Danish butter magnate’s coin collection worth estimated $96m for sale 100 years after death

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A poster in front of the Odd Fellow Palace, where the coin collection of butter magnate Lars Emil Bruun will be auctioned off, in Copenhagen on Sept 11.

The coin collection of butter magnate Lars Emil Bruun will be auctioned off in the Odd Fellow Palace in Copenhagen in September.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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COPENHAGEN – The 20,000-piece coin collection of Danish butter magnate Lars Emil Bruun, worth an estimated US$74 million (S$96 million), is set to go under the hammer on Sept 14 in Copenhagen, a century after his death.

The collection, kept by Mr Bruun’s relatives in line with his will, includes rare coins and medals from Denmark, Norway, Sweden and England dating back to the Viking age. It is expected to attract bids from some of the world’s wealthiest people.

Mr Bruun, born into poverty in 1852, amassed a fortune through his butter export business. He developed a passion for coin collecting in his childhood, resulting in what is expected to be the most valuable non-US coin collection ever sold.

“The collection is unique in many ways, partly because it’s so valuable, but also because it’s been kept safe as a sleeping beauty for 100 years without nobody having access to the coins,” said Mr Michael Fornitz, a professional numismatist appointed by auction house Stack’s Bowers to oversee the sale.

After World War I, Mr Bruun, fearing another war or bombing of Copenhagen, decided his historic collection should be kept in reserve for the Royal Coin and Medal Collection in Copenhagen for a century.

The auction will commence on Sept 14 with the sale of the first 286 coins, starting with a coin minted in 1496 for Denmark’s King Hans. The coin has an estimated price of up to €600,000 (S$864,000).

“It was probably struck for King Hans’ personal use when he travelled through Europe and he needed to show that Denmark was not just an insignificant province in the north of Europe but actually a power to be reckoned with,” said Mr Fornitz, holding the coin in his hand.

Professional numismatist Michael Fornitz looking at the catalogue for the coin collection of Danish butter magnate Lars Emil Bruun.

PHOTO: REUTERS

The collection has been showcased to potential buyers in Hong Kong, Europe, and the United States. According to Mr Brian Kendrella, Stack’s Bowers president, the coins are expected to sell for amounts ranging from less than US$100 to more than US$1 million each.

“Buyers might be some of the wealthiest people who are making Forbes lists and things like that. But there’s also regular people that have deep interest in history and interest in coin collecting,” he said.

Proceeds from the auctions, expected to continue for several years, will go to Mr Bruun’s direct relatives, as stipulated in his will. A representative for his relatives did not reply to a request for comment. REUTERS

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