Garden statues turn out to be ancient Egyptian relics, selling for $265,000

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Garden statues turn out to be ancient Egyptian relics, selling for $265,000​

  • AMY WOODYATT, CNN
  • POSTED 13 HRS AGO
A pair of carved stone statues used as garden ornaments have sold for more than £195,000 ($265,510) after it was revealed that they were ancient Egyptian relics dating back thousands of years, an auction house has said.

The artifacts were acquired from a garden in Sudbury, Suffolk, in eastern England.

Mander Auctioneers, which handled the sale, said they were contacted by a family looking to get rid of items from their old house before moving home.


The "heavily weathered" statues, which had been used to decorate a garden patio until last month, had been bought for "a few hundred pounds" at another auction 15 years ago and were believed to be 18th century replicas of ancient Egyptian relics, according to the auction house.

One statue even had its head re-attached with cement by a local builder under the instruction of the previous owners, auctioneer James Mander told CNN Tuesday.

"We didn't really question them and put them in [at auction] at £300 to £500 ($410 to $680)," Mander told CNN. "And then the auction just went crazy," he said.

Saturday's bidding began at £200, but within 15 minutes four telephone bidders and numerous internet buyers pushed the final price up to £195,000 plus 24% buyer's premium, with an international art gallery making the final sale.

"Opinion was that they were genuine ancient Egyptian examples, which had somehow passed through recent history as 18th century copies," auctioneers said in a statement.


Mander said that, in the 18th century, the Grand Tour saw English people travel through Europe, buying items.

"And we've just presumed they were 18th century Grand Tour items," Mander told CNN.

"As it turns out they're thousands of years old and genuine. So it's quite amazing really," he said, adding that news of the final sale was "beyond comprehension" for the surprised previous owners.

Mander said that work was being done to trace the provenance of the statues, and he can't place an exact date on the artifacts yet.

"I wonder where they've been for the last 5,000 years. It's quite incredible, really," he said.

The-CNN-Wire

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KANACKI

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Hola Amigo

Old Kanacki suspects a leg pull with this one. As far as I can ascertain no expert has put their name or reputation on this claim of them being 5000 years old. only stating "Believed"

That are just 18th century concrete garden statues that are badly weathered. Quite common in the 19th century. Cement mix for such garden features is usually poor quality and after a few years of weathering moisture created micro cracking in the statue.

Cement was invented by the Romans not by the Egyptians . This is a classic example of the poor quality of reporters we have in the media we have these days unable to research basic facts.

As for the buyer well I have Brooklyn bridge to sell them and its going cheap.

56583264_1_x.jpg


Kanacki
 

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Treasure_Hunter

Treasure_Hunter

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Hola Amigo

Old Kanacki suspects a leg pull with this one. As far as I can ascertain no expert has put their name or reputation on this claim of them being 5000 years old. only stating "Believed"

That are just 18th century concrete garden statues that are badly weathered. Quite common in the 19th century. Cement mix for such garden features is usually poor quality and after a few years of weathering moisture created micro cracking in the statue.

Cement was invented by the Romans not by the Egyptians . This is a classic example of the poor quality of reporters we have in the media we have these days unable to research basic facts.

As for the buyer well I have Brooklyn bridge to sell them and its going cheap.

View attachment 1985589

Kanacki

Then they fooled the world....







 

KANACKI

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Hola amigo it would not be the first time or last time that has happened..

Regardless thanks for the interesting thread.

Kanacki
 

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