Christmas stamps, as we know them are not that old. It is a matter of debate as to which was the first Christmas stamp. The Canadian map stamp of 1898 bears an inscription "XMAS 1898", but it was actually issued to mark the inauguration of the Imperial Penny Postage rate.
The
Christmas connection has long been reported to have been the result of quick
thinking; William Mulock was proposing that it be
issued on 9 November, to "honor the Prince" (meaning the Prince of
Wales), but when Queen
Victoria asked "what Prince?" in a displeased manner,
Mulock realized the danger, and answered "Why, madam, the Prince of
Peace."
In
1935, British Forces troops stationed in
In
1937, Austria issued
two "Christmas greeting stamps" featuring a rose and zodiac signs.
In 1939, Brazil issued
four semi-postal stamps with designs featuring
the three kings and a star, an angel and child,
the Southern Cross and a child, and a mother
and child.
In
1941 Hungary also
issued a semi-postal whose additional fees were to pay for "soldiers'
Christmas". The first stamps to depict the Nativity were
the
Many more nations took up the practice during the 1960s, including the United States (1962) and United Kingdom (1966). By the 1990s, approximately 160 postal administrations were issuing Christmas stamps, mostly on an annual basis.
Ukraine 2021 stamp combined both religious and historical motifs, as we can see Jesus and his mother Mary, as well as the Cossacks and Volodymyr the Great, a ruler of Kievan Rus' and a person who Christianized it. The stamp was designed by the artist Mykola Kochubei.
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