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Stamp numbering system

Philatelists' traditional method of identifying postage stamps uniquely has long been to number each country's stamps consecutively; Norway #1 is the 4-skilling blue stamp issued in 1855, and so forth. However, this seemingly straightforward system runs into immediate difficulties, which have been solved in different ways by different stamp catalogs.

Table of contents
1 Issues
2 Catalog numbering systems
3 Official numbering systems

Issues

The difficulties are as follows:

Although the definition of "country" may seem obvious, there are occupations of one country by another, stamp issued by areas in rebellion, reunifications, and regions that have issued their own stamps for one reason or another. A classic example is Germany; unified from many smaller entities, then divided into multiple zones of occupation at the end of World War II, then divided into West Germany and East Germany, then reunified. Catalogs typically treat West Germany as part of a single sequence under the name "Germany" while giving East German stamps their own numbers.

The definition of "postage stamp" can also be problematic for catalogers. For instance, some countries have issued adhesive labels purporting to be postage stamps, but which had the "cancel" printed directly on the stamp and shipped to dealers, without ever being sold to the public for use on letters. The treatment of these has long been a vexing issue, and catalogs vary greatly on whether to list the stamps. A related issue is a small number of extremely rare stamps that may or may not be old forgeries; the assignment or removal of a number is a key step in the consensus as to their authenticity.

Philatelists typically identify more types of stamps than do the governments issuing them. Changes of perforation, watermark, often occur without any official notice, as do printing errors. In a few cases, even the date of first issue of a stamp has no surviving record.

The issuance of multiple types on a single day is an old practice, but usually these were different denominations, and could be numbered in ascending order of value. More recently, it has become common to issue a group of stamps with related designs and the same denomination on the same day.

Finally, it is common for the stamps of a definitive series to be issued one or a few at a time, as postal rates change. Logically, they are part of a single group, with a unified design theme and a sequence of values, even though ten years or more may have elapsed from the first to the last. The same reasoning could be applied to special-purpose stamps such as airmail or postage due stamps.

Catalog numbering systems

The upshot is that the numbering of stamps cannot be a purely mechanical process; it is a complicated undertaking that requires some editorial judgment. Over time, stamp numbers become a shorthand for collectors and dealers; in the United States, the Scott catalog number "C3a" is instantly recognized as the Inverted Jenny, so Scott cannot now renumber the stamp (everybody would just use their old catalogs, and not buy new ones).

The Scott system assigns plain numbers for regular mail stamps, and uses capital letter prefixes for special-purpose types, such as "B" for semi-postals and "C" for airmail. The numbers are generally consecutive; there are gaps among older stamps, where some numbered types were later determined not to be legitimate issues, and among newer stamps, where Scott has left groups of numbers unassigned in the expectation that later stamps of a series will use those numbers. If more stamps than expected appear, Scott will add a capital letter as suffix, or if the change is very recent, it will renumber stamps. Minor variations, such as shades or errors, get a lowercase letter; so the "C3a" above indicates a variation (error in this case) on the third US airmail stamp.

The Michel catalog numbers regular and special-purpose types together, but indicates paper, perforation, and other variations with lowercase and uppercase letter suffixes.

Because of the editorial aspect, the commercial catalogs' systems are all copyright, and generally only licensed for use in dealers' price lists. However, attempts by philatelists to establish an alternative have not yet been successful.

Official numbering systems

In general, governments have not tried to number their own stamps. The People's Republic of China is a notable exception, having inscribed almost all of its stamps with a year-series-number combination since its first issues in 1949.

In 2002, as part of efforts to control the issuance of illegal stamps, the Universal Postal Union introduced the WADP Numbering System (WNS) for new issues by UPU members.