Valuable Books and Manuscripts including Cartography

Valuable Books and Manuscripts including Cartography

Sale Overview

Christie’s Valuable Books and Manuscripts including Cartography auction on 8 July ranks among the most significant various-owner sales in the category in recent memory. Leading the sale is the Clermont-Tonnerre Grail, an exceptional late 13th-century illuminated manuscript of the greatest of all medieval romances: the epic tale of the quest for the Holy Grail, the story of Merlin and his diabolic birth, and the adventures of King Artur and the Knights of the Round Table. Other highlights include a sumptuous miniature by Don Silvestro dei Gherarducci; one of the earliest surviving witnesses of Charlemagne’s Admonitio Generalis, dating from the emperor’s lifetime; and two important collections of Romanesque manuscripts and richly illuminated Books of Hours.

The printed books are led by two major groups of atlases and maps from private European collections. Highlights include the French edition of Blaeu’s monumental 12‑volume Grand Atlas, the 1508 Rome edition of Ptolemy’s Geographia, and manuscript portolan charts of the Mediterranean and the North and Baltic Seas.

A selection from the Neapolitan library of Antonio Bonchristiano includes the fine Dogmersfield–Rosebery copy of Hamilton’s Campi Phlegraei and d’Hancarville’s Collection of Etruscan, Greek and Roman Antiquities. The autograph section focuses particularly on Albert Einstein, featuring three highly significant letters relating to the general theory of relativity, alongside letters and manuscripts by Newton, Kant, Marx and Horatio Nelson.

Learn more about the sale's top lot The Clermont-Tonnerre Grail now.

Auction times
08 Jul 12:00 PM (BST)

Our specialist’s selection

Brought to you by

Eugenio Donadoni

Eugenio Donadoni

Senior Specialist, Medieval & Renaissance Manuscripts | Books & Manuscripts

Eugenio Donadoni joined Christie’s in 2010, where he leads the manuscripts team with responsibility for the appraisal, researching, cataloguing and marketing of medieval and renaissance and earlier western manuscripts worldwide. Born in Florence and raised in Naples, he underwent a radical process of Anglicisation and ended up reading for an undergraduate degree, a Master’s degree, and a doctorate at Oxford University. His loyalties are still divided, especially come the World Cup.

Highlights include the sale of the Rothschild Prayerbook ($13.6m, the world record at auction for an illuminated manuscript, January 2014); the Carolingian ‘Gospels of Queen Theutberga’ (£1.99m, July 2015); the only copy of the Ripley Scroll in private hands (£584,750, December 2017); the Audley End Lydgate (£392,750, July 2018); and the oldest known manuscript of Ezechiel in Latin (£212,500, July 2019). Notable collection sales have included the Arcana Collection of Exceptional Illuminated Manuscripts, the stunning group of manuscripts from the collection of Yates, Thompson and Bright: a Family of Bibliophiles (16 July 2014), the collection of Maurice Burrus (25 May 2016), and, most recently, The History of Western Script: Important Antiquities and Manuscripts from the Schøyen Collection (10 July 2019). While cataloguing the Yates, Thompson and Bright sale, Eugenio identified a previously unknown text by the Renaissance French author Catherine d’Amboise: this important discovery formed the subject of his 2016 article in French Studies Bulletin. In November 2015, Eugenio dragged medieval manuscripts out of the Dark Ages and into the Digital Age by piloting the department’s first, and very successful, Online Only sale – Script and Illumination: Leaves from Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts.

Over the past ten years Eugenio has negotiated a number of multi-million pound private sales of medieval and renaissance manuscripts to clients in Europe, the UK and the Americas: most significantly the Clumber Park Chartier (now in the Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library) and the Breviary of Saint-Louis de Poissy (now in the Bibliothèque nationale de France).

Eugenio is one of Christie’s international auctioneers, and takes all of the London department’s auctions. He plays in a much-loved – if terrible – rock band, will offer unsolicited advice on anything food-related and is trilingual in English, Italian and French. He also reads Latin and Ancient Greek.

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