Description: THIS IS A LISTING FOR ONE MINT NEVER HINGED VERT STRIP OF FOUR: THE ABOVE IMAGE(S) ARE OF THE ACTUAL STAMP(S) YOU WILL RECEIVE IF YOU ARE THE WINNING BIDDER Please peruse my other philatelic materials available for your collection! Shipping & Handling: Please pay for items within 7 days. Any items left unpaid after 11 days will be handled automatically by eBay according to their unpaid item policy. Each additional item combined & paid by a single transaction: 5¢ each U.S. #3945-4837¢ Constellations Issue Date: October 3, 2005City: Bloomfield Hills, MIQuantity: 70,000,000Printed By: Ashton-Potter (USA) LtdPrinting Method: LithographedPerforations: Serpentine Die Cut 10.75Color: Multicolored Centuries ago, people used stars to travel oceans or deserts and to mark the seasons. They named groups of stars, or constellations, after figures from their myths. Some constellations date back 2000 to 3000 years. Many constellations were named by the ancient Greeks. The constellation Orion is named for a legendary hunter. In one version, the goddess of the hunt, Artemis, fell in love with Orion, but was tricked into killing him. She set his image in the stars. The constellation Lyra is the harp that Orpheus played after his wife died. When Orpheus was killed, the great god Zeus raised Orpheus’ lyre into the skies. Leo, the lion, is a constellation connected to the story of Hercules. The Greek hero was ordered to kill the fierce Nemean lion, a nearly impossible task. Hercules’ enemy, the goddess Hera, was so angry at the hero’s success that she raised Leo into the sky. Pegasus became a constellation, according to a Greek myth, when the hero Bellerophon tried to fly the winged horse to heaven. Pegasus threw Bellerophon off and was immortalized in the stars. New constellations were added from the 16th to the 18th centuries. In 1929, the International Astronomical Union defined 88 “official” constellations.
Price: 2.49 USD
Location: Mandeville, Louisiana
End Time: 2024-12-06T12:44:51.000Z
Shipping Cost: 1 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Denomination: 37 Cent
Year of Issue: 2001-2010
Place of Origin: United States
Quality: Mint Never Hinged/MNH
Color: Multi-Color
Grade: GBYOE
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Topic: Constellations, Stargazing, Orion, Pegasus, Leo, Lyra
Certification: NAAN