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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Jessica Murray

Pencil ‘given to Adolf Hitler by Eva Braun’ could fetch £80,000 at auction

The silver pencil with the initials AH on its top end.
The pencil is believed to have been given to the former Nazi dictator by his long-term partner Eva Braun as a gift for his 52nd birthday. Photograph: Bloomfield Auctions/Kelvin Boyes/PressEye/PA

A silver-plated pencil purported to have belonged to Adolf Hitler is going under the hammer in Belfast next month and is estimated to sell for between £50,000 and £80,000.

It is believed to have been a gift to the former Nazi dictator from his long-term partner Eva Braun for his 52nd birthday on 20 April 1941.

The pencil, originally bought by a collector at an auction in 2002, has an inscription in German, ending in “Eva”, and has the initials “AH”.

The sale of wide-ranging historical items at Bloomfield Auctions in east Belfast on 6 June will also include an original signed photograph of Hitler and a rare hand-written pardon by Queen Victoria dated to 1869 for Irish rebels convicted of treason.

A personally signed portrait of former Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler.
A personally signed portrait of Adolf Hitler is another of the historical items to be auctioned in Belfast on 6 June. Photograph: Bloomfield Auctions/Kelvin Boyes/PressEye/PA

Karl Bennett, managing director of the auction house, said they expected interest from around the world.

“The importance of Hitler’s engraved personal pencil lies in the fact that it helps to unravel a hidden piece of history, giving a unique insight into Hitler’s personal relationships, which he scrupulously kept hidden from the public eye,” he said.

“Much of Hitler’s personal appeal during his dictatorship derived from his carefully constructed identity as the father of the German nation, who rejected personal connection in favour of loyalty to his country.

“This love token of a personalised pencil from Eva on his birthday helps reveal the deception behind Hitler’s public facade.”

Bennett said careful research and discussion with the item vendor about where the item was obtained “give me confidence that what I’m telling people I’m selling is the actual item”.

He added that he could understand why people may have reservations about selling and collecting items belonging to the dictator.

“But for me, as a high-end collector of militaria items, they preserve a piece of our past and should be treated as historical objects, no matter if the history they refer to was one of the darkest and most controversial in recorded history,” he said.

• This article was amended on 29 May 2023 to clarify that the inscription on the pencil was more than just the word “Eva”, as an earlier version suggested.

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