
On 25 July 1807 the Russian sloop “Diana” under the command of V.M. Golovnin with a young crew of fifty-five sailed from Kronstadt, a Russian seaport town in the Gulf of Finland, to Petropavlovsk-in-Kamchatka in the far east of the country. Its voyage was one of provisioning to the new Russian settlements in the Far East and North America as well as of surveying and discovery in North Pacific waters.
On 26
July 1809 the sloop found itself entering a small bay in the
tropical Pacific named by Captain Cook “Port Resolution” and by Tanna
islanders – “Uea”, in the dark, volcanic lee of Mount Yasur. “Diana” had no
orders to call at Tanna Island - her arrival was a consequence of a
dramatic and unlikely series of events, including capture by the
British, an escape from Simon's Bay in South Africa, at dusk and in a
storm, and an exhausting, uninterrupted passage across the Indian Ocean
and Tasman Sea with the intention of avoiding all encounters with the
British fleet or British merchantmen in Australian waters. Tanna was
chosen by V.M. Golovnin as their resting and revitalizing spot, well
removed from normal shipping routes and likely to be free of Europeans,
yet supplied with ample fruit, some drinking water, and a neatly
charted harbour.All, in fact, passed off as well as Golovnin could have desired, after tense initial meetings with a Kwamera-speaking Tannese group led by an elder called Gunama. Drawing maximum advantage from the works of the two Forsters who, had been at Tanna with “Resolution” in 1774, Golovnin proceeded cautiously but amicably. A single day produced, through barter at the water's edge, some forty feet of sugarcane, 400 coconuts or more, and yams. Uea Bay, meanwhile, was surveyed by cutter, and Tannese weaponry and other artifacts were collected and can be now seen at St. Petersburg Kunstcamera Museum. Full notes were taken about the evidence of tribal warfare, social structure, navigation, husbandry and diet, clothing, ornament, and language. “Diana’s” visit to Uea Bay was beneficial in both practical and scientific terms.
This stamp issue marks 200 years since the first Russian-Vanuatu contact, which continues today and will be celebrated on 28 July 2009 in Port Vila.

Bicentenary of First Contact between Russia and
Vanuatu 1809 - 2009
Please Note: All prices are in US Dollars
| Miniature Sheet | $4.80 | ||
| First Day Cover with Miniature Sheet | $5.80 |
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Collectors Notes: | ![]() |
For more information please contact: |
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| Designer: | Denise Durkin, Wellington, New Zealand | The
Manager, Philatelic Bureau, Vanuatu Post, Port Vila, Vanuatu Tel. + 678 22000 Fax + 678 23900 E mail: philatelic@vanuatupost.vu |
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| Printer: | Wyatt and Wilson Printers, Christchurch, New Zealand | |||
| Process: | Offset lithography | |||
| Stamp Size: | 50.16 mm x 34.96 mm, two horizontal stamps | |||
| Miniature Sheet Size: | 128mm x 89mm | |||
| Paper: | 104gsm litho gummed stamp paper | |||
| Denominations: | 130, and 350 vatu. M/S is 480 vatu | |||
| Period of Sale: | 28 July 2009 for a period of 2 years |

