Philatelic International
Emblem of the organisation on the cover of its organ, magazine Radio de Filintern (in the combined issue with Soviet Philatelist and Soviet Collector) Emblem of the organisation on the cover of its organ, magazine Radio de Filintern (in the combined issue with Soviet Philatelist and Soviet Collector) | |
Abbreviation | Filintern |
---|---|
Formation | 22 June 1924 |
Founded at | Moscow, USSR |
Extinction | 1940s |
Type | NGO |
Legal status | international association |
Purpose | philately, scripophily[a] |
Location |
|
Coordinates | Lua error: callParserFunction: function "#coordinates" was not found. |
Region | world |
Membership (1924) | 102 members |
Official language | Esperanto, English, French, German |
Editor | Leongard Eichfuss |
Publication | Radio de Filintern |
Remarks | private persons |
Philatelic International (Filintern)[b] was an international philatelic society of collector-workers in the 1920s to 1940s.[1]
History[change]
The creation of the Filintern was set up at a conference in Moscow in 22 to 30 June 1924. Its formation was greeted by all branches of the All-Russian Society of Philatelists and at the same time by the Soviet Esperantists. At the conference opening, Feodor Chuchin, Commissioner for Philately and Scripophily, declared:
“ | Within the Filintern and through it we will not only adhere to all the rules of international philatelic ethics but also watch to make sure others uphold them. | ” |
—from Sovetskii Filatelist,[c] June 1924, No. 7 (23).[1] |
A program for the Filintern's central organ was developed that included:
- "propaganda of the international union of philatelist-workers of all nations for the struggle against organised philatelist-dealers",
- "wide popularisation of ideological philately",
- "introducing Esperanto into philately and thus the establishment of lively communication between philatelists around the world."[1]
Filintern facilitates the goals of philatelists, scripophilists[d] and Esperantists. Within Filintern, they could:
- collect stamps and paper money,
- publish philatelic bulletins, journals and catalogues,
- most importantly, conduct foreign exchange.[1]
Using philately, scripophily and Esperanto, the Soviet authorities also hoped for promoting communist propaganda among the foreign proletariat.
The Philatelic International's organ was the journal Esperanto: Radio de Filintern. Its Editor was a prominent Russian philatelist L. K. Eichfuss. The first issue of the journal appeared in January 1925.[1]
Related pages[change]
- All-Russian Society of Philatelists
- First All-Union Philatelic Exhibition
- Leniniana
- Organisation of the Commissioner for Philately and Scripophily
- Philately
- Soviet Philatelic Association
- Soviet Philatelist
Notes[change]
- ↑ Collecting stock and bond certificates.
- ↑ Russian: Филателистический интернационал (Filatelisticheskii international), brief name being Russian: Филинтерн (Filintern). This was similar to Comintern (Communist International) and Profintern (Red International of Labor Unions).
- ↑ Central organ of the Organisation of the Commissioner for Philately and Scripophily and the All-Russian Society of Philatelists (Soviet Philatelist).
- ↑ Collectors of paper money, and stock and bond certificates.
References[change]
Further reading[change]
- Grant, Jonathan (July 1995). "The Socialist Construction of Philately in the Early Soviet Era". Comparative Studies in Society and History. 37 (3): 476–493. doi:10.1017/S0010417500019770. ISSN 0010-4175. S2CID 143458562.
Other websites[change]
- File:Commons-logo.svg Media related to Lua error in Module:Commons_link at line 47: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). at Wikimedia Commons
- Pages with script errors
- Articles containing Russian-language text
- Pages using Lang-xx templates
- Articles containing Esperanto-language text
- Philately organizations
- Esperanto
- Philately of the Soviet Union
- 1924 establishments
- International organizations
- 1920s establishments in the Soviet Union
- 1940s disestablishments
- Disestablishments in the Soviet Union
- Organizations based in the Soviet Union