By now, everybody in the coin trade knows that you do not need a public auction with on-site bidders to realize phenomenal results. All you need is a potent and easy-to-manage online platform as well as enthusiastic coin collectors from around the world. They will make sure prices go up from their computers at home. Therefore, Künker’s eLive Premium Auctions with printed catalogs and online sales have established themselves as the ideal form to auction off exciting collections that are worth of being documented for posterity. Our eLive Premium Auction 401 with the last part of a private collection from Westphalia with “multiple portraits” illustrates how much interest there is currently in medals of historical significance.
In this review, we will only introduce the three lots that realized the highest hammer prices. However, it is worthwhile to take a look at the results for yourself. You will see the high prices that are being fetched in this section right now, although there were also interesting pieces that sold for low three-digit sums. Therefore, it did not come as a surprise that the total estimate of 237,000 euros soared to a total hammer price of 800,000 euros.
In second place of this auction we have a beautiful late Renaissance medal, depicting on one side the old Emperor Charles V, who abdicated in 1556. The reverse shows his son, young Felipe II, King of Spain. The medal is a contemporary cast and was used as a diplomatic gift for high dignitaries. The medal’s price jumped from 250 euros to 8,500 euros.
A 19th-century work of minting art – there is no other way to describe this medal, created by the royal mint of France to celebrate the visit of its still new sovereign in 1833. With its incredibly high relief, meticulous detail and exuberant historicist style, this medal is a unique numismatic testimony to Citizen King Louis Philippe and all that was built under his rule. We only have to think of the Dôme des Invalides and Les Halles, the “belly” of Paris.
With a diameter of 75.11 mm and a weight of 202.24 g, this magnificent medal had been estimated at 1,500 euros and sold for 8,750 euros, making it the most expensive lot in the entire sale.