Valuation of cancellations of the Austrian Empire
The study of postmarks is a specialized branch of philately called marcophily. It brings added value to the stamps by their historical significance. Other parameters are the rarity and the attractiveness. In particular, the stamps issued by the Habsburg monarchy during the 1850-1867 period (the 5 issues before the Austro-Hungarian compromise of 1867), are collected for their variety and beauty. A first publication on this topic was made by Hans Kropf in 1899. Edwin Mueller in his Handbook of Austria and Lombardy-Venetia Cancellations on the Postage Stamp Issues 1850-1864, published in 1961, described all postmarks used in the Austrian empire, Lombardy, Venetia and in the Austria post-offices in the Ottoman empire. The relative valuation of those postmarks contains a popularity index, which is a multiplicative factor on top of the rarity. Closely related article is Postage stamps and postal history of Austria for a better understanding of the historical context.
The historical context
The Austrian Empire stamps were first issued on June 1, 1850: a coat of arms under the text KK Post-Stempel. The word Austria does not appear, which is logical, as the issue served in whole central Europe, more precisely in all or in part of the current following countries:
- in the north the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland;
- in the East Ukraine, Romania;
- in the South Serbia, Slovenia, Croatia, Montenegro, Italy;
- Austria and Hungary.
The languages used are German, Italian, Hungarian, Czech, Serbo-Croat, Polish and French Chargé.
This article is linked to the article Postage stamps and postal history of Austria. For a better understanding of the historical context, see the article Austria-Hungary.
The collection of cancellations of Austria
Collecting of cancellations, in particular the 1850 issues of Austria and Lombardy-Venetia, has a long tradition. The first important collection of the kind was assembled by Hans Kropf. He published The Cancellations of the stamps of Austria-Hungary and Lombardy-Venetia, a handbook with 959 different cancellation types, in 1899. His collection was purchased by King Fuad I of Egypt, and by Marc Fitch in 1954.[1] The Jerger collection (see below) has made complements to this collection, with items from Baron Ferrari, Felix Brunner, Maurice Burrus, Arthur Caspary, Dale-Lichtenstein, the King Carol I of Romania, and others.
The system used by Edwin Mueller
The cancellations (or postmarks in more general terms) can be studied, classified and valuated based on the handbook, compiled by Edwin Mueller.[2]
Edwin Mueller describes each of the postmark type by a series of codes (13 basic forms, 5 types of lettering, with or without a year etc.), and idealized pictures.
The 505 types that have been used for each of the 3381 post-offices are documented from the first (I) to the fifth (V) issue, with their opening date: when relevant, the letter P means that the postmark was already in use in 1850 (precursor of the pre-stamp period).
The handbook relies on an original system of relative valuation. It is a valuation expressed in points, result of a double multiplicative content:
- a point system which indicates the relative rarity, between 1 and 250
- a popularity index, between 2 and 30.
The valuation points can thus vary (in principle) between 1 and 30 x 250 = 7500.
The market value of an ordinary type cancellation depends primarily only on its rarity index (1 by default), while if it displays attractive characters (color other than black, originality, beauty..), it is the multiplicative result of both indexes which determines the global Mueller valuation points.
The article further illustrates by a few examples this popularity index.
The popularity index
Index 1 : the basic types
The value of those cancellations depend only on their relative rarity (and on usual characteristics like their degree of completeness, cleanliness, centering (SON)...). This value is added to the stamp value, of course.
Some examples :
-
Type sL-I of St. Pölten, 1x5 P (I means Italic lettering)
-
Type RDb-f, of (FLITSCH) Bovec 1x12 P (Db means double circle and usual ornament; f means date without year)
-
Type RS-f (the most common - 2311 postoffices:[3] S for simple circle, but rarity 35 for Frankenmarkt)
-
Type RL-R of SPITAL (Spittal an der Drau) (1x6 P of rarity)- RL-R means 2 linear lines of Roman type (Antiqua) lettering
Index 2
-
LOMNITZ (Lomnice nad Popelkou) Type RS-f (30x2 Points) because of the blue ink
-
WIEN (Vienna) Type GkB-R with the lettering G for Grotesk - Sans-Serif and R Antiqua - Roman; k for Divided Box - 2x2 Points
-
TRIEST Type RhK-f (1x2 Points) with K for Rectangular Postmark
Index 3
-
Type GF-fh A fancy rare form (losange for example WIEN (Vienna) (3x3 Points)
-
Type R2So-f (the small o means ornamented frame for ELBOGEN (Loket) (15x3 Points)
Index 4
-
Type RC-R (200x4 points) of NIZNIOW, now Ukraine (Nyzhniv).
-
Type RDo-Iy TRIEST (Trieste) (the year 1850 or 1851 is outside the stamp)
-
Type GC-I (4x4 Points) of NEUNKIRCHEN (Neunkirchen, Austria)
Index 6
Letter C indicates a curved format in semi-circle. It is a relatively rare cancellation (15) and beautiful (index 6) hence 90 points Mueller.
Index 8
Letter O indicates an Oval postmark:
-
Type RfOd (70x8=560 P) of Werschetz (Vršac) - Sold 1100 SF in 1981
-
Type ROo of SEMLIN (Zemun) (12x8 P)- Sold 220 SF in 2003
Index 10
Red ink for recommended letters from Vienna K.K. BRIEF-FILIALAMT RECOMANDIRT
Index 15
-
Type RyB-ROeh of PERCHTOLDSDORF (30x15 P): These fancy ornaments of wine growing villages near Vienna are in popular demand.
-
Type sqBo of OELS in Bohemia[4] rarity 40 thus 600 P Mueller.
Index 20
-
Type RCj-f of SADAGURA (Bucovine, Sadhora) (40x20 P)- Sold 1000 SF in 2003
Index 25
-
Type RCj of WÜRBENTHAL (Vrbno pod Pradedem) (175x25 P) - Sold 3400 SF in 2003
Index 30
A rare series of mute cancellations, including a unique 1576:
Prices reached during auctions
The net prices mentioned in Swiss Francs are those obtained (charges not included) in 2003 during the sale of a remarkable collection Sammlung Dr.Anton Jerger (1919-1987) & Elisabeth Jerger-Kramer (1921-2002) (mainly).[5]
The most beautiful cancellations (complete on fragments) were close to 1 Euro per point Mueller.
Auctions using the Mueller points
To be expanded
Besides the illustrated auction in 2003, other important stamps vendors have based their proposed values on the Mueller points:
- Stanley Gibbons Merkur GmbH, Frankfurt, 1976
- P. Rapp, Zürich, 1977
- Corinphila, Zürich, many.
Valuation of later postmarks
After the death of Edwin Mueller in 1962, collectors felt the need to continue his work for later issues. Wilhelm Klein noticed a good continuity in many postmarks on the last issues in kreuzer. He thus decided to publish in 1967 a first part of the work, covering the issues 1867, 1883 and 1890. However, he dropped the Mueller system, presenting the rarity (Häufigkeit) and the popularity (Beliebtheit) in a single final point value. There are more than 700 images of postmarks, used by the 6186 fixed post offices (in the Austrian half[6] of the monarchy) as of 30 September 1900.[7]
Notes and references
- ^ Adapted from the CORINPHILA introduction for the 2003 Auction.
- ^ Handbook of Austria and Lombardy-Venetia Cancellations on the Postage Stamp Issues 1850-1864, by Edwin MUELLER, 1961.
- ^ Mueller 1961, Dated Town Postmarks RS-f model, page P19
- ^ This office closed in 1858. Not to be confused with OELS in MÄHREN (Olesnice).
- ^ Abstempelungen Kaiserreich Österreich, during the 138th CORINPHILA Briefmarken-Auktion (Zürich), November 2003
- ^ Mueller and Klein use the expression in der österreichischen Reichshälfte - not Cisleithania
- ^ Die regulären Poststempel der stabilen Ortspostämter in der Österreichischen Reichshälfte, Wilhelm Klein, Wien 1967.