LONDON: A late 12th-century iron key to the Ka’aba in Makkah sold for £9.2mn ($18.1mn) with fees, about 20 times its estimated price, at Sotheby’s in London yesterday. The key to Islam’s most holy pilgrimage site had been estimated to sell for £400,000 to £600,000. It was sold to an English-speaking agent in the room, who refused to give his name or that of his client. Sotheby’s said the sale raised a total of £21.5mn with fees, which was a record for an Islamic-art sale by the auction house. A 14th-century gold and enamel belt buckle from Moorish Spain sold for £983,700 after commission to a telephone bidder. It had been estimated to fetch more than £600,000. Christie’s also took £11.8mn in an auction yesterday. A leaf from a 7th-century copy of the Qur’an on vellum fetched a record £2.5mn ($4.92mn) with fees against an estimate of £100,000-£150,000, setting a new world auction record for any Islamic manuscript. The 282-lot sale raised £11.8mn with fees, more than doubling Christie’s presale upper estimate. – Bloomberg |