french Post Offices in Morocco: The Rights of Man 35 Centimos

french Post Offices in Morocco: The Rights of Man 35 Centimos

Year
1910
Face Value
35
Mint Value
29.30 €
Used Value
14.07 €
Print Run
-
Themes
Mythology

Catalogs References

Michel
FR-MA 24
Yvert & Tellier
MA 24
Stanley Gibbons
FR-MA 22

Technical Details

Colors
Light violet
Size
21 x 25 mm
Perforation
14 x 13½
Printing
Typography
Designer
Louis-Eugène Mouchon
Reflecting the ideological underpinnings of the French presence in Morocco, this stamp features a classical seated figure holding a tablet inscribed with "Droits de l'Homme" (The Rights of Man). This imagery carries a symbolic message of the Enlightenment values that the French administration sought to project as part of its institutional identity and civilizing mission. The prominence of French republican iconography, combined with the "Maroc" designation and local currency overprint, underscores the dual nature of the colonial administration—imposing European judicial and social concepts onto the Moroccan cultural context. Historically, it serves as a record of the ideological framework used to justify the expansion of foreign institutions and the formalization of a Western-style bureaucracy within the Sherifian Empire.