Postage Stamps and Postal History of India - Postal History of Indian States

Postal History of Indian States

British India had hundreds of Princely States, some 652 in all, but most of them did not issue postage stamps. The stamp-issuing States were of two kinds: the Convention States and the Feudatory States. The postage stamps and postal histories of these States provide great challenges and many rewards to the patient philatelist. Many rarities are to be found here. Although handbooks are available, much remains to be discovered.

The Convention States are those which had postal conventions (or agreements) with the Post Office of India to provide postal services within their territories. The adhesive stamps and postal stationery of British India were overprinted for use within each Convention State. The first Convention State was Patiala, in 1884, followed by others in 1885. The stamps of the Convention States all became invalid on 01 Jan 1951 when they were replaced with stamps of the Republic of India valid from 01 Jan 1950.

The Feudatory States maintained their own postal services within their territories and issued stamps with their own designs. Many of the stamps were imperforate and without gum, as issued. Many varieties of type, paper, inks and dies are not listed in the standard catalogs. The stamps of each Feudatory State were valid only within that State, so letters sent outside that State needed additional British India postage.

Below is a list of the Convention states and Feudatory Indian states
Convention states Feudatory states (starting - ending years)
  • Chamba
  • Faridkot
    (formerly feudatory;
    convention from 1887)
  • Gwalior
  • Jind
    (formerly feudatory;
    convention from 1885)
  • Nabha
  • Patiala
  • Alwar (1877–1899)
  • Bamra (1888–1893)
  • Barwani (1921–1938)
  • Bhopal (1876–1932)
  • Bhor (1879–1901)
  • Bijawar (1935–1937)
  • Bundi (1894–1941)
  • Bussahir (1895–1900)
  • Bahawalpur (1947–1949)
  • Charkhari (1894–1943)
  • Cochin (1892–1933)
  • Dhar (1897–1898)
  • Duttia (1893–1916)
  • Faridkot (1879–1900)
  • Hyderabad (1869–1949)
  • Idar (1939–1944)
  • Indore (1886–1941)
  • Jaipur (1900–1947)
  • Jammu and Kashmir (1878–1886)
  • Jammu (1866–1877)
  • Jind (1874–1885)
  • Kashmir (1866–1867)
  • Jasdan (1942–1942)
  • Jhalawar (1887–1887)
  • Kishangarh (1899–1928)
  • Las Bela (1897–1904)
  • Morvi (1931–1935)
  • Nandgaon (1892–1893)
  • Nowanuggur (1877–1893)
  • Orchha (1913–1939)
  • Poonch (1876–1884)
  • Rajasthan (1949–1949)
  • Rajpipla (1880)
  • Sirmur (1879–1899)
  • Soruth (1864–1937)
  • Travancore (1888–1946)
  • Travancore-Cochin (1949–1950)
  • Wadhwan (1888–1889)

Both Faridkot and Jind, as feudatory states, issued their own stamps before they joined the Postal Convention. Faridkot joined on January 1, 1887. Jind joined in July, 1885; its stamps from the feudatory period became invalid for postage, but they continued to be used for revenue purposes.

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