Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Tipu's throne to go under the hammer on April 2

After Mahatma Gandhi's personal belongings, some more of India's heritage is to go under the hammer -- this time, a gem-set gold finial from the throne of Tipu Sultan will be auctioned in London next week. The recently discovered gem-encrusted gold finial plundered from Tipu Sultan's huge golden throne is being put up for sale in the British capital on April 2, ten years after it was found lying in the vaults of an English bank.
The object, found by the Bonhams Islamic Department during a routine valuation, is one of three surviving tiger head finials that adorned Tipu's elaborate throne. It had lain at Featherstone Castle, Northumberland, where it was listed in an 1843 inventory of the late Baron Wallace of Knarsdale (1768-1844), who oversaw the East India Company, and afterwards was hidden away in a bank.
In fact, the famous golden throne was broken up so quickly -- much to the disapproval of the then Governor- General Lord Wellesley -- following the fall of Seringapatam that little is known about the fate of the remaining relics.

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