I can understand why! Is that a Krause-listed country in the Standard Catalog now with a regular KM-number, I wonder, or is it just in the Krause "Unusual" catalog, with a KM X-number? I'll have to check... Update: per Numista, it is KM#16, so apparently in the regular Standard Catalog rather than the Unusual World Coins catalog. Neato.
Here's a recent arrival. I bought it from a European auction with a scant description and washed out photos. Expected a horribly cleaned coin, but considering they used the wrong date in its description (online AND in the printed catalog they'd sent me), I was willing to take a chance. Even with auction fees and shipping fees it ended up being a decent buy as catalog for a year 14 vs. 24 is about a 3x difference. It's not as horribly cleaned as I feared--looks better in hand than in the photo really. If only it had hidden an UNC instead of AU then it would have been a screaming buy. Also sadly not the scarcer variant for the year (but that was obvious in the photos--the normal location for the 4). Still a lucky purchase for a year I'd not normally have gotten and there is something gratifying in spotting a mistake]...and as an auction it was fair.
Some new pickups: Hungary 1 Krajczár 1869KB This is a 4 year type (1868-69 and 1872-73). All dates other than 1868 are very challenging to find in MS grades. I'm happy to pick up this well-struck example for my krajczár date set. Hungary 1885 His Majesty Crown Prince Rudolf / Budapest National Exhibition 1885 Medal 30mm 11g Brass Crown Prince Rudolf was the only child of Franz Joseph I and Empress Elisabeth of Austria-Hungary. There were a lot of Austrian medals produced in Latin to commemorate his wedding to Princess Stéphanie, but I don't believe I've seen him featured on a Hungarian medal before. He didn't spend much time in Hungary, but then he died at a relatively young age. When this medal was struck in 1885 he was 27 years old; this was only 4 years before his suicide. For some added context, here's a painting by Nadler of the 1885 Budapest National Exhibition, featuring the exhibition pavilion that is shown on the reverse of the medal:
Finally got a shipment in. 2.83 Kg of coins, including some nice British silver. This should keep me busy the rest of the year and then some!