Epaulettes (stamp)

Epaulettes (French: Épaulettes, Dutch: Epauletten) is the name given by philatelists to the first series of postage stamps issued by Belgium. The stamps, which depicted King Leopold I with prominent epaulettes from which the name derives, became legally usable on 1 July 1849. Two denominations with the same design were issued simultaneously: a brown 10 centimes and a blue 20 centimes. They were produced as the result of a series of national reforms to the postal system in Belgium, based on the success of similar British measures adopted in 1840. The stamps allowed postal costs to be pre-paid by the sender, rather than the receiver, and led to a sharp increase in the volume of mail. Although quickly superseded by new types, Epaulettes proved influential and have since inspired several series of commemorative stamps.

Epaulettes
Brown ten centimes version
Country of productionBelgium
Date of production1849
DesignerCharles Baugniet
EngraverJohn Henry Robinson
Dimensions18 mm × 24 mm (0.71 in × 0.94 in)
PerforationNone
DepictsKing Leopold I
NotabilityFirst Belgian postage stamp
Face value10 and 20 centimes
Estimated value€7,100 (mint unhinged)
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