Red Revenue
Chinese stamps of the Qing Dynasty / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Red Revenues (Chinese: 紅印花郵票) are Qing dynasty Chinese revenue stamps that were overprinted (surcharged) to be used as postage stamps in 1897. Their limited number, fine design and the intaglio process made the stamps in this series some of the most sought-after in the world.[1][2]
Red Revenue | |
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Country of production | Chinese Qing dynasty |
Location of production | London |
Printer | Waterlow and Sons |
Face value | 3 cents (overprinted in five denominations) |
Red Revenue | |||||||
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Traditional Chinese | 紅印花郵票 | ||||||
Simplified Chinese | 红印花邮票 | ||||||
Literal meaning | red tax-stamp postage stamp | ||||||
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There are several varieties of Red Revenue stamps, with the "Small One Dollar" being the rarest and most valuable. It has been called "China's rarest regularly issued stamp". In a 2013 Hong Kong auction, a single stamp was sold for HK$6.9 million.[3] Another was sold in a 2013 Beijing auction for 7.22 million yuan. A block of four, considered the "crown jewel" of Chinese philately, was reportedly sold in 2009, together with a different stamp, for 120 million yuan (US$18.8 million).[4]