Here are some thoughts on the Michel listing for
Armenia. Your Comments are invited.
It is important to understand that Michel lists only
stamps which, on the basis of archival research by C Zakiyan, are known to have
been officially authorised. Counter surcharges made for dealers like
Serebrakian and Melik Pachaev are excluded. In contrast, the Stanley Gibbons
listing – based on the work of Tchilinigirian and Ashford – includes these
counter surcharges.
Michel 3 – 28 Framed Z overprints
-
The earlier small type overprints are
much scarcer and worth x 5 to x 10 more than the larger sized overprints
-
The earlier small overprints are roughly
as common in black and in violet. But the larger overprints are scarcer in
violet and are worth about x 2 to x 5 the price of black overprints
- Michel 3,4,5 and 20 are scarcer than the
valuations suggest
-
Large framed Z on 7 rouble imperforate
exists and may be an official overprint, since the original handstamps would not
have been available for late overprinting.
Michel 29 – 56 Unframed Z overprints
-
For the small Z overprints, violet and
black are about as common; but for the large Z overprints, violet is much less
common and worth x 2 to x 5 the price of black overprints
Michel 57 – 85 Rouble overprints
-
Violet overprints exist for the 1,3 and
5 rouble; they are scarce and worth maybe x 5 – x 10 the price of black overprints
-
Violet overprints exist for the 10r on
25 kop but they are rarities
-
The valuations for Michel 65,66,72,73,84
are completely wrong based on a mis-reading of C Zakiyan’s first book. Zakiyan
gave REMAINDER numbers for various stamps; Michel thought they were ISSUED
numbers. Michel 66 for example is a common stamp worth maybe 15 €, not the 750€
given in Michel.
Michel 86 – 118 Combined Surcharges
-
The combined surcharges with framed Z
(Michel 86 – 101) are all much scarcer than the unframed ones; Michel makes no
distinction in valuations, though it lists the two types separately (Michel 86 - 101 for framed Z; 102 - 118 for unframed Z). Michel does not separately list stamps where the rouble Monogram has been obscured leaving the underlying Z clearly visible.
In general, framed surcharges are worth x 5 – x 10 their unframed equivalents. Only Michel 100 is quite common.
In general, framed surcharges are worth x 5 – x 10 their unframed equivalents. Only Michel 100 is quite common.
-
Again, some stamps are hugely overpriced
due to the misreading of Zakiyan. This is true of Michel 95,96, 110, 111, 116
and 117. Fort example, Michel 111 is worth about 50 - 75 €uro not the 2200€
given by Michel
Chassepot Issue Ia – Ik
-
Stamps from the Original printing are
relatively common, but the low values to 15r are scarcer as is the 70r. The set
in ** condition is probably worth 20 –
25€
First Yessayan Michel IIa – II s
-
Stamps from the Original printing are
probably worth 1€ each imperforate and 2 – 10 € each perforate. The 25 000
brown perforated is a rarity and worth 500 €. Confusion is created by the
common Reprints/Forgeries of all values in both perf and imperf.
Second Yessayan Michel IIIa – IIIr
-
Unoverprinted stamps from the Original
printing are scarce for those values which were not issued and worth 50 – 100 €
each. They are rarities for the stamps which were issued and worth maybe 200 –
500 € each. Confusion is created by the two series of unofficial Reprints made
by Yessayan, none of which were sent to Armenia.
-
It is a specialist task to distinguish
the three printings.
Gold Kopeck surcharges Michel 142 – 166
- In general this is a very good listing
though 155a is too low (this is the 25 000 brown perforated)
Yerevan Pictorials Michel IVa – IV k
-
A set of the Original printing is not
too difficult to find and 10 or 20 € seems about right; some values exist as
remainders and are much more common – for example, the 400r
Manuscript surcharges Michel 167 – 170
-
In general this is a good listing, but
the 2 kop surcharge (Michel 169) is a rarity.
Yerevan Pictorials with Overprints Michel 171 – 180
-
It’s very strange that Michel does not
provide separate listings for the Metal and Rubber handstamps, nor for the
three main colours (red, violet and black). This could be done quite easily. It
is correct that the red Rubber overprints are generally scarcer. Red Metal
overprints are probably Soviet reprints.
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