Independence Day -30 fils

Independence Day -30 fils

Year
1971
Face Value
30
Mint Value
-
Used Value
-
Print Run
-
Themes
National Day

Catalogs References

Michel
BH 190
Yvert & Tellier
BH 183
Stanley Gibbons
BH 180

Technical Details

Colors
Multicolor
Perforation
15 x 14
Printing
Photogravure
Designer
Laszlo Gyula (Julian) Vasarhelyi
Printers
Harrison & Sons Ltd.
This commemorative stamp set was issued by the state of Bahrain in late 1971 to celebrate the nation’s formal declaration of independence from the United Kingdom on August 15, 1971. Marking the end of decades as a British protectorate, this historic milestone saw the country transition into an independent emirate under the leadership of Sheikh Isa bin Salman Al Khalifa, who assumed the role of Bahrain’s first official sovereign Emir. The postal administration released this landmark set of four stamps (cataloged under Stanley Gibbons as SG 180–183 and Michel as 190–193) as a proud symbol of newly achieved self-determination, serving as one of the very first stamp issues to carry the sovereign inscription "State of Bahrain".

The visual iconography of the 1971 Independence set beautifully weaves together national sovereignty, geography, and cultural identity. The designs prominently feature key patriotic symbols, including a detailed cartographic map of the Bahraini archipelago, the portrait of the ruling Emir Sheikh Isa, and the newly formalized National Coat of Arms. This emblem, consisting of a red shield surmounted by a white serrated chief with five points representing the Five Pillars of Islam, was officially adopted upon independence to grace state documents and postal paper. Rendered in a striking, multi-color design, this philatelic issue remains a highly cherished keepsake among collectors of Middle Eastern postal history, capturing the optimistic dawn of Bahrain's modern post-colonial era.