Dunes (Stamps)

Dunes in philately refers to the many editions of stamps produced in the Trucial States (today the United Arab Emirates or UAE). The stamps, printed in great profusion in the 1960s, are mostly near-worthless today.[1]

History

An Ajman 'Dunes' stamp

Britain managed the Trucial States' external relations (a result of the 1892 'Exclusive Agreement' treaty), including the management of posts and telegraphs - the states were not members of the UPO - the Universal Postal Union). The Government of India opened its first post office in Dubai in 1941 and its operation was taken over by British Postal Agencies, a subsidiary of the GPO (General Post Office) in 1948. Stamps of the time were British stamps surcharged with Rupee values, until in 1959 a set of 'Trucial States' stamps was issued from Dubai.[2]

In 1963, Britain ceded responsibility for the Trucial States' postal systems to the Rulers of the Trucial States. An American philatelic entrepreneur, Finbar Kenny, saw the opportunity to create a number of editions of stamps aimed at the lucrative collector's market and in 1964 concluded a deal with the cash-strapped emirate of Ajman to take the franchise for the production of stamps for the government. Kenny had made something of a specialty out of signing these deals, also signing with the Ruler of Fujairah in 1964,[3] and getting involved in a bribery case in the USA over his dealings with the government of the Cook Islands.[4]

These stamps, luridly illustrated[5] and irrelevant to the actual emirates they came from (editions included 'Space Research' and 'Tokyo Olympic Games', with two odd editions issued from Umm Al Qawain including 'British Kings and Queens' and, with summer temperatures in Umm Al Qawain reaching 50° C, 'Winter Olympics').

They became known collectively as 'dunes'.[1]

Value

Manama post office today.

The sale of postage stamps was for a short time a lucrative trade for the emirates, most of whom (with the exception of Abu Dhabi, which struck oil in 1965) had few other sources of revenue. Revenues of up to £70,000 for the poorer states fell, however, to £30,000 with the inevitable saturation of the market.[6] Their sale by 1966 constituted the main source of revenue for the northern Trucial States.[2]

Their proliferation eventually devalued them and, because of this, many popular catalogues today do not even list them.[7]

Among these editions, following the opening of a 'post office' in Manama on July 5, 1966, were nine editions published from 'Manama, Dependency of Ajman'.[8] Few collectors would realise Manama was a remote agricultural village consisting of a few adobe houses on a plain overlooked by the Hajar Mountains.

Kenny's arrangements ended when the United Arab Emirates was formed in 1971.[9]

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See also

References

  1. Healey, Barth. "STAMPS; Historic Collections from the Trucial States". Retrieved 27 September 2018.
  2. Donald., Hawley, (1970). The Trucial States. London,: Allen & Unwin. p. 183. ISBN 0049530054. OCLC 152680.CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link)
  3. "Agreement between Mohammed Al Sharqi & Finbar Kenny". Oh My Gosh. Retrieved 1 November 2014.
  4. "Stamp Firm Stuck In Bribery Case". Toledo Blade. August 3, 1979. Retrieved 1 November 2014.
  5. "Dune Stamps - Really So Bad?". www.artonstamps.org. Retrieved 27 September 2018.
  6. A Special Correspondent (3 March 1969). "Stamps are now the money-spinners". The Times (Supplement on the Union of Arab Emirates, Page XIV).
  7. Carlton, R. Scott (1997). The International Encyclopedic Dictionary of Philately. Krause Publications. p. 173. ISBN 9780873414487.
  8. Wilson, Graeme (2010). Rashid, Portrait of a Ruler. UAE: Media Prima. pp. 169–171. ISBN 9789948152880.
  9. Crompton, Paul (9 November 2016). "Stamps tell the UAE's story". Gulf News. Retrieved 26 April 2018.
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