This article discusses the portrayal of Salvador Allende on postage stamps.

November 1973 [1]USSR postage stamp. Probably the first Allende stamp, released after the coup.

Allende on stamps edit

One of the first postage stamps to commemorate Salvador Allende, released after the 1973 coup in Chile, was the Soviet one. It was issued just two months after the event and had a circulation of 3.8 million. The issue was designed by the painter A. Kovrizhkin and bore the title "Salvador Allende, President of the Republic of Chile, Laureate of the Lenin Peace Prize, 1908 - 11.IX.1973".[2]

A stamp was released by Magyar Posta in Hungary in 1974 shortly after the September 11, 1973 coup in Chile that ended the socialist government of Salvador Allende. The stamp bore an image of Allende that had become popular during his election campaign in 1970.[citation needed]

Two other stamps, both on the tenth anniversary of the coup, represent extreme reactions to the event. Scott Cuba #2605 shows the burning presidential palace of La Moneda ("The Mint") and a picture of Allende. The caption refers to him as having "fallen in combat".[citation needed]

In contrast, Chile, still under the military dictatorship of General Augusto Pinochet at that time, issued Scott Chile #656, labeled "Ten Years of Liberty," celebrating the decade since the fall of Allende and the rise of the junta.[citation needed]

References and sources edit

Notes
  1. ^ "Salvador Allende". Home.nestor.minsk.by. Retrieved 21 December 2014.
  2. ^ Catalogue of Postage Stamps of the USSR 1918-1974, “Soyuzpechat” Central Philatelic Agency [Wikidata] of the Ministry of Communications of the USSR publisher, Moscow, 1976
Sources
  • Jack Child, "The Politics and Semiotics of the Smallest Icons of Popular Culture: Latin American Postage Stamps", Latin American Research Review, Vol. 40, no. 1, February 2005.