ADEN / عدن (now in Yemen).
Definitive stamps (with a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II).
Map with location of Aden in the Arabian Peninsula.
Stamp issued on 15.06.1953.
Face value: 50 East African cents.
Printing: Recess.
Catalogs
- Michel No. 54.
- Scott No. 53.
- StampWorld No. 54.
- Stanley Gibbons No. 59.
- Yvert et Tellier No. 54A.
Aden
(in Arabic, عدن) is currently a city in Yemen located south of the Arabian Peninsula.
It is a natural harbor, built on an old volcanic peninsula, in a strategic
position on the route between India and Europe. The first records of its
existence date from the 5th and 7th centuries BC. On January 19, 1839, the
British seized the city, which was under the control of the British Crown until
on November 7, 1967, as a result of several Yemeni revolts and some armed
confrontations, was abandoned. On December 1, 1970 the Democratic People's
Republic of Yemen, better known as South Yemen, was proclaimed. On July 7,
1994, Aden was occupied by troops from the North Yemen Army and Yemen was
unified into one country.
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