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General Philatelic/Identify This? : Japanese Occupied stamps

 

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postalpicker

15 Mar 2020
07:22:31pm
I look at the back of my Scott's catalog and it shows a small series of symbols that end up with what looks like 4 fingers pointing downward.
Is that the way to identify stamps of Japanese occupation?

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musicman
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APS #213005

15 Mar 2020
08:00:58pm
re: Japanese Occupied stamps

I don't know for sure about the symbol, but these are

Japanese Occupation of Burma I believe.

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nigelc
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15 Mar 2020
08:26:09pm
re: Japanese Occupied stamps

These are regular Japanese stamps.

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cdj1122
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Silence in the face of adversity is the father of complicity and collusion, the first cousins of conspiracy..

16 Mar 2020
02:28:03pm
re: Japanese Occupied stamps

They are regular Japanese Commemoratives issues in 1942 that celebrate the "Fall of Singapore" Britain's Unsinkable Battleship. So called because the thinking was that it was not attackable from the Malayan jungles at the otherwise well defended city's rear. Yet the Japanese troops did invade the Malaya peninsula and traveled south, often using bicycles to travel the jungle trails.
The city's defensive guns were only able to fire seaward against an attack and could not traverse the rest of the directions,. Arriving at the City's north (land side), the Japanese seized the city's water supply and Singapore is in history alongside the "Maginot Line," "Corrigador," "Dien Bien Phu" and "Fortress Europa."
With the sinking of the "Prince of Wales" and the "Repulse", under the command of UK's admiral Tom Phillips, the city's fate was sealed.

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".... You may think you understood what you thought I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you think you heard is not what I thought I meant. .... "
simothecat

16 Mar 2020
06:39:18pm
re: Japanese Occupied stamps

I don't claim to know much Japanese, but, to answer the OP's question, the symbol refered to reads as "Dai" and means great or large. The three characters at right, reading from right to left, would be spoken as "Dai Nippon" and translate roughly as "Great Japan".

Jan

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musicman
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APS #213005

16 Mar 2020
08:21:12pm
re: Japanese Occupied stamps

I stand corrected;

thanks Nigel and Charlie!

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Author/Postings
postalpicker

15 Mar 2020
07:22:31pm

I look at the back of my Scott's catalog and it shows a small series of symbols that end up with what looks like 4 fingers pointing downward.
Is that the way to identify stamps of Japanese occupation?

Image Not Found

Like
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this post
Members Picture
musicman

APS #213005
15 Mar 2020
08:00:58pm

re: Japanese Occupied stamps

I don't know for sure about the symbol, but these are

Japanese Occupation of Burma I believe.

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this post
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nigelc

15 Mar 2020
08:26:09pm

re: Japanese Occupied stamps

These are regular Japanese stamps.

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3 Members
like this post.
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Silence in the face of adversity is the father of complicity and collusion, the first cousins of conspiracy..
16 Mar 2020
02:28:03pm

re: Japanese Occupied stamps

They are regular Japanese Commemoratives issues in 1942 that celebrate the "Fall of Singapore" Britain's Unsinkable Battleship. So called because the thinking was that it was not attackable from the Malayan jungles at the otherwise well defended city's rear. Yet the Japanese troops did invade the Malaya peninsula and traveled south, often using bicycles to travel the jungle trails.
The city's defensive guns were only able to fire seaward against an attack and could not traverse the rest of the directions,. Arriving at the City's north (land side), the Japanese seized the city's water supply and Singapore is in history alongside the "Maginot Line," "Corrigador," "Dien Bien Phu" and "Fortress Europa."
With the sinking of the "Prince of Wales" and the "Repulse", under the command of UK's admiral Tom Phillips, the city's fate was sealed.

Like 
2 Members
like this post.
Login to Like.

".... You may think you understood what you thought I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you think you heard is not what I thought I meant. .... "
simothecat

16 Mar 2020
06:39:18pm

re: Japanese Occupied stamps

I don't claim to know much Japanese, but, to answer the OP's question, the symbol refered to reads as "Dai" and means great or large. The three characters at right, reading from right to left, would be spoken as "Dai Nippon" and translate roughly as "Great Japan".

Jan

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musicman

APS #213005
16 Mar 2020
08:21:12pm

re: Japanese Occupied stamps

I stand corrected;

thanks Nigel and Charlie!

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