In 1995, Girobank merged with the savings bank Bikuben, after which the Danish government sold their remaining interest. In 2001, the merged bank was purchased by [[Danske Bank]]. --[[User:BluePlatypus|BluePlatypus]] 00:30, 5 February 2006 (UTC) |
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== Imperial Russia == |
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I've been reading the 1913 Beilis case transcript and one of the witnesses had a postal savings account from before 1905. He had a bill of indebtedness from the sale of a house and kept the bill with his account. Every time he paid an installment to the seller, who was on compulsory military service in the Russo-Japanese War, he went to the postal bank, made a note on the bill and dated it. Another witness tried to claim the money left on the bill and he had proof that he had paid out everything he owed before the claim was filed. |
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[[Special:Contributions/71.163.114.49|71.163.114.49]] ([[User talk:71.163.114.49|talk]]) 10:46, 3 April 2013 (UTC) |
Revision as of 10:46, 3 April 2013
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A fact from Postal savings system appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 9 September 2004. The text of the entry was as follows:
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Major edit tag
How is it legitimate to have a message saying "Please don't edit, under-going major editing." when there's no discussion on the article? This smacks of irrational editorial conservatism.Fifelfoo 05:39, 9 Sep 2004 (UTC)
More Info Needed
I wrote the basic article and if I left the "inuse" tag on it, I do apologize. I put a note on the articles needing attention page because I know this article needs more info, especially since I have nothing about countries besides US, UK, and Japan. Ave! PedanticallySpeaking 18:53, Sep 9, 2004 (UTC)
Anon User: added France, Germany, attempted removal of limited geographic scope. It's a little broader now, we can let the editing take its natural course.
- Here's some info on Scandinavia:
- Sweden had a post office bank. First it was "Postbanken" ("the post-bank"). I don't know when that was started, unfortunately. In 1974 the government created Post- och Kreditbanken (PK-banken) to replace it. In 1990 they bought the smaller bank Nordbanken and changed their name to that, after which their relations to the Post-Office was phased out (although it was still a state-owned bank). During the 90's a bunch of mergers and aquisitions occured, as well as the government selling off a large part of their holdings. Today it's Nordea, which is mostly a private bank, although the Swedish state still is the largest shareholder at 20% of the stock.
- Norway's post-office bank (also "Postbanken") had its beginnings in 1943 during the Nazi occupation of Norway (the infamous Vidkun Quisling was the first account-holder), it was a giro system for money transfer. It became a full savings bank in 1950. In 1996, ownership was transferred from the Norwegian Post Office to the Norwegian Department of Communications. In 1999 they merged with DnB NOR. Currently the Norwegian state owns 1/3 of DnB. Their cooperation agreement with the Norwegian Post Office expired on Dec 31, 2005.
- Denmark only had a giro system, founded in 1920 as "Postgirokontoret", in 1991 it was turned into a government-owned company as Girobank. In 1995, Girobank merged with the savings bank Bikuben, after which the Danish government sold their remaining interest. In 2001, the merged bank was purchased by Danske Bank. --BluePlatypus 00:30, 5 February 2006 (UTC)
Imperial Russia
I've been reading the 1913 Beilis case transcript and one of the witnesses had a postal savings account from before 1905. He had a bill of indebtedness from the sale of a house and kept the bill with his account. Every time he paid an installment to the seller, who was on compulsory military service in the Russo-Japanese War, he went to the postal bank, made a note on the bill and dated it. Another witness tried to claim the money left on the bill and he had proof that he had paid out everything he owed before the claim was filed. 71.163.114.49 (talk) 10:46, 3 April 2013 (UTC)