Which country's first stamp was called the Scinde Dwak?
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Stamps were required for the prepayment of postage, a basic feature of the new system. These stamps, first issued on July 1, 1852, bore the Merchants' Mark of the British East India Company in a design embossed on wafers of red sealing wax impressed on paper.
Stamps were required for the prepayment of postage, a basic feature of the new system. These stamps, first issued on July 1, 1852, bore the Merchants' Mark of the British East India Company in a design embossed on wafers of red sealing wax impressed on paper.Date of production: 1852
Stamps were required for the prepayment of postage, a basic feature of the new system. These stamps, first issued on July 1, 1852, bore the Merchants' Mark of the British East India Company in a design embossed on wafers of red sealing wax impressed on paper.Date of production: 1852Country of production: Sindh
Stamps were required for the prepayment of postage, a basic feature of the new system. These stamps, first issued on July 1, 1852, bore the Merchants' Mark of the British East India Company in a design embossed on wafers of red sealing wax impressed on paper.Date of production: 1852Country of production: SindhFace value: one-half anna
Stamps were required for the prepayment of postage, a basic feature of the new system. These stamps, first issued on July 1, 1852, bore the Merchants' Mark of the British East India Company in a design embossed on wafers of red sealing wax impressed on paper.Date of production: 1852Country of production: SindhFace value: one-half annaNo. in existence: Less than 100
Sindh is one of the four provinces of Pakistan, in the southeast of the country, and the historical home of the Sindhi people.[5][6] Sindh is the third largest province of Pakistan by area, and second largest province by population after Punjab. Sindh is bordered by Balochistan province to the west, and Punjab province to the north. Sindh also borders the Indian states of Gujarat and Rajasthan to the east, and Arabian Sea to the south. Sindh's landscape consists mostly of alluvial plains flanking the Indus River, the Thar desert in the eastern portion of the province closest to the border with India, and the Kirthar Mountains in the western part of Sindh.
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