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GERMAN COLONIES
TOGO
STAMPS
1889 / 1901

Togo became a German Protectorate from 5th Jul 1884 with the German post Office starting from 1st Mar 1888.

Togo was located on the western coast of Africa and occupied a thin 50Km wide strip of the "Slave Coast". The area expands into the hinterland for about 560Km and is 175Km wide from north to south at its widest part. As the area was so small it was difficult to defend militarily and so was forced to surrender to British and French troops on 26th Aug 1914.

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Forerunners are stamps of the German Empire that were in circulation in foreign countries and the colonies without any special identification (i.e. not overprinted "Togo"), until issue of their own stamps. 'Proper' forerunners were officially delivered to post offices and were sold from postal counters, stamps that were not used or not officially issued are non-proper forerunners. All forerunners and interim stamps can only be recognised by the cancellation and as such there is no such thing as an unused forerunner.

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MICHEL V47
FORERUNNER

The German Post Office in Togo used regular German Empire issue stamps V47, crown/eagle.

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Mi V47
10Pf
red
(variations)


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VARIATIONS

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Mi V47a
rose red
(1889/90)
Mi V47b
bright rose red
(1890 to 1896)
Mi V47c
medium carmine red
(1894/95)
Mi V47d
bright lilac red
(1895 to Jul 1897)


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PLATE FLAWS

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Mi V47 PF I
'I' in 'REICHSPOST' with crossbars
Mi V47 PF II
'I' in 'REICHSPOST' open in the top centre
Mi V47 PF V
bar to the left of the denomination


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STAMPS FROM MY COLLECTION

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(1)
Mi V47d
cancelled, used
"LOME"
"TOGOGEBIET"
"13/1 97"

(1) This stamp is cancelled with the first LOME cancel used from 1st Mar 1890 to 13th Nov 1906 (there is some later usage of this cancel) and there are also instances of no year on the cancel.

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This page was last updated
21-Jul-2020 02:17