Global Times

Albert Einstein’s hand-written note sells for $1.56 million at auction

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A note that Albert Einstein gave to a courier in Tokyo briefly describing his theory on happy living sold at auction in Jerusalem on Tuesday for $1.56 million, the auction house said.

The winning bid for the note far exceeded the pre-auction estimate of between $5,000 and $8,000, according to the website of Winner’s auction house.

“It was an all-time record for an auction of a document in Israel,” Winner’s spokesman Meni Chadad told AFP.

The buyer was a European who asked to remain anonymous, he said. The note, on Imperial Hotel Tokyo stationery, says in German “a quiet and modest life brings more joy than a pursuit of success bound with constant unrest.”

Bidding, in person, online and by phone, started at $2,000. A flurry of offers pushed the price up rapidly for about 20 minutes until the final two potential buyers bid against each other by phone. Applause broke out in the room when the sale was announced.

“I am really happy that there are people out there who are still interested in science and history and timeless deliveries in a world which is developing so fast,” the seller told AFP on condition of anonymity after the sale.

A second Einstein note written at the same time that simply reads “where there’s a will, there’s a way” sold for $240,000, Winner’s said.

The German-born physicist, most famous for his Theory of Relativity, was on a lecture tour in Japan when he handwrote the autographe­d notes, previously unknown to researcher­s, in 1922.

He had recently been informed that he was to receive the Nobel Prize for physics, and his fame outside of scientific circles was growing.

A Japanese courier arrived at the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo to deliver Einstein a message. The courier either refused to accept a tip, in line with local practice, or Einstein had no small change available.

Einstein didn’t want the messenger to leave empty-handed, so he wrote him two notes by hand in German, according to the seller, a relative of the messenger.

“Maybe if you’re lucky those notes will become much more valuable than just a regular tip,” Einstein told the messenger, according to the seller, a resident of the German city of Hamburg.

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