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Japanese businessman, writer and philatelist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hiroyuki Kanai (金井 宏之, Kanai Hiroyuki, 16 May 1925 in Amagasaki[1] – 26 January 2012[2]) was a Japanese businessman, writer and philatelist.[3]
Kanai Hiroyuki | |
---|---|
Born | 16 May 1925 |
Died | 26 January 2012 86) | (aged
Nationality | Japanese |
Occupation(s) | Businessman writer Philatelist |
Kanai's father was a wealthy Japanese businessman and at the age of five he began his first stamp collection.[4]: 186 At 13, he intensified his hobby and while in university founded two stamp collecting clubs.[5]: 178 His first degree was in engineering at Nihon University after which he studied political economy at Waseda University. He then worked for the textile machinery factory founded by one of his grandfathers. Later, he became president of a number of companies[1] such as the Kanai Heavy Industry Co.
At first, Kanai was a general stamp collector[1] but after World War II he specialised in the philately of Japan, Finland and the British colonies.[1][6] Through philatelic contacts he became aware of and eventually owned a unique collection of the Red and Blue Mauritius "Post Office" stamps, when he procured a total of six pieces of 27 known copies of these valuable stamps, which was the largest ever owned by one person. In 1971, he bought the Bordeaux Letter, a cover with both the one penny red and two pence blue stamps addressed to Bordeaux, for 120 million yen. At that time this was about 1 million US dollars, equivalent in purchasing power to about 7.5 million US dollars 2023. In 1988, he initially sold the Bordeaux Letter;[7]: 13 the balance of the Kanai's Mauritius stamps were sold by David Feldman in 1993 at a Zurich auction.[8][9] That part of the Kanai collection, being 183 pages of the classic issues of Mauritius, is listed by the Guinness World Records as the "Most expensive stamp collection".[10] He received many awards and worked most recently as Director of the Stamp Museum Kobe.[6]
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