Napoleon’s dress sword sells for US2.8 mil

Napoleon’s dress sword sells for US2.8 mil

The dress sword was carried by Napoleon Bonaparte when he staged a coup in 1799.

The bronze statue of French Emperor Napoleon I inside the honour yard at the Hotel des Invalides, in Paris.
NEW YORK:
The dress sword carried by Napoleon Bonaparte when he staged a coup in 1799 and five of his other firearms sold at auction for more than US$2.8 million, US auctioneers announced Tuesday.

The lot, which was put up for sale by the Illinois-based Rock Island Auction Company, was sold on Dec 3 via phone to a buyer who has remained anonymous, company president Kevin Hogan told AFP.

The sword and five ornamented pistols had initially been valued at $1.5 million to $3.5 million.

With the $2.87 million sale, “the buyer of the Napoleon Garniture is taking home a very rare piece of history,” Hogan said.

The sword, with its scabbard, was the “crown jewel” of the collection, according to the auctioneers.

The weapon was made by Nicolas-Noel Boutet, who was director of the state arms factory in Versailles.

After being crowned emperor, Napoleon is believed to have presented the sword to general Jean-Andoche Junot, but the general’s wife later was forced to sell it to pay off debts.

It was then recovered by a London museum. A US collector was its last owner, but the man recently died, according to the auction house.

In May, France celebrated the bicentennial of Napoleon’s death.

The famed Corsican is one of the most divisive figures in French history, his huge contribution to the creation of the modern state set against his imperialism and war-mongering.

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