File:Russia 1915-02-07 registered cover Petrograd-Riga.jpg

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Russia 1915-02-07 registered cover Petrograd-Riga

Summary

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Description
English: Russia 1915-02-07 registered cover sent from Petrograd to Riga. Registered, second weight category (2 lot - 25 grams) porto 14 kopecks for letter and 7 kopecks for registration, correct franking of 21 kopecks. Franked with the complete November 1914 set, with different perforations (A 11.5, B 12.5 and C 13.5). Cover bears postmarks using both the new 'Petrograd' and old 'St. Petersburg'. St Petersburg was officially renamed Petrograd on 18 August 1914 (Julian), or 31 August 1914 (Gregorian).

Details:

  • February 7, 1915 Julian (Petrograd used the Julian calendar until 1918). Letter posted at Petrograd suburban post office number 37. This office was located at the Nab. Obvodnogo Kanala 177.
The post office applied the 'PETROGRAD b 37 b / -7 2. 15 7 8.' postmark.
  • Registration label no. 503 was affixed, and the cover was sent to the Petrograd main post office.
  • February 8. Receipt of the cover by the Petrograd main post office.
The post office applied 'St. PETERSBURG E 1 EXP E / -8.2.15' postmark.
Dobin: 02-01.22 E-E. Postmark of the office for accepting and dispatching ordinary correspondence, used between 1914 and 1915.[1]
  • February 9, receipt in Riga.
Two Riga arrival backstamps 'RIGA 2 / -9 2 15-3' and 'RIGA 2 / -9 2 15-4' applied.
Date
Source Self-scanned
Author Russia Post
Russia 1915-02-07 registered cover Petrograd-Riga

Licensing

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Public domain
This work is not an object of copyright according to article 1259 of Book IV of the Civil Code of the Russian Federation No. 230-FZ of December 18, 2006.

Shall not be objects of copyright:

  • official documents of state government agencies and local government agencies of municipal formations, including laws, other legal texts, judicial decisions, other materials of legislative, administrative and judicial character, official documents of international organizations, as well as their official translations;
  • state symbols and signs (flags, emblems, orders, any forms of money, and the like), as well as symbols and signs of municipal formations;
  • works of folk art (folklore), which don't have specific authors;
  • news reports on events and facts, which have a purely informational character (daily news reports, television programs, transportation schedules, and the like).

Comment – This license tag is also applicable to official documents, state symbols and signs of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (union level[2]).

Warning – This license tag is not applicable to drafts of official documents, proposed official symbols and signs, which can be copyrighted.

Warning – This Russian official document, state symbol or sign (postage stamps, coins and banknotes mainly) may incorporate one or more works that can be copyrightable if separated from this document, symbol or sign. In such a case, this work is not an object of copyright if reused in its entirety but, at the same time, extracting specific portions from this work could constitute copyright infringement. For example, the denomination and country name must be preserved on postage stamps.


  1. Dobin, Manfred (2004) From the history of the Saint-Petersburg post, St. Petersburg: Standard Kollektion, p. 128
  2. Official documents, state symbols and signs of 14 other Soviet Republics are the subject of law of their legal successors. See respective license tags.

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