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JUDAICA PHILATELY: Stamps & Covers

 

Judaica Sales Reg'd has the largest stock anywhere in the world of Judaica related philately - be it stamps, First Day Covers, maximum Cards, special cancels and cachets etc . Our search engine allows you to search for and display stamps by Country or Topic, and recently added items in the last 30-60-90 days. For instance, to display all stamps from a particular country, choose country in the drop down box on the left; a new drop down box will appear on the right with all countries for which we have have stamps and First day covers available for sale. To choose the country you want, just scroll down the list. Of course you can also see the entire list of countries available by clicking on right here. To select a topic - Holocaust - for example, select Topic from the drop down box on the left, and type Holocaust in the search box that appears on the right, or click right here to see our complete list of topics and names available - almost 1000 in total. By clicking on the one you want, you will access that list. When searching by topic, please search in the plural tense, ie: stamps instead of stamp. Some exceptions may occur. To execute either search simply click Search. To browse all stamps on our list irrespective of country or topic, select all and click search. To view stamps added in the last 30, 60 or 90 days simply use the New Additions Search box. You must return to this search engine for a subsequent search by country or topic.
PLEASE NOTE: This listing is generally reserved for stamps, First Day Covers and maxicards, with the odd exception. Please see our listing of cachets and cancellations where superb Judaica related entires - postcards and covers - are also listed. (An entire is a postcard or cover on which the stamp is imprinted. Some like Moldova have First Day of issue cancels, where others like Poland do not.

Stamp Search:
New Additions Search:
 

To view all Judaica Stamps & Covers Topics, click here.
To view all Judaica Stamps & Covers Countries, click here.

To browse through the list (the number of pages will depend on the size of the list) simply use the navigation buttons under the list of items. The buttons read as; First - takes you to the beginning of the list, Previous - takes you back one page, Next - takes you forward one page, Last - takes you to the end of the list (not the last yearly listing).

When available, click on the    icon to view a photo sample of the item, or click on the    icon to view the item's First Day Cover.
Prices are subject to change without notice. ALL PRICES ARE IN US$ DOLLARS.

Catalog #   Description
Mint
FDC
Algeria
818 Click to view item Click to view First Day Cover Herzian waves, discovered by Heinrich Hertz,, whose father was Jewish but converted to Catholicism before marrying. His mother, Anna Elisabeth Pfefferkorn was thought to be Jewish but there exists no definitive proof. Although he did not consider himself Jewish, Hertz himself is buried in Ohlsdorf, Hamburg at the Jewish cemetery.
Congo Peoples Republic
574 Hertzian wave communications network, discovered by Heinrich Hertz, who clarified and expanded the electromagnetic theory of ligh; he was the first to satisfactorily demonstrate the existence of electromagnetic waves by building an apparatus to produce and detect VHF or UHF radio waves.
N/A
N/A
Czechoslovakia
949-54 Click to view item Click to view First Day Cover # 953 - Herzian waves, discovered by Heinrich Hertz,, whose father was Jewish but converted to Catholicism before marrying. His mother, Anna Elisabeth Pfefferkorn was thought to be Jewish but there exists no definitive proof. Although he did not consider himself Jewish, Hertz himself is buried in Ohlsdorf, Hamburg at the Jewish cemetery.
Germany
1392-3 Click to view item #1393: Electro-magnetic waves, discovered by Heinrich Hertz, a German physicist who clarified and expanded the electromagnetic theory of light
N/A
1822 Click to view item Heinrich Hertz, whose father was Jewish but converted to Catholicism before marrying. His mother, Anna Elisabeth Pfefferkorn was thought to be Jewish but there exists no definitive proof. Although he did not consider himself Jewish, Hertz himself is buried in Ohlsdorf, Hamburg at the Jewish cemetery. Hertz discovered first electrical waves in 1886.
N/A
1822.1 Click to view item Heinrich Hertz, physicist, discoverer of Hertzian waves FIRST DAY SOUVENIR LEAF
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San Marino
1263 Click to view item Click to view First Day Cover Herzian waves, discovered by Heinrich Hertz, whose father was Jewish but converted to Catholicism before marrying. His mother, Anna Elisabeth Pfefferkorn was thought to be Jewish but there exists no definitive proof. Although he did not consider himself Jewish, Hertz himself is buried in Ohlsdorf, Hamburg at the Jewish cemetery.

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