| Title: Fable Series (1st Issue) Girl (Kong-ji) and Stepmother (Pat-ji) (View Souvenir Sheet) |
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Stamp Serial#
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643 | |||
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KPC#
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C-388 | |||
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MICHEL#
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672 | |||
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StanGib#
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812 | |||
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Scott#
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667 | |||
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Date of Issue
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09/01/1969 | |||
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Quantity
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1,000,000 | |||
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Denomination
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5 won | |||
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Design
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Kong-ji in a sedan chair, on the way to the palace | |||
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Designer
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Chun Hee-han | |||
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Image Area
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33mm*23mm | |||
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Perforation
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13 | |||
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Sheet Composition
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5Ąż10 | |||
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Paper
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Granite paper; unwatermarked | |||
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Printer
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Government Printing & Mint Agency of the Repubic of Korea | |||
| Description | ||||
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Very few Korean stamps issued in the past had designs such as that were attractive
and of particular interest to the children. Mindful of this default, the Ministry of Communications
plans to issue a fairy tale stamp series, the first in its kind in the history of the Korean stamp, with
an aim to reproduce the charms of the old-time tales in stamps and thereby cultivate the esthetic mind
of the children, who will shoulder the destiny of the nation toward prosperity.
This stamp series will be issued in the five parts with each part coming every two months featuring four scenes from each of the tales, "Kongji and Patji," "a Hare`s Liver," "the Sun and the Moon," "a Fairy and Woodcutter," and "Hungbu and Nolbu." The stamp issues are scheduled as follows: the first part, "Kongji and Patji" on September 1; the second part, "a Hare`s Liver" on November 1; the third part, "the Sun and the Moon" on January 5, the next year; the fourth, "a Fairy and a Woodcutter" on March 5; the finish and last, "Hungbu and Nolbu." The Kongji and Patji is a story written exclusively in Hankul, the Korean alphabet, presumed to be a product of the latter half of the 18th century when the popular literature began to emerge for the first time in this country, but the exact time of the writing and the author of the story are unknown today. The story tells of a good girl who is maltreated by her ill-natured step-mother and step-syster, accomplishes menial work ordered by her mother with the aid of toads, cows and sparrows and eventually marriges a prince. The Ministry of Communications issues this fairy tale stamp series in a hope to intrigue the interests of stamp collectors and children in the Korean stamp and to promote the philatelic activities. |
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