These two stamps appear to be the normal Scott N20 & N21 issues for the post-WWI Italian Occupation of Austrian territory. The overprint, however, is reversed (not inverted) "Giulia/Venezia" instead of "Venezia/Giulia." Scott has no mention of them.
I am particularly curious about these, as both were cancelled apparently at the same place and time (8.XII.18), yet both have full, unused gum. Perhaps a deliberate philatelic "pseudo-error?" Does anyone know of any reference to these in the literature? Any premium value?
Thanks
You'd have to check Sassone -- sorry, I don't have one.
That being said, the overprints (and the both stamps, in general) look suspect.
All the "normal" overprints I've seen are much sharper. The overprint at the right looks like it is at an angle. Definitely not an expert on cancels, but the cancel looks, well, weird. I've seen the thin outer ring combined with the thick inner ring/bar, but never seen the thin outer ring so incredibly sharp. But I certainly don't claim to have seen all the different cancel varieties for Austria.
Now what makes the reversed order overprint even more odd is that the few examples I've seen are all on canceled stamps with -- you guessed it, Görz cancels of the same type.
Given that both your cancels are the exact same date, I find it odd that the Görz block lettering in your cancels differ, yet the date lettering is the same.
I would suggest taking a genuine overprint and compare the spacing of each letter (i.e., see if the points of the V, i, l... line up properly), not just compare the total width of each overprint line.
Silence in the face of adversity is the father of complicity and collusion, the first cousins of conspiracy.. 26 Apr 2016 12:06:20am
re: 1918 Venetia Giulia reversed overprint error
Perhaps it is an example of the very rare "Leaning Overprint of Trieste."
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