A viewset for viewing and editing Postal Stations.

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{
    "count": 388,
    "next": "https://seshat-db.com/api/sc/postal-stations/?format=api&page=4",
    "previous": "https://seshat-db.com/api/sc/postal-stations/?format=api&page=2",
    "results": [
        {
            "id": 101,
            "polity": {
                "id": 111,
                "name": "in_achik_1",
                "long_name": "Early A'chik",
                "start_year": 1775,
                "end_year": 1867
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " During the colonial period, some journals were distributed among small educated neo-elites, but not to the general population: ‘Most of the writings before 1940 had religious intonation though secular form of literature began in 1924. Before this, there were only two journals in Garo language-one was the A’chikni Ripeng or “Friend of the Garos”, a powerful organ of the American Baptist Mission started in 1879. Since the journal was meant for propagation of plans and policies of the American Baptist Mission, articles dealing with one’s freedom of thought and expression were not accepted and published in it. The other journal, which was brought out in October, 1912 by three local leaders, namely Jobang D. Marak, Modhunath G. Momin and Alexander Macdonald Bassamoit, was Phringphrang or “Morning Star”. This journal, which was supposed to be secular in nature, was not very much different from the A’chikni Ripeng as most of the articles there, were connected with religion. The journal had its last publication in December, 1914 after which there were no more secular journals.’ §REF§Shira, Lindrid D. 1995. “Renaissance In Garo Literature”, 176§REF§ This suggests that neither couriers nor institutions resembling a postal service were present prior to colonization."
        },
        {
            "id": 102,
            "polity": {
                "id": 112,
                "name": "in_achik_2",
                "long_name": "Late A'chik",
                "start_year": 1867,
                "end_year": 1956
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Journals and newspapers were distributed among small educated neo-elites, but not to the general population: ‘Most of the writings before 1940 had religious intonation though secular form of literature began in 1924. Before this, there were only two journals in Garo language-one was the A’chikni Ripeng or “Friend of the Garos”, a powerful organ of the American Baptist Mission started in 1879. Since the journal was meant for propagation of plans and policies of the American Baptist Mission, articles dealing with one’s freedom of thought and expression were not accepted and published in it. The other journal, which was brought out in October, 1912 by three local leaders, namely Jobang D. Marak, Modhunath G. Momin and Alexander Macdonald Bassamoit, was Phringphrang or “Morning Star”. This journal, which was supposed to be secular in nature, was not very much different from the A’chikni Ripeng as most of the articles there, were connected with religion. The journal had its last publication in December, 1914 after which there were no more secular journals.’ §REF§Shira, Lindrid D. 1995. “Renaissance In Garo Literature”, 176§REF§ We have assumed that some form of postal or courier service was present in the town."
        },
        {
            "id": 103,
            "polity": {
                "id": 384,
                "name": "in_mahajanapada",
                "long_name": "Mahajanapada era",
                "start_year": -600,
                "end_year": -324
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Evidence for an organized postal system, and therefore postal stations, is not discussed in the literature and is therefore presumed absent. §REF§Singh, Upinder, A History of Ancient and Early Medieval India: From the Stone Age to the 12th Century (New Delhi: Pearson Education, 2008)§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 104,
            "polity": {
                "id": 87,
                "name": "in_mauryan_emp",
                "long_name": "Magadha - Maurya Empire",
                "start_year": -324,
                "end_year": -187
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " a communication system linking the empire with tree-lined roads, public wells, rest houses, and a mail service.\"§REF§(McClellan III and Dorn 2015, 164) McClellan III, James E. Dorn, Harold. 2015. Science and Technology in World History: An Introduction. JHU Press.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 105,
            "polity": {
                "id": 98,
                "name": "in_mughal_emp",
                "long_name": "Mughal Empire",
                "start_year": 1526,
                "end_year": 1858
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Stations were positioned at regular intervals along roads to keep horses for the next leg of the journey. §REF§Chitra, Joshi. 2012. Dak Roads, Dak Runners, and the Reordering of Communication Networks.Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis. 57, pp. 169-189.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 106,
            "polity": {
                "id": 132,
                "name": "iq_abbasid_cal_1",
                "long_name": "Abbasid Caliphate I",
                "start_year": 750,
                "end_year": 946
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Simple postal stations in use as stopping point for couriers. §REF§Silverstein, Adam J. Postal systems in the pre-modern Islamic world p. 77-78, 97..§REF§ The Abbasid had a department of state running the post office, called the Barim. §REF§( Alcock, Susan E., John Bodel, and Richard Ja Talbert, eds. Highways, byways, and road systems in the pre-modern world. Vol. 9. (Wiley 2012) pp. 70-74)§REF§ \"The Muslim conquerors adop­ted many ancient institutions, including the postal system, which they called barīd (ultimately derived from Lat. veredus, Gk. beredos “[courier’s] horse”). Although there is some controversy over whether it was primarily the Byzantine or Sasanian model that was followed (see, e.g. EI2, s.v. Barīd; Camb. Hist. Iran III/1, p. 564), it is probable that elements of both were taken over (Mez, p. 466). In the eastern part of the empire at least, ancient Persian practices and terminology seem to have prevailed.\"§REF§(Floor 1990) Floor, Willem. 1990. ČĀPĀR. www.iranicaonline.org/articles/capar-or-capar-turk§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 107,
            "polity": {
                "id": 484,
                "name": "iq_abbasid_cal_2",
                "long_name": "Abbasid Caliphate II",
                "start_year": 1191,
                "end_year": 1258
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 108,
            "polity": {
                "id": 476,
                "name": "iq_akkad_emp",
                "long_name": "Akkadian Empire",
                "start_year": -2270,
                "end_year": -2083
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Sargon \"introduced postal service between diverse parts of his gigantic multiethnic state.\"§REF§(Baizerman 2015) Baizerman, Michael. 2015. Dawn and Sunset: A Tale of the Oldest Cities in the Near East. AuthorHouse.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 109,
            "polity": {
                "id": 475,
                "name": "iq_early_dynastic",
                "long_name": "Early Dynastic",
                "start_year": -2900,
                "end_year": -2500
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 110,
            "polity": {
                "id": 106,
                "name": "iq_neo_assyrian_emp",
                "long_name": "Neo-Assyrian Empire",
                "start_year": -911,
                "end_year": -612
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " After Tiglath-pileser III (744-727 BCE) system of roads and posting stages. Mounted riders (mar shipri) could traverse the empire in 5-7 days from capital Nineveh. Letters were on parchment or clay tablet. §REF§(Chadwick 2005, 79)§REF§ The King's Road communication system between king and governor in provinces and client states. Planned and created in 9th Century. §REF§(Radler 2014)§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 111,
            "polity": {
                "id": 473,
                "name": "iq_ubaid",
                "long_name": "Ubaid",
                "start_year": -5500,
                "end_year": -4000
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 112,
            "polity": {
                "id": 477,
                "name": "iq_ur_dyn_3",
                "long_name": "Ur - Dynasty III",
                "start_year": -2112,
                "end_year": -2004
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Shulgi introduced the system of couriers and postal stations§REF§Postgate 2007, 42§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 113,
            "polity": {
                "id": 474,
                "name": "iq_uruk",
                "long_name": "Uruk",
                "start_year": -4000,
                "end_year": -2900
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 114,
            "polity": {
                "id": 107,
                "name": "ir_achaemenid_emp",
                "long_name": "Achaemenid Empire",
                "start_year": -550,
                "end_year": -331
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " §REF§(Farazmand 2002)§REF§ Lettered communication between central bureaucracy and the satrapies.§REF§(Schmitt 1983<a class=\"external autonumber\" href=\"http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/achaemenid-dynasty#pt2\" rel=\"nofollow\">[30]</a>)§REF§ \"The Archaemenids introduced the world's first postal service, and it was said the network of relay horses could deliver mail to the furthest corner of the empire within 15 days.\"§REF§(Burke 2010, 30) Burke, A. 2010. Iran. Lonely Planet.§REF§ \"In Persia the postal service appears to have originated in the Achaemenid period. ... There were way stations where the couriers could rest and where fresh horses could be obtained. The itinerary was measured in parasangs, or stages, along roads that seem not to have been paved or well maintained (cf. Olm­stead, p. 299).\"§REF§(Floor 1990) Floor, Willem. 1990. ČĀPĀR. www.iranicaonline.org/articles/capar-or-capar-turk§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 115,
            "polity": {
                "id": 508,
                "name": "ir_ak_koyunlu",
                "long_name": "Ak Koyunlu",
                "start_year": 1339,
                "end_year": 1501
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " possibly inherited from the Timurids."
        },
        {
            "id": 116,
            "polity": {
                "id": 495,
                "name": "ir_elam_1",
                "long_name": "Elam - Awan Dynasty I",
                "start_year": -2675,
                "end_year": -2100
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": true,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"the Sumerian civilisation which flourished before 3500 BC. This was an advanced civilisation building cities and supporting the people with irrigation systems, a legal system, administration, and even a postal service. Writing developed and counting was based on a sexagesimal system, that is to say base 60.\"§REF§J J O'Connor, J J. Robertson, E F. December 2000.  <a class=\"external free\" href=\"http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/HistTopics/Babylonian_mathematics.html\" rel=\"nofollow\">http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/HistTopics/Babylonian_mathematics.html</a>§REF§ -- presumably postal stations would have been necessary for an ancient postal service. \"Other major administrative achievements of the Elamites included ... the construction and maintenance of numerous public works and enterprises, such as roads, bridges, cities and towns, communication centers, and economic and commercial centers...\" §REF§(Farazmand 2009, 22) Farazmand, Ali. 2009. Bureaucracy and Administration. CRC Press. Boca Raton.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 117,
            "polity": {
                "id": 495,
                "name": "ir_elam_1",
                "long_name": "Elam - Awan Dynasty I",
                "start_year": -2675,
                "end_year": -2100
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": true,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"the Sumerian civilisation which flourished before 3500 BC. This was an advanced civilisation building cities and supporting the people with irrigation systems, a legal system, administration, and even a postal service. Writing developed and counting was based on a sexagesimal system, that is to say base 60.\"§REF§J J O'Connor, J J. Robertson, E F. December 2000.  <a class=\"external free\" href=\"http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/HistTopics/Babylonian_mathematics.html\" rel=\"nofollow\">http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/HistTopics/Babylonian_mathematics.html</a>§REF§ -- presumably postal stations would have been necessary for an ancient postal service. \"Other major administrative achievements of the Elamites included ... the construction and maintenance of numerous public works and enterprises, such as roads, bridges, cities and towns, communication centers, and economic and commercial centers...\" §REF§(Farazmand 2009, 22) Farazmand, Ali. 2009. Bureaucracy and Administration. CRC Press. Boca Raton.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 118,
            "polity": {
                "id": 362,
                "name": "ir_buyid_confederation",
                "long_name": "Buyid Confederation",
                "start_year": 932,
                "end_year": 1062
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": "\"In an effort to establish a quick postal service, Adud al-Daula concentrated on improving the roads between Baghdad and Shīrāz.\" §REF§(Busse 1975, 283)§REF§ The barid \"post and intelligence service that had been established by the early Abbasids, and which allowed the caliphal government to keep tabs on its most far-flung provinces ... was used by both the Buyids and the Ghaznavids\".§REF§(Peacock 2015, 200) Peacock, A C S. 2015. Edinburgh University Press Ltd. Edinburgh.§REF§ \"Under the Buyids rapid and efficient service was established first between Baghdad and Ray, then between Baghdad and Shiraz, with couriers arriving in the capital daily (Ebn Jawzī, VI, p. 341; Helāl Ṣābeʾ, p. 18; cf. Busse, p. 311).\"§REF§(Floor 1990) Floor, Willem. 1990. ČĀPĀR. www.iranicaonline.org/articles/capar-or-capar-turk§REF§\r\n\r\nHowever, “The struggles between the different regional powers and the Abbasid caliphate of Baghdad, particularly during the time of the Buyids and later in the eleventh century with the arrival of the Turks in the Middle East, meant that the barid became progressively disorganized until only an occasional postal service remained (Sauvaget, 11; Ebn Fazlollāh al-ʿOmari, 241).”§REF§(Gazagnadou 2017, 51) Gazagnadou, D. 2017. The Iranian origin of the word 'barid’. Journal of Persianate Studies 10(1) pp. 49-56. Seshat URL https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/A2CXIP3I/library§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 119,
            "polity": {
                "id": 486,
                "name": "ir_susiana_formative",
                "long_name": "Formative Period",
                "start_year": -7200,
                "end_year": -7000
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 120,
            "polity": {
                "id": 172,
                "name": "ir_il_khanate",
                "long_name": "Ilkhanate",
                "start_year": 1256,
                "end_year": 1339
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Post stations were erected at distances of one day's journey between them. Marco Polo said that this was 25-30 miles distance. §REF§David Morgan, The Mongols (Oxford: Blackwell, 2nd ed. 2007), p.91.§REF§ The extensive <i>Yam</i> system was used to communicate royal orders and royal envoys across the empire.§REF§David Morgan, The Mongols (Oxford: Blackwell, 2nd ed. 2007), p.90-91.§REF§ Ḡāzān Khan established \"special yāms exclusively for official couriers (īḷčī or yārāltū; cf. Doerfer, III, p. 12 and I, pp. 551-53) and making each one the responsibility of a grand amir. Stations were built along main arteries at a distance of three farsaḵs from one another and were required to have on hand fifteen well-nourished (farbeh) horses at all times. Two special couriers (peyk) were stationed at each yām; their function was to carry to the capital important reports about the provinces; such reports bore a special seal called tamḡā-ye peykī (seal of the messenger). A single courier could travel 30 farsaḵs in twenty-four hours, changing mounts frequently; the distance could be doubled if relays were used. Theoreti­cally an urgent message could reach Tabrīz from Khorasan in four days (Rašīd-al-Dīn, Jāmeʿ al-tawārīḵ, Baku, pp. 483-84; idem, Tārīḵ-eḡāzānī, pp. 274-75; cf. Spuler, Mongolen3, pp. 424-25).\"§REF§(Floor 1990) Floor, Willem. 1990. ČĀPĀR. www.iranicaonline.org/articles/capar-or-capar-turk§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 121,
            "polity": {
                "id": 489,
                "name": "ir_susiana_b",
                "long_name": "Susiana B",
                "start_year": -5700,
                "end_year": -5100
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 122,
            "polity": {
                "id": 491,
                "name": "ir_susiana_ubaid_2",
                "long_name": "Susiana - Late Ubaid",
                "start_year": -4700,
                "end_year": -4300
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 123,
            "polity": {
                "id": 490,
                "name": "ir_susiana_ubaid_1",
                "long_name": "Susiana - Early Ubaid",
                "start_year": -5100,
                "end_year": -4700
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 124,
            "polity": {
                "id": 499,
                "name": "ir_elam_5",
                "long_name": "Elam - Kidinuid Period",
                "start_year": -1500,
                "end_year": -1400
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 125,
            "polity": {
                "id": 503,
                "name": "ir_neo_elam_1",
                "long_name": "Elam I",
                "start_year": -900,
                "end_year": -744
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 126,
            "polity": {
                "id": 504,
                "name": "ir_neo_elam_2",
                "long_name": "Elam II",
                "start_year": -743,
                "end_year": -647
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 127,
            "polity": {
                "id": 125,
                "name": "ir_parthian_emp_1",
                "long_name": "Parthian Empire I",
                "start_year": -247,
                "end_year": 40
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Isidore of Charax wrote \"Parthian Stations\" on the postal stations maintained by the Parthians. §REF§(Silverstein 2007, 13) Silverstein, Adam J. 2007. Postal Systems in the Pre-Modern Islamic World. Cambridge University Press.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 128,
            "polity": {
                "id": 483,
                "name": "iq_parthian_emp_2",
                "long_name": "Parthian Empire II",
                "start_year": 41,
                "end_year": 226
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Isidore of Charax wrote \"Parthian Stations\" on the postal stations maintained by the Parthians. §REF§(Silverstein 2007, 13) Silverstein, Adam J. 2007. Postal Systems in the Pre-Modern Islamic World. Cambridge University Press.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 129,
            "polity": {
                "id": 485,
                "name": "ir_susiana_pre_ceramic",
                "long_name": "Pre-Ceramic Period",
                "start_year": -7800,
                "end_year": -7200
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 130,
            "polity": {
                "id": 509,
                "name": "ir_qajar_dyn",
                "long_name": "Qajar Dynasty",
                "start_year": 1794,
                "end_year": 1925
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 131,
            "polity": {
                "id": 374,
                "name": "ir_safavid_emp",
                "long_name": "Safavid Empire",
                "start_year": 1501,
                "end_year": 1722
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"The Safavid government maintained a postal system, mainly to relay messages and government orders. The couriers gradu­ally came to be known as čāpār. The system of relay stations no longer existed, however.\"§REF§(Floor 1990) Floor, Willem. 1990. ČĀPĀR. www.iranicaonline.org/articles/capar-or-capar-turk§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 132,
            "polity": {
                "id": 128,
                "name": "ir_sassanid_emp_1",
                "long_name": "Sasanid Empire I",
                "start_year": 205,
                "end_year": 487
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"In Persia the postal service appears to have originated in the Achaemenid period. ... There were way stations where the couriers could rest and where fresh horses could be obtained. ... Under the Sasanians a similar postal system appears to have been in operation; in a peace treaty concluded with Byzantium in a.d. 561 one clause stipulated that envoys should be supplied with mounts at the postal stations maintained by both empires.\"§REF§(Floor 1990) Floor, Willem. 1990. ČĀPĀR. www.iranicaonline.org/articles/capar-or-capar-turk§REF§ The barid of the Islamic era thought to have been based on earlier system of postal stations."
        },
        {
            "id": 133,
            "polity": {
                "id": 130,
                "name": "ir_sassanid_emp_2",
                "long_name": "Sasanid Empire II",
                "start_year": 488,
                "end_year": 642
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"In Persia the postal service appears to have originated in the Achaemenid period. ... There were way stations where the couriers could rest and where fresh horses could be obtained. ... Under the Sasanians a similar postal system appears to have been in operation; in a peace treaty concluded with Byzantium in a.d. 561 one clause stipulated that envoys should be supplied with mounts at the postal stations maintained by both empires.\"§REF§(Floor 1990) Floor, Willem. 1990. ČĀPĀR. www.iranicaonline.org/articles/capar-or-capar-turk§REF§ The barid of the Islamic era thought to have been based on earlier system of postal stations."
        },
        {
            "id": 134,
            "polity": {
                "id": 108,
                "name": "ir_seleucid_emp",
                "long_name": "Seleucid Empire",
                "start_year": -312,
                "end_year": -63
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Seleucids took over the Persian postal system. \"... originally post stations on the main roads, the Seleucids having taken over the Persian postal system - each stathmos being the centre of a subdivision comprising so many villages.\" §REF§(Tam 2010, 2) Tam, W W. 2010. The Greeks in Bactria and India. Cambridge University Press.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 135,
            "polity": {
                "id": 364,
                "name": "ir_seljuk_sultanate",
                "long_name": "Seljuk Sultanate",
                "start_year": 1037,
                "end_year": 1157
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " <i>Inferred that postal stations were kept and used by chosen emissaries and it was just the bureaucracy behind it which involved an intelligence service that was abolished.</i> \"Despite Nizam al-Mulk's urging, Alp Arslan was steadfast in rejecting the introduction of the barid. ... One reason may have been the Ghaznavid barid reports were encrypted (mu'amma), meaning that only a trained bureaucrat could interpret them. The Seljuks may not have wished to place such confidence in their kuttab.\"§REF§(Peacock 2015, 200) Peacock, A C S. 2015. Edinburgh University Press Ltd. Edinburgh.§REF§ Nizam al-Mulk mentions postal stations in his \"Book of Government\". \"Little is known about the postal service in Persia under the Saljuqs, but Sultan Alp Arslan (455-65/465-1072) abolished at least the intelligence-gathering aspects of the courier service, preferring to rely on personally chosen emissaries\".§REF§(Floor 1990) Floor, Willem. 1990. ČĀPĀR. www.iranicaonline.org/articles/capar-or-capar-turk§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 136,
            "polity": {
                "id": 492,
                "name": "ir_susa_1",
                "long_name": "Susa I",
                "start_year": -4300,
                "end_year": -3800
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 137,
            "polity": {
                "id": 493,
                "name": "ir_susa_2",
                "long_name": "Susa II",
                "start_year": -3800,
                "end_year": -3100
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"the Sumerian civilisation which flourished before 3500 BC. This was an advanced civilisation building cities and supporting the people with irrigation systems, a legal system, administration, and even a postal service. Writing developed and counting was based on a sexagesimal system, that is to say base 60.\"§REF§J J O'Connor, J J. Robertson, E F. December 2000.  <a class=\"external free\" href=\"http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/HistTopics/Babylonian_mathematics.html\" rel=\"nofollow\">http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/HistTopics/Babylonian_mathematics.html</a>§REF§ -- presumably postal stations would have been necessary for an ancient postal service."
        },
        {
            "id": 138,
            "polity": {
                "id": 115,
                "name": "is_icelandic_commonwealth",
                "long_name": "Icelandic Commonwealth",
                "start_year": 930,
                "end_year": 1262
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": "§REF§pers. comm. Axel Kristissen; Arni D Juliusson 2017§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 139,
            "polity": {
                "id": 179,
                "name": "it_latium_ba",
                "long_name": "Latium - Bronze Age",
                "start_year": -1800,
                "end_year": -900
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 140,
            "polity": {
                "id": 178,
                "name": "it_latium_ca",
                "long_name": "Latium - Copper Age",
                "start_year": -3600,
                "end_year": -1800
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 141,
            "polity": {
                "id": 180,
                "name": "it_latium_ia",
                "long_name": "Latium - Iron Age",
                "start_year": -1000,
                "end_year": -580
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " No general postal service until the Cursus Publicus, established by Augustus during the Principate. However \"A series of postal stations connected by wagon and horse relays along the major trunk roads of the Empire\". §REF§(Gabriel 2002, 209) Richard A Gabriel. 2002. The Great Armies of Antiquity. Praeger. Westport.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 142,
            "polity": {
                "id": 186,
                "name": "it_ostrogoth_k",
                "long_name": "Ostrogothic Kingdom",
                "start_year": 489,
                "end_year": 554
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 143,
            "polity": {
                "id": 189,
                "name": "it_st_peter_rep_2",
                "long_name": "Rome - Republic of St Peter II",
                "start_year": 904,
                "end_year": 1198
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 144,
            "polity": {
                "id": 190,
                "name": "it_papal_state_1",
                "long_name": "Papal States - High Medieval Period",
                "start_year": 1198,
                "end_year": 1309
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 145,
            "polity": {
                "id": 192,
                "name": "it_papal_state_3",
                "long_name": "Papal States - Early Modern Period I",
                "start_year": 1527,
                "end_year": 1648
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " This should be bracketed. I have not found any specific mentions of postal stations, but the ongoing bureaucratization of the post delivery system would probably have led to this."
        },
        {
            "id": 146,
            "polity": {
                "id": 193,
                "name": "it_papal_state_4",
                "long_name": "Papal States - Early Modern Period II",
                "start_year": 1648,
                "end_year": 1809
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Specialized buildings exclusively devoted to the postal service."
        },
        {
            "id": 147,
            "polity": {
                "id": 191,
                "name": "it_papal_state_2",
                "long_name": "Papal States - Renaissance Period",
                "start_year": 1378,
                "end_year": 1527
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 148,
            "polity": {
                "id": 187,
                "name": "it_ravenna_exarchate",
                "long_name": "Exarchate of Ravenna",
                "start_year": 568,
                "end_year": 751
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 149,
            "polity": {
                "id": 182,
                "name": "it_roman_rep_1",
                "long_name": "Early Roman Republic",
                "start_year": -509,
                "end_year": -264
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " No general postal service until the Cursus Publicus, established by Augustus during the Principate."
        },
        {
            "id": 150,
            "polity": {
                "id": 184,
                "name": "it_roman_rep_3",
                "long_name": "Late Roman Republic",
                "start_year": -133,
                "end_year": -31
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Postal_station",
            "postal_station": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " No general postal service until the Cursus Publicus, established by Augustus during the Principate."
        }
    ]
}