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Nobel 1936 Peace Prize medal, originally extended to an Argentine, auctioned at 1.1 million

Monday, March 31st 2014 - 11:50 UTC
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Carlos Saavedra Lamas was instrumental in ending the Chaco war between Paraguay and Bolivia. Carlos Saavedra Lamas was instrumental in ending the Chaco war between Paraguay and Bolivia.

A 1936 Nobel Peace Prize medal, only the second such medal to be sold at auction, has fetched 1.1 million dollars in a sale to a private Asian collector, auctioneers Stack's Bowers said on Friday.

 The medal was awarded to Carlos Saavedra Lamas, foreign minister of Argentina, for his part in ending the Chaco War between Paraguay and Bolivia and for his work on a South American antiwar pact that was signed in 1933.

Four collectors from around the globe bid aggressively on the medal at the auction in Baltimore, Maryland, Thursday evening, pushing the final price, which included the buyer's premium, far above the presale estimate of up to 100,000 dollars.

“It is sort of the ultimate trophy. We call this the world's most famous medal,” John Kraljevich, a consultant at Stack's Bowers, said in an interview.

Since 1901, Nobel Peace Prizes have been awarded 94 times, according to the prize website. Fifteen of them have been awarded to women.

The 1936 medal was sold by the estate of a private collector from New York, who had owned it for about a decade. The medal was awarded to Carlos Saavedra Lamas, foreign minister of Argentina, for his part in ending the Chaco War between Paraguay and Bolivia and for his work on a South American antiwar pact that was signed in 1933. Saavedra Lamas died in 1959.

“In essence anyone who is collecting medals is collecting history. Obviously, the history of the 20th century is in many ways written through the recipients of this medal. This one tells the story of a bloody conflict in South America,” Kraljevich said.

A 1903 Nobel Peace Prize medal sold for nearly 17,000 dollars at auction in 1985 in London.

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