PITCAIRN ISLANDS / PITKERN AILEN.
Landscapes. Tatrimoa Cape.
Last stamp in a set of 5, issued on 22.01.1981.
Face value: 70 cents of New Zealand dollar.
Printing: Offset lithography.
Size: 49 x 32 mm.
Catalogs
- Michel No. 205.
- Scott No. 202.
- Seven Seas Stamps No. 201.
- StampWorld No. 205.
- Stanley Gibbons No. 215.
- Yvert et Tellier No. 198.
The
Archipelago of the Pitcairn Islands (in Pitkern: Pitkern
Ailen) is officially a British
Overseas Territory. It includes the Pitcairn (the only inhabited), Oeno,
Henderson and Ducie islands. Its capital is Adamstown, where the only settlement
of the islands is located, located in the north-central part of Pitcairn, The
islands of Henderson, Ducie and Pitcairn were discovered by a Spanish
expedition under the command of the Portuguese navigator Pedro Fernandes
de Quirós and his crew on January 26, 1606. A century and a half later, the
islands were rediscovered by English sailors: Pitcairn in 1767, Ducie in 1791,
Henderson in 1819 and Oeno in 1824. Pitcairn is known to be the home of
descendants the mutineers on the Bounty ship and the
Tahitians who accompanied them in 1790. With only 56 inhabitants from nine
families, it is the least populated country in the world, although it is not a
sovereign nation.
Tatrimoa is the Polynesian name for the Big Fence headland and cape, on the eastern shore of Pitcairn Island.
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