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Federation of South Arabia
الخميس، 2 فبراير 2012
التسميات:
English
The Federation of South Arabia (Arabic: اتحاد الجنوب العربي Ittihad al-Janūb al-‘arabī) was an organization of states under British protection in what would become South Yemen. It was formed on 4 April 1962 from the 15 protected states of the Federation of Arab Emirates of the South. On 18 January 1963 it was merged with the crown colony of Aden. In June 1964, the Upper Aulaqi Sultanate was added for a total of 17 states. A team was sent to the 1966 Commonwealth Games in Kingston, Jamaica. The Federation was abolished when it gained independence along with the Protectorate of South Arabia as the People's Republic of South Yemen
States of the Federation
Aden
Alawi
Aqrabi
Audhali
Beihan
Dathina
Dhala
Fadhli
Haushabi
Lahej
Lower Aulaqi
Lower Yafa
Maflahi
Shaib
Upper Aulaqi Sheikhdom
Upper Aulaqi Sultanate
Wahidi Balhaf
eaders of the Federation
High Commissioners
Sir Charles Hepburn Johnston (18 January 1963 - 17 July 1963)
Sir Gerald Kennedy Nicholas Trevaskis (17 July 1963 - 21 December 1964)
Sir Richard Gordon Turnbull (21 December 1964 - 22 May 1967)
Sir Humphrey Trevelyan (22 May 1967 - 30 November 1967)
Chief Ministers
Hassan Ali Bayumi (18 January 1963 - 24 June 1963)
Zayn Abdu Baharun (9 July 1963 - 23 January 1965)
Abdul-Qawi Hassan Makkawi (7 March 1965 - 25 September 1965)
Ali Musa al-Babakr (25 September 1965 - 30 August 1966)
Salih al-Awadli (30 August 1966 - 30 November 1967)
Postage stamps
The Federation issued its own postage stamps from 1963 to 1966. Most of its issues were part of the omnibus issues common to all the Commonwealth territories, but it did issue its own definitive stamps on 1 April 1965. The set of 14 included 10 values, from 5 to 75 fils, each depicting the arms of the Federation in a single color, while the top four values (100 fils, 250 fils, 500 fils, and 1 dinar), featured the flag of the Federation.
The stamps referred to above are those listed in the Scott Standard Postage Stamp Catalog. A number of other stamps have also been issued and are listed in Stanley Gibbons and other widely used stamp catalogs. It is possible, or even likely, that some of the stamps of South Arabia were not issued primarily for postal use.