Bud's Observations
The Versailles Treaty, following World War I, provided
opportunity for people living in seven disputed territories contiguous to
Germany to decide by plebiscite (referendum) whether or not to continue as a
part of Germany or to join another nation. BB provides spaces for the stamps
that publicized all seven plebiscites: Allenstein, Danzig, Marienwerder, Memel,
Saar, Schleswig, and Upper Silesia.
Most plebiscite-promoting stamps are overprints; that’s true
for some but not all of Marienwerder’s. The caption Commission Interaliée
Marienwerder overprinted on German Empire stamps is French for “Inter-allied
Commission Marienwerder,” the League’s agency for plebiscite oversight. Overprints
exist in several fonts and colors, making Marienwerder an interesting technical
specialization.
The Commission also issued two Marienwerder series with
unique designs and no overprints, both printed in Milan. They feature a female
allegory for the Commission standing on a ballot box inscribed populi
voluntas, Latin for “the people wish” or “the will of the people.” She is
surrounded by the flags of four of the five allied victors in WWI -- Italy,
France, Japan, and Great Britain. Missing, of course, is the United States flag
-- the ally that rejected membership in the League of Nations, a political
humiliation for President Woodrow Wilson who had strongly promoted populi
voluntas.
Scott # 5, deep blue, CTO
The two Milan issues differ in noticeable ways. The first, Scott
#s 1-14, has Commission Interalliée at the top and Marienwerder at the
bottom while the second, Scott #s 40-53, has Plébiscite at the top and Marienwerder
Kwidzyn at the bottom, Kwidzyn being the Polish name for Marienwerder. The
Commission wanted, I suppose, to appear unbiased, although “Kwidzyn” appears in
a smaller font. The actual voting reflected strong pro-German sentiments. Both
series became postally invalid on 14/9/1920 but, during the following week,
they could be exchanged for German empire stamps.
Scott #51, dark violet
Census: twelve in BB spaces, 20 on supplement page.
Jim's Observations
After WW I, some territories, namely Alleinstein in East Prussia, and Marienwerder in West Prussia, because of a vocal German population, and the sympathies of the British Prime Minister Lloyd George, were allowed to vote whether to join Poland or East Prussia (Germany).
The Plebiscite was scheduled for July 11, 1920. It was sponsored by Inter-Allied Commissions for the League of Nations. British and Italian contingents were on the ground, but civil administration was handled by the Germans.
Naturally, the plebiscite was promoted and publicized through the use of stamp issues.
The result for Marienwerder (Kwidzyn) was a very lopsided 96,000 votes for East Prussia, and 8,000 votes for Poland. Consequently, Marienwerder joined East Prussia and the Weimar Republic.
Marienwerder Blog Post & BB Checklist
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