Duties and Functions: Courier or Postman, Japan
Duties and Functions: Courier or Postman, Japan
Couriers are distinguished from ordinary mail services by features such as speed, security,
tracking, signature, specialization and individualization of express services, and swift delivery
times, which are optional for most everyday mail services. As a premium service, couriers are
usually more expensive than standard mail services, and their use is normally limited to
packages where one or more of these features are considered important enough to warrant the
cost.
Courier services operate on all scales, from within specific towns or cities, to regional, national
and global services. Large courier companies include DHL, FedEx, EMS
International, TNT, UPS, and Aramex. These offer services worldwide, typically via a hub and
spoke model.
Courier or postman, Japan, hand-coloured albumen print by Felice Beato, between 1863 and 1877
Japanese military bike courierpursued by Cossacks (1904). On foot, military couriers are known
as runners.
Anabasii[edit]
Starting at the time of Augustus, the ancient Greeks and Romans made use of a class of horse
and chariot-mounted couriers called anabasiito quickly bring messages and commands long
distances.[1] The word anabasii comes from the Greek (adscensus, "mounting").[2]They
were contemporary with the Greek hemeredromi, who carried their messages by foot.
In Roman Britain, Rufinus made use of anabasii, as documented in Saint Jerome's memoirs
(adv. Ruffinum, l. 3. c. 1.): "Idcircone Cereales et Anabasii tui per diversas provincias
cucurrerunt, ut laudes meas legerent?" ("Is it on that account that your Cereales and Anabasii
circulated through many provinces, so that they might read my praises?")
Middle Ages[edit]
In the Middle Ages, royal courts maintained their own messengers who were paid little more than
common labourers.
Types[edit]
In cities, there are often bicycle couriers or motorcycle couriers but for consignments requiring
delivery over greater distance networks, this may often include lorries, railways and aircraft.
Many companies who operate under a Just-In-Time or "JIT" inventory method often use on-
board couriers (OBCs). On-board couriers are individuals who can travel at a moment's notice
anywhere in the world, usually via commercial airlines. While this type of service is the second
costliestgeneral aviation charters are far more expensivecompanies analyze the cost of
service to engage an on-board courier versus the "cost" the company will realise should the
product not arrive by a specified time (an assembly line stopping, untimely court filing, lost sales
from product or components missing a delivery deadline, organ transplants).