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EARLY POSTAL SERVICES

A regular postal network was estab­lished by Cyrus the Great in Persia in about 529 BC, and detailed descriptions of it were written by the Greek histori­ans Herodotus and Xenophon, both of whom commented on the speed and efficiency of the horse relays that car­ried letters to the furthest reaches of the Persian Empire.­ By this time, the Chinese had ;~ , highly sophisticated network of pos\: relays. In the 13th century Marco Polo' described the imperial service as hav­ing over 25,000 relay stations, but as late as 1879 it was still confined to the court, and the general public were barred from using it on pain of death. The Chinese were also the first to use paper as a writing material, by the 2nd century Be. The Romans wrote their letters on wax
tablets and later on thin sheets of wood,

We usually think of postage stamps as small pieces of printed, gummed paper; in fact stamps, labels and seals have evolved in response to various postal needs and a wealth of distinctive formats - and affiliated stationery - now exist. Left: A United States commemorative celebrates the centenary of its country's stamps in

THE ORIGINS OF POSTAL SERVICES

Almost as soon as writing evolved, communications of a sort came into being. Postal services were certainly in existence in China as long ago as 4000 BC and in Egypt and Assyria a millen­nium later. The Chinese and Egyptian services were confined to imperial court circles, but in Assyria the service was open to the mercantile class as well. Not only are these ancient services well documented in contemporary chroni­cles, but actUal examples of letters have survived, in the form of clay tablets bearing messages written in cuneiform (wedge-shaped) script. An immense hoard of such correspondence was dis­covered at Kultepe in Turkey in 1925 and included clay tablets dating from at least 2000 Be.

Below and right: Cuneiform writing on a Mesopotamian clay tablet, dating from the 21st or 20th century BC; this was celebrated on an Austrian stamp of 1965 issued for the Vienna International Philatelic Exhibition.  Above: Postmen from the Middle Ages to more modern times are depicted on stamps of Austria, USA, Belgium and France.  Right: A medieval Latin manuscript on another Austrian stamp of the WIPA series of 1965 the Italian city states, the universities and the great religious houses When state services were institute these gradually died out or we merged with them while the Egyptians favoured papyrus. Parchment was the preferred medium in Europe until the 15th century, when paper was introduced from China via Asia Minor and the Byzantine Empire. By the Middle Ages there were many postal services in Europe, but none was in general use. They operated almost exclusively for trade guilds (such as the Metzger Post of Germany, which served the guild of butchers), the merchants of the Hanseatic League, Venice and by the 15th century the Holy Roman Empire had an efficient postal service operated by the Counts of Thurn anc'" Taxis, whose range extended from thql Baltic to the Adriatic and from Polan41 to the Straits of Gibraltar. The service survived into the era of adhesive stamps, and issued these in various states of Germany until 1867, where the Thurn and Taxis family.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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