Philatarium
APS #187980 21 May 2014 12:54:50pm | re: please help to i.d. these two stamps (North and South Korea Revenues)
On that left stamp, the writing across the bottom is in Chinese characters. Without using a dictionary, the first 4 characters from left to right say "Greater Korea(n) People's/Democratic Country/Republic", so that sounds like North Korea to me. Also, the next to last character (one in from the right) is, if I'm recalling correctly, the character often used on revenue stamps.
The odd thing is that North Korea dropped the use of Chinese characters fairly early on -- earlier than South Korea did. So I'm not quite sure how that squares with everything else.
-- Dave
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khj
24 May 2014 03:16:09am | re: please help to i.d. these two stamps (North and South Korea Revenues)
The stamp on the left is South Korean. The 2 leftmost characters at the bottom of the stamp is translated as "Korea". The next 2 characters, individually translated would be people+country, but together would be translated as "Republic". For "People's Republic", the character pair man+people preceded by the country name would be used instead.
It is indeed a revenue stamp: KSSC #RP-54(1962). Your 2w stamp is similar to the older currency series of 1955, but your stamp is definitely the 1962 series. Also note the 1963 cancel on the stamp, indicating new currency usage.
k
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