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The Holy Grail of Manuscripts~
#1
i'd like to see this in a museum rather than private hands. it will be auctioned on Dec. 7 at Sotheby's.

Daily Mail:
A 14th century manuscript containing what is believed to be the oldest surviving account of the legends of King Arthur is to be sold for up to £2 million, it was announced today.

The Rochefoucauld Grail, a colourful, illustrated account of the knights of the round table is said to be one of the finest medieval texts in private hands.

It is due to be sold by auction house Sotheby's in London for a price estimated between £1.5 million and £2 million.

Blood and guts: This picture from the manuscript shows King Arthur fighting the Saxons. The manuscript is expected to fetch nearly £2m at auction

Lady of the lake.

Battle: Two knights fight to the death on horseback in this illustration from the tome.

More than 200 cows would have been needed to produce the vellum sheets for the three hefty volumes of the manuscript, which contains 107 finely painted illustrations.

It was written in Flanders or Artois some time between 1315 and 1323 and probably produced for Guy VII, Baron de Rochefoucauld, head of one of the leading aristocratic families of medieval France.

The manuscript went on to be acquired by 19th century collector Sir Thomas Phillipps and has changed hands twice since.

Rescued: Characters from the story carry injured warriors to the safety of a castle.

Off with his head: Another of the 107 paintings shows a knight about to execute another

The stories of Arthur, the lady in the lake and Lancelot which it contained were popular in their day and were translated widely around Europe, and became something of a guidebook for chivalry.

Wounded: Queen Guinevere and her maidservants carry Lancelot to safety

Sleeping knights: A suicidal Lancelot is stopped from killing himself by one knight. All the others were meant to be watching too but fell asleep


Sotheby's specialist Dr Timothy Bolton said: 'This is one of the principal manuscripts of the first significant medieval work of secular literature.

'It is a grand book, in a monumental format, with 107 miniatures, each a dazzling jewel of early gothic illumination.

'The scenes often have a riotous energy, and often stretch beyond the boundaries of the picture frames, with lofty towers poking through the borders at the top, and figures tumbling out of the miniatures onto the blank page as they fall or scramble to escape their enemies.'

click to enlarge:




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#2


I think that's a very cheap price given what it is.
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#3
(11-12-2010, 11:14 AM)Duchess Wrote:

I think that's a very cheap price given what it is.

actually so do i! i think it's beyond price. monks slaved away to do all those illuminations by hand. it probably took years.


















































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#4
HOLY SHITE!

Daily Mail

A world record has been smashed in a provincial British auction house after a household vase fetched £51million. 68 million dollars!

The 18th-­century Chinese antique was found during a ­routine clear-out of a dusty attic in a three-bed semi-detached house on the outskirts of London.

The owners, a brother and sister who were clearing out their late parents’ modest home in suburban Pinner, West London, had to be taken out of the auction room in shock Big surprise as frenzied bidding lasted half an hour.

The vase is from the Qianlong period, when the production of intricately designed china was at its peak, and the Emperor, who ruled from 1736 to 1795, was an avid connoisseur of art.

The bottom of the 16-inch high vase, thought to have been made in the 1740s, is marked with the Imperial seal.

The elaborately decorated and enameled body, exquisitely painted in pastel yellow and blue, contains an inner vase that can be viewed through the perforations.



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#5


Sixty eight million dollars for one butt ugly vase. Jesus.
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