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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
National
Sean Morrison

Missing ancient Lewis Chessman piece bought for just £5 sells for £735,000 at auction

The chess piece is hundreds of years old and was previously bought for just £5 (Picture: PA)

A 900-year-old Viking chess piece bought for a few pounds in the 1960s has now sold at auction for £735,000.

The 3 1/2-inch (8.8-centimeter) Lewis Chessman was sold to an anonymous bidder at Sotheby's in London on Tuesday.

The Lewis Chessmen are intricate, expressive chess pieces in the form of Norse warriors, carved from walrus ivory in the 12th century.

A hoard of dozens of pieces, amounting to four chess sets, was discovered in 1831 on Scotland's Isle of Lewis - but five of the pieces were missing.

The Sotheby's piece, the equivalent of a rook, is the first missing chessman to be identified.

It was bought by an antiques dealer in Scotland in 1964 for just £5 and passed down to his family before being identified as a Lewis figure.

Agencies contributed to this report

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