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The New Year is approaching, and people are busy sending postcards to each other, who knows which country made the first postcard?
Reader: Mr. Daley: One day in October 1865, a German painter drew a beautiful picture on cardboard paper and was going to send it to a friend as a wedding souvenir.
However, when he was struggling to find a suitable envelope at the post office, a post office clerk suggested that the painter write the recipient's address and name on the back of the picture and send it out. Sure enough, this "picture" without an envelope was sent to a friend like a letter. In this way, the world's first homemade "postcard" was quietly born.
In 1869, an Austrian doctor suggested developing postcards and listing them as printed mail in order to reduce postage costs**. The Austrian Ministry of Posts made his suggestion. On October 1 of the same year, the postcard was officially released in Vienna.
As a result, Austria is recognized as the first country in the world to issue postcards.
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The postcard reads:
1. Movies and life are all won or lost by aftertaste.
2. The regrets in summer will be gently resolved by the autumn breeze.
3. Always be clear and clear with kindness.
4. The stars are drunk and running around, the moon falls into the deep sea, I have never felt good in the world before, until you come.
5. This person is so good, so good that I feel that I suddenly have sustenance and hope in this life, and I want to see him live a long life, get married and have children, and everything will go well.
6. Love can last a long time.
7. We'll all love the deep blue sky with the summer temperature of 7:20 p.m. towards the end of August.
8. I still have to go down quietly, saying that the weather is so good, the wind is gentle, and I can smile tiredly in the sun, saying that life is very ordinary, and there are no twists and turns and sorrows.
9. When you meet lovely people, you feel that life is not difficult all of a sudden, whether it is the evening breeze or the cool night, you want to laugh.
10. I don't believe in contemporary science, unless there is a man who rides a horse and keeps moving forward, passing by all the grasslands, seas, mountains, love, encounters, partings, cities and years, and finally returning to you, so that I agree that the earth may be round.
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The birth of the postcard has a history of more than 10 years, and it is actually very accidental to talk about its origin.
A German painter drew a picture on a piece of cardboard and wrote a greeting on the back, intending to send it to a friend, but could not find a large envelope that could hold the picture. Seeing his sad look, the post office clerk gave him the idea to write the recipient's address and name on the back, and the result was sent like any other letter. The matter caught the attention of Senior Postal Counsellor Stephen.
So, at a congress of the German Postal Federation held on the same year, he put forward his idea. He believes that it is very troublesome for a letter to be written and sealed and sent, and for a letter with simple content and no confidential nature, it is completely possible to use a simple, unenveloped letter, that is, a postcard. Stephen's suggestion was not heeded.
In an Australian journal, Dr. Gell-Mann published an article suggesting that postcards should be classified as printed mail in order to reduce postage costs**. At the same time, he also proposed to limit the number of words in the letter, stipulating that a postcard should not exceed more than one word. At that time, such postcards were called "letter letters".
Postcards were officially issued at the Vienna Post Office and have since become popular all over the world.
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