Historic Letter from Mao to Clement Attlee:
Calling for Urgent Assistance From the British Labour Party
To
be offered at Sotheby’s in London, 15 December 2015
One
of the first communications between the Communist party leader and any Western
politician.
Only the second letter signed by Mao to appear on the international auction market in recent decades.
Only the second letter signed by Mao to appear on the international auction market in recent decades.
An historic letter
written by Mao Zedong, the Communist Party leader and brilliant guerrilla
commander who would become one of the most significant historical figures of
the century, to the British politician Clement Attlee, then head of the Labour
Party and the future British Prime Minister, will come to auction in London on
15 December 2015. Estimated at £100,000-150,000 / HK$ 1.2-1.8m, this is one of
the very first communications between the Communist leader and any Western
politician.
Dated 1 November 1937, the letter was written from Yan’an, a remote part of north-western China where the Communists had set-up their headquarters following the full-scale Japanese invasion of the country. After stating Mao’s solidarity and goodwill to the British people, the letter calls for the Labour Party's urgent practical assistance in the fight against Japanese Imperialism.
Gabriel Heaton, Sotheby’s Specialist in Books and Manuscripts: “This attempt to elicit British support against Japan is an extraordinarily early instance of Mao engaging in international diplomacy, and is an exceptionally rare example of Mao’s signature. This is only the second document signed by Mao to appear on the international auction market in recent decades.”
Dated 1 November 1937, the letter was written from Yan’an, a remote part of north-western China where the Communists had set-up their headquarters following the full-scale Japanese invasion of the country. After stating Mao’s solidarity and goodwill to the British people, the letter calls for the Labour Party's urgent practical assistance in the fight against Japanese Imperialism.
Gabriel Heaton, Sotheby’s Specialist in Books and Manuscripts: “This attempt to elicit British support against Japan is an extraordinarily early instance of Mao engaging in international diplomacy, and is an exceptionally rare example of Mao’s signature. This is only the second document signed by Mao to appear on the international auction market in recent decades.”
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Treloar Auction
Rare
Books, Photographs, Maps & Ephemera
Wednesday 9 December 2015
7pm (Australian Central Daylight Time)
196 North Tce, Adelaide, South Australia
Highlights include a fine complete set of Carl Strehlow's Die Aranda-und Loritja-Stämme (among other important Australian Aboriginal works, including original Spencer and Gillen photographs), a large oil painting of SY Aurora of Antarctic fame; W.J. Hooker's Journal of a Tour in Iceland with extraordinary provenance (J.D. Hooker, William Colenso and Douglas Mawson), a fine autograph letter from Alexander von Humboldt, and a superb signed photograph of cricketer George Giffen.
Particular strengths of the sale are exploration and travel, rare Australiana and vintage photographs, including photographically illustrated books.
Click here to view the illustrated catalogue
Go to www.treloars.com for full details
Wednesday 9 December 2015
7pm (Australian Central Daylight Time)
196 North Tce, Adelaide, South Australia
Highlights include a fine complete set of Carl Strehlow's Die Aranda-und Loritja-Stämme (among other important Australian Aboriginal works, including original Spencer and Gillen photographs), a large oil painting of SY Aurora of Antarctic fame; W.J. Hooker's Journal of a Tour in Iceland with extraordinary provenance (J.D. Hooker, William Colenso and Douglas Mawson), a fine autograph letter from Alexander von Humboldt, and a superb signed photograph of cricketer George Giffen.
Particular strengths of the sale are exploration and travel, rare Australiana and vintage photographs, including photographically illustrated books.
Click here to view the illustrated catalogue
Go to www.treloars.com for full details
———————————
The Book of Kells
The work is thought by scholars to have been produced on the island of Iona, in Gaelic Scotland, around AD 800, although conflicting views have suggested that its origins could lie in English Northumbria or in Pictland in eastern Scotland.
The ‘new’ manuscript fragments were found by a retired German professor who realised their significance and passed them to an eminent American palaeographer to try to establish their origin. He in turn sought the expert help of Professor David Dumville, a professor in history, palaeography, and Celtic at the University of Aberdeen, who assembled an international team of scholars in the Granite City to analyse scans of the fragments.
The Book of Kells contains the four Gospels in Latin and is written in a high grade of Insular script, originally developed in Britain and Ireland and which spread to continental Europe during the early Middle Ages
To Contact Ibookcollector
Ibookcollector © is published by Rivendale Press.
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