詳情
PROBABLY 18TH CENTURY
Two bezoar stones
One 318 in. (8 cm.) long; the other 338 in. (8.5 cm.) long
特別通告
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榮譽呈獻
Caitlin Yates
佳士得專家或會聯絡閣下,以商討此拍品,又或於拍品狀況於拍賣前有所改變時知會閣下。

拍品專文

Bezoar stone, which is a calcified concretion found in the stomachs of some animals, was prized for its supposed medicinal properties as well as being believed to act as an antidote to poison. The scarcity of bezoar stones by the 17th century led a group of Portuguese Jesuits working in Goa to come up with a man-made version. These so called 'Goa Stones' were a mixture of bezoar as well as other precious objects believed to have curative powers. Until the beginning of the 18th century, when medical authorities began to debunk the belief in these stones, they could sell for more then their weight in gold and were often contained in cases, such as the subsequent lot.

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更多來自
Finch and Co's Cabinet of Curiosities