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POST, AND POSTAL SERVICE
  


The comparative postal statistics for all France during the years 1900 and 1905 stands thus:—

1900. 1905.
No. No.
Letters 980,629,000  1,113,090,000 
Post-cards 62,591,000  450,889,000 
Newspapers, printed matter,
 samples, circulars, &c.
1,390,246,000  1,441,713,000 
Value of money
orders
French francs
Internatl. „  
1,422,736,000  1,834,360,000 
56,210,000  73,229,000 
Value of postal orders 40,688,000  54,582,000 
Receipts
£
209,982,000 
8,399,000 
261,454,000 
10,458,000 

The savings banks system of France, so far as it is connected with the postal service, dates only from 1875, and began then (at first) simply by the use of post offices as agencies and feeders for the pre-existing banks. Prior to the postal connexion the aggregate of the deposits stood at £22,920,000. In 1877 it reached £32,000,000. Postal savings banks, strictly so called, began only during the year 1881. At the close of 1882 they had 210,712 depositors, with an aggregate deposit of £1,872,938 sterling; in 1905 they had 12,134,523 depositors, with an aggregate deposit of £229,094,155.

The union of the telegraph with the post office dates only from 1878. The following table gives the figures for 1900 and 1905:—

1900. 1905.
Length of line   kilometres
miles
117,559 
73,004 
129,826 
80,622 
Length of wire   kilometres
miles
388,824 
241,453 
418,331 
259,784 
Total gross receipts francs
£
43,977,000 
1,759,000 
46,490,000 
2,860,000 
Number of messages forwarded:
 Home service. 36,723,000  39,433,000 
 International 3,374,000  3,686,000 
Amount of International telegraphic 
  money orders:
 From foreign countries to
  France (Total francs)
6,145,455  10,239,546 
 From France to foreign
  countries (Total francs)
6,124,913  4,754,960 

The postal telephonic system began in 1879. The following table gives the figures for 1901 and 1905:—

1901. 1905.
Length of line   kilometres
miles
30,142 
18,718 
46,992 
29,182 
Length of wire   kilometres
miles
453,287 
281,491 
498,389 
309,500 
Messages 175,340,000  232,727,645 
Receipts francs
£
17,518,000 
701,000 
23,495,000 
940,000 

Bibliography.—P. d’Alméras, Réglement sur le port des lettres (1627); Le Quien de la Neufville, Usages des postes (1730); Rowland Hill, Report to the Chancellor of the Exchequer on the French Post Office (1837); Annuaire des postes (from 1850–); M. du Camp, “De L’administration . . . et de l’hôtel des postes,” in Revue des deux mondes (1865), 3rd series; Revue des postes et télégraphes (pub. at various periods); A. de Rothschild, Histoire de la poste-aux-lettres (1875); “Entwickelung des Post- u. Telegraphenwesens in Frankreich,” in Archiv f. Post. u. Telegraphie (1882); “Die französischen Postsparkassen,” and other articles, in L’Union postale (Berne).

Austria-Hungary

The Austrian postal system is among the oldest on record. Vienna possessed a local letter post and a parcel post, on the plan of prepayment, as early as May 1772, at which date no city in Germany possessed the like. This local post was established by a Frenchman (M. Hardy) and managed by a Dutchman (Schooten).[1] Thirteen years after its organization it became merged in the imperial post. The separate postal organizations of the empire (Austria) and of the kingdom (Hungary) date from 1867. In Austria the post office and the telegraph office are placed under the control of the minister of commerce, in Hungary under that of the minister of public works. The following table gives the figures for 1900 and 1904:—

Austria
1900. 1904.
Post offices No.   6,895  8,327 
Letters and post-cards„   1,193,418,000  1,421,107,000 
Newspapers„   116,000,000  144,986,000 
Packet post :
 Ordinary packets.kilogs. 37,522,000  44,624,000 
 Registered packets
 and letters   
kronen
£
8,043,570,000 
335,148,000 
8,323,179,000 
346,799,000 
Receipts. kronen
£
107,718,000 
4488,000 
123,919,000 
5,163,000 
Expenses kronen
£
98,412,000 
4,200,000 
121,749,000 
5,073,000 
Hungary
1900. 1904.
Post officesNo. 4,923  5,097 
Letters, newspapers, &c.    „ 487,670,000  584,081,000 
Packet post:
 Ordinary packets 17,730,000  21,367,000 
 Packets with
  declared value and
  money letters
korona 
£
6,256,900,000  4,936,403,000 
260,704,000  205,683,000 
Reimbursements and
money orders  
korona 
£
1,095,591,000  1,253,440,000 
45,649,000  52,226,000 
Postal orders korona 
£
27,470,000 
1,145,000 
30,397,000 
1,266,000 
Receipts korona 
£
47,103,000 
1,962,000 
57,067,000 
2,378,000 
Expenses korona 
£
39,912,000 
1,663,000 
44,560,000 
1,857,000 

German Empire

The Prussian postal system developed mainly by the ability and energy of Dr Stephan, to whom the organization of the International Postal Union[2] was so largely indebted, into the admirably organized post and telegraph office of the empire began with the Great Elector, and with the establishment in 1646 of a Government post from Cleves to Memel. Frederick II. largely extended it, and by his successor the laws relating to it were consolidated. In Strasburg a messenger code existed as early as 1443. A postal service was organized at Nuremberg in 1570. In 1803 the rights in the indemnity-lands (Entschädigungsländer) of the counts of Taxis as hereditary imperial postmasters were abolished. The first mail steam-packet was built in 1821; the first transmission of mails by, railway was in 1847; the beginning of the postal administration of the telegraphs was in 1849; and, by the treaty of postal union with Austria, not only was the basis of the existing system of the posts and telegraphs of Germany fully laid, but the germ was virtually set of the International Postal Union. That treaty was made for ten years on the 6th of April 1850, and was immediately accepted by Bavaria. It came into full operation on the 1st of July following, and then included Saxony, Mecklenburg-Strelitz and Holstein. Other German states followed; and the treaty was renewed in August 1860. The following table gives figures for 1900 and 1905:—

1900. 1905.
Post offices  . . . . . . . No. 32,135  33,105 
Letters received . . . . . . .  „ 2,893,555,000  3,855,369,000 
Letters and parcels received
(value declared)
No.
1000 marks
10,508,000  10,518,000 
15,984,425  16,215,800 
Parcels received (value not declared)No. 153,985,000  186,038,000 
Postal orders re-
 ceived    
No.
1000 marks
126,217,209  162,800,261 
7,868,860  9,807,934 
  1. Loeper, “Organisation des postes de ville,” in L’Union postale vii. 1 seq.
  2. The International Postal Union was founded at Berne in 1874. All the countries of the world belong to it, with the exception of Afghanistan, Baluchistan, China, Abyssinia and Morocco. Congresses have been held at Paris (1878), Lisbon (1885), Vienna (1891), Washington (1897) and Rome (1906).