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Rare Nazi Enigma Machine Sells for €482,600

During two separate auctions, the auction house Christie's will sell one of the eight known examples of the first calculating machine, invented and created by Blaise Pascal in the 17th century, as well as the famous message-encrypting machine used by the German army, Enigm
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Caption: The auction house Christie’s sells one of the eight known examples of the first calculating machine, invented and created by Blaise Pascal in the 17th century, as well as the famous message-encrypting machine used by the German army, Enigma

PARIS – An extremely rare and operational Nazi Enigma encryption machine, famously cracked by Allied codebreakers during World War II, has sold for nearly half a million euros in Paris, double its expected price, auction house Christie’s said Wednesday.

Based on keys and complex rotor systems, Enigma machines were used by the Germans for encrypted communication during the war, initially beyond the decoding capabilities of Allied intelligence services.

The Enigma M4 sold in Paris was a new, even more sophisticated version ordered by German Admiral Karl Doenitz in 1941 for communication with his submarine fleet as the Nazis attempted to blockade Britain.

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Enveloped in a wooden case and featuring a keyboard and four rotors, it sold for €482,600  ($556,900) to an unidentified buyer on Tuesday in Paris, Christie’s said in a statement sent to AFP.

It was previously owned by a French collector.

Another M4 machine, the rarest type of the surviving Enigma machines, sold for $365,000 in New York in 2015 which was said by auction house Bonhams to be a record at the time.

Enigma was cracked by British mathematician Alan Turing and his team under a top-secret programme whose vital contribution to the Allied victory in the war only came to light in the 1990s.

It was the subject of a book by British author Robert Harris and an Oscar-nominated 2014 film, “The Imitation Game”, starring Benedict Cumberbatch. (AFP)

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