Contents:Bosnia and Herzegovina, Yugoslavia, Kosovo, Croatia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia, Slovenia, Trieste – Zone B.
Description:
- The editorial improvements are spread across the entire work. In Yugoslavia, we added their ethnicity to the biographical data of the honored personalities. In the “King Peter II” postage stamp series from 1939/1940, we note a striking plate error. The broken boundary line of the royal ear looks like a ring. Since Croatia used these postage stamps for its first own overprint issues, the “earring” plate error is repeated in three other stamps.
- Among the new products from Serbia, we discovered two cases where the designer hid his initials in the image of a single brand within the counter arch. A good eye is required here. It is certainly useful for collectors to know that Croatia has been using the euro currency since 2023.
- Another focus was checking and updating price quotations. Collectors' demand is primarily for interesting motif editions, which results in rising valuations. North Macedonia and Serbia as well as the Serbian Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina are particularly worth mentioning here. A Croatian overprint set from 1941 made a big jump, going up 50 percent.
- This volume contains all the new products covered up to and including issue 4/2024 of the MICHEL-Rundschau.
Product information:
Edition: 109. Edition, in color
Pages: 1020
Format: 155mm x 230mm, hardcover
Publisher: Schwaneberger Verlag GmbH
Release date: May 3, 2024
The editorial improvements are spread across the entire work. In Yugoslavia, we added their ethnicity to the biographical data of the honored personalities. In the “King Peter II” postage stamp series from 1939/1940, we note a striking plate error. The broken boundary line of the royal ear looks like a ring. Since Croatia used these postage stamps for its first own overprint issues, the “earring” plate error is repeated in three other stamps. Another focus was checking and updating price quotations. Collectors' demand is primarily for interesting motif editions, which results in rising valuations. North Macedonia and Serbia as well as the Serbian Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina are particularly worth mentioning here. A Croatian overprint set from 1941 made a big jump, going up 50 percen