Brazilian postal administration has finally released the
first host country stamps commemorating the upcoming Olympic Games (5-21 August
2016) and Paralympic Games (7-18 September 2016) to be held in Rio de Janeiro.
Commemorating Stamps comprised of two souvenir sheets of two
stamps, plus two panes consisting of 6 strips of 3 se-tenant stamps – in its spring
2013 issue. At that time philatelic author Jean-Louis Emmenegger revealed that
the stamps, which had presumably been printed in June 2012 in time to celebrate
the handover of the Olympic Games from London to Rio, were being withheld from
release by Brazil Post because of a licensing dispute with the Olympic Games
organizing committee.
Without the customary fanfare surrounding the issue of host
country Olympic stamps, these first issues began to appear in the philatelic
marketplace in early 2015.
The horizontal pane of 18 stamps consists of six strips of 3
se-tenant stamps (shown above) which together create a ribbon connecting
landmarks in London, where the 2012 Olympic Games were conducted, with a
silhouette of the mountainous terrain surrounding Rio. Two nearly identical
versions of these sheets were printed, one bearing the 2016 Olympic Games logo
in the selvedge, and the other with the 2016 Paralympic Games logo. Each of the
two panes was printed in a quantity of 10,000 (180,000 stamps of each). The
three se-tenant stamps in the two panes are non-denominated, paying the first
tier rate for domestic letters.
The two souvenir sheets – one for the 2016 Olympic Games
(shown above) and the other for the 2016 Paralympic Games (at right)– show the
same scene in the background: Rio’s Sugarloaf Mountain and city below. The two
stamps on the Olympic sheet bear the 2016 Olympic Games logo. One of the
se-tenant stamps depicts Big Ben and Tower Bridge, while the other is an
artistic representation of Sugarloaf Mountain. The Paralympic Games logo
appears on each of the two stamps on the second sheet. In this case London’s
Olympic Eye Ferris wheel is displayed on the first stamp while the second shows
the famous Christ the Redeemer statue atop Corcovado Mountain. The two souvenir
sheets were issued in quantities of 15,000 sheets of each. The stamps in the
two souvenir sheets are each denominated at R$2.60.
Brazil Post’s schedule of stamp issues for 2015 includes two
more series. On 24 March there will be a set of ten stamps commemorating the
Olympic and Paralympic Games. Another set of ten stamps as well as six
postcards will be released on 5 August.