POSTAGE STAMPS
(1933)
This page was last updated
20-Feb-2023 10:16
MICHEL 502
GERMAN WELFARE FUND (DEUTSCHE NOTHILFE)
RICHARD WAGNER
6Rpf
BACKGROUND: This series of 9 stamps depicts various scenes from operas by Richard Wagner (1813 to 1883) and were the first stamps to feature a swastika watermark. Changing the watermark from the previous waffle type to a swastika design was one of the first steps in the Nazification of the postal system and it was a subtle sign of the Nazi's beginning to move into all aspects of German life. Later stamps were to feature Nazi Swastikas and party symbols much more overtly.
This second stamp in the series was valued at 6Rpf with a donation of 4Rpf going to the welfare fund and features a scene from the opera "Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg" - "The Master-Singers of Nuremberg', an 1868 opera, in three acts by Richard Wagner. This opera is longest opera commonly performed and takes about four and a half hours from start to finish, excluding two breaks and is usually performed in its entirety.
The stamps were available throughout Germany at post office counters until 1st Feb 1934. They were then made available again during the Richard Wagner Festival in 1934 at counters in Munich and Beyreuth.
VALIDITY: 1st Nov 1933 to 30th Sep 1934
VALUE: 6Rpf + 4Rpf
COLOUR: blackish-green
WATERMARK: Swastika
PERF: K14:13 (sheets) and K14 (booklets).
AVAILABILITY: Engraved sheets (5x10) and booklets.
QUANTITY PRINTED: 4,328,111
NOTE: Beware of forged stamp with cancellation "STUTTGART 15.11.33"
VARIATIONS
ABOVE LEFT: Sheet variant (perf K14:13)
ABOVE RIGHT: Booklet variant (perf K14)