sun



The Mystery Box, short stories by Frederick Highland taking their inspiration from philatelic images

Night Falls on Damascus, a novel by Frederick Highland, set in Damascus during the French Mandate
Ghost Eater, a novel set in turn of the century Sumatra, by Frederick Higland
       
Stamp Whys

Puzzlers!

StampWhys - Puzzlers with Attitude!

Mystery

The Clearing
An "old fisherman" reports to the Magistrate

History

The Emperor's Garden
The Emperor's Garden

Stamps

Philately - The Fiction Connection
Sushi! Yum!


Chicago Philatelic Society Medal

The Mystery Box book is the proud winner of a Silver Medal awarded by the Chicago Philatelic Society CHICAGOPEX Literature Exhibit

Your Sponsor: The Mystery Box by Frederick Highland

Read the Book Review by Barbara Kinne of the APS American Philatelist

The Solution

The trident is taken from the coat of arms of Vladimir the Great, Prince of Kiev (c. 956- 1015). A Ukrainian hero, Vladimir was the first ruler to forge the kingdoms of Kiev and Novgorod into a single state.

The trident device may symbolize the Trinity of the ruler's adopted religion.

 A convert to Christianity, the prince is credited
with adopting the Byzantine or Greek rite over
Roman Catholicism, thus determining the future
course of the church in Russia
 

In 1918, when these hopeful stamps were issued, the Ukraine declared itself an independent republic in the wake of the Tsar's collapse. By 1923, it had been re-absorbed into Lenin's new Russian state. The Ukraine would have to await the break-up of the USSR to reclaim its independence in 1992.

The stamps are Scott 63- 65. The 1920 set, which includes this stamp bearing his image, was probably never placed in postal use.

Vladimir the Gread, Prince of Kiev, c. 956- 1015