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A silver medal from the first modern Olympic Games sold for approximately $181,000 at a Danish auction on Sunday, fetching roughly four times its estimated high price and underscoring the enduring allure of early Olympic memorabilia.
The medal, awarded at the 1896 Athens Games, was hammered down for DKK 900,000 (about $142,000) at Bruun Rasmussen Arts Auctioneers’ online sale, according to Reuters. Including the buyer’s premium, the total price reached DKK 1,152,000 — approximately $181,323. The auction house had estimated the piece would sell for between DKK 200,000 and DKK 300,000.devdiscourse
“We are absolutely thrilled about today’s result,” said Christian Grundtvig, Head of the Coins and Stamps Department at Bruun Rasmussen. “The Olympic medal represents a ‘unicorn’ among international collectors — a rare fusion of Olympic and cultural history.”mynewsdesk
Grundtvig called it “one of the most remarkable sales within the field of numismatics in the history of our auction house.”mynewsdesk
The medal was designed by French artist Jules-Clément Chaplain. Its obverse depicts Zeus holding a globe topped by Nike, the Goddess of Victory, bearing an olive branch. The reverse shows the Acropolis and Parthenon, alongside a Greek inscription translating to “International Olympic Games — Athens 1896.”reuters
The 1896 Athens Games followed a prize structure unfamiliar to modern audiences: first-place athletes received silver medals, while second-place finishers earned bronze. Gold medals were not introduced until later Olympics. The Games featured 241 athletes from 14 nations, including Denmark.coinweek
In its auction notes, Bruun Rasmussen mentioned that Denmark’s Viggo Jensen became the country’s first Olympic weightlifting champion at those Games. However, the auction house could not confirm whether this particular medal was awarded for that achievement.reuters
The result echoes a comparable sale in July 2021, when an identical but more heavily worn 1896 Athens first-place silver medal sold for over $180,000 at RR Auction. The continued demand for such rarities reflects what specialists describe as an exceptionally thin market — medals from the inaugural Games survive in extremely limited numbers and seldom appear at auction.rrauction