Mussolini astride the Ionian Sea
Bud's Big BlueBud's Observations
Why these six Italian stamps with “Corfu” overprinted?
History in brief: In 1923, Greece and Albania disputed a boundary. An Italian
General chaired a commission to settle things. Greeks thought he sided with
Albania. Someone murdered the general. Mussolini got angry, made demands. On
August 31, the Italian navy bombarded Corfu for 30 minutes, killed several,
mostly refugees and orphans from the Middle East. Italy occupied the island.
Mussolini threatened to leave the League of Nations if they intervened. On
September 10, an agreement was reached. The Greeks paid indemnity. On September
27, the Italians withdrew with Greeks saluting the Italian flag and Italians
saluting the Greek flag. Google “Corfu incident” for more detail.
Meanwhile, Italy opened a post office on September 11, then
closed it on September 26 (only 15 days). Hence the Corfu overprints (a.k.a.
Mussolini’s footprints). Some arrived too late for postal use. Authentic
cancels are rare. Later, unused copies were sold at the Rome post office.
Census: six in BB spaces, one tip-in.
Jim's Observations
If it hadn't been for this occupation stamp issue, I and probably you, would not have known that Italy occupied Corfu in 1923. Unfortunately, this was not the last occupation. More horrifically, Italy under Mussolini , and then the Nazis, controlled Corfu between 1941-44.
Corfu Blog Post and Checklist
Page 1
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