AN INTRODUCTION TO THE STAMPS OF CARPATHO-UKRAINE, 1939 and 1945

Background The Uzhhorhod Provisional Overprints
The National Assembly Issue         Watermarks
The Yasinia Local Trident Overprints         First Edition

Carpatho-Ukrainian Postal Rates

        Second Edition
A Change in Regimes         Forgeries
 
The National Council Definitive Issues Cancellations
        First Definitive Issue Censorship
        Second Definitive Issue Epilog
        Third Definitive Issue Conclusion

The Yasinia Local Trident Overprints

Hearkening back to 1918-19 when trident overprints were the norm on stamps of newly independent Ukraine, some citizens of the town of Yasinia decided to create their own version during the time of Carpatho-Ukraine’s short-lived independence. On 14 March 1939, 43 Czechoslovak stamp issues and two souvenir sheets were overprinted with a rubber handstamp showing a trident (Figure 5; designated Type I, it is rather similar to Odesa VIa or some of the Podillia trident overprints from Ukraine 20 years earlier). Still on that same day or on the following day, 39 Czechoslovak stamp varieties were overprinted with a distinctive Type II metal device that not only displayed a trident, but also the words “СЛАВА УКРАЇНІ!” (Glory to Ukraine!) in a half circle under the trident (Figure 6). Some postal cards were also overprinted with either the Type I or Type II tridents. All of the overprinting was carried out with black ink.

Figure 5. Type I Figure 6. Type II.

Exactly who produced the Yasinia overprints has not been determined. A likely source is members of the military organization Karpatska Sich, some of whose recruits were stationed in Yasinia at this time. The Yasinia stamps were not officially authorized issues by any means, despite the fact that some of the overprinted stamps are known seemingly used with a Yasinia circular date stamp of 14 March 1939. These "used" stamps were most likely created on a "canceled-to-order" or "handback" basis. The Yasinia local stamps were not prepared in any great quantities and are fairly difficult to track down. They thus provide quite a challenge for collectors of philatelic ephemera.

Previous Chapter Next Chapter

<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>

References

 
Background The Uzhhorhod Provisional Overprints
The National Assembly Issue         Watermarks
The Yasinia Local Trident Overprints         First Edition
Carpatho-Ukrainian Postal Rates         Second Edition
A Change in Regimes         Forgeries
 
The National Council Definitive Issues Cancellations
        First Definitive Issue Censorship
        Second Definitive Issue Epilog
        Third Definitive Issue Conclusion