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Bought for 100 Euros, WWII-era Cipher Machine Sells for 45,000


An employee of an auction house presses a key on an working original Enigma cipher machine that is on display at an auction house in Bucharest, Romania, July 11, 2017.
An employee of an auction house presses a key on an working original Enigma cipher machine that is on display at an auction house in Bucharest, Romania, July 11, 2017.

Someone in Romania thought he'd made a fair amount of money when he sold an old typewriter for 100 euros at a flea market. He was wrong.

The "typewriter" was in fact a German Wehrmacht Enigma I, a World War II cipher machine, and the collector who bought it put it up for sale at the Bucharest auction house Artmark with a starting price of 9,000 euros ($10,300).

On Tuesday, Artmark sold it to an online bidder for 45,000 euros.

"The collector bought it from a flea market. He's a cryptography professor and ... he knew very well what he was buying," Cristian Gavrila, the collectible consignment manager at Artmark, told Reuters.

An Enigma cipher machine is on display among other wartime memorabilia pieces at an auction house in Bucharest, Romania, July 11, 2017.
An Enigma cipher machine is on display among other wartime memorabilia pieces at an auction house in Bucharest, Romania, July 11, 2017.

Romania was an ally of Nazi Germany until 1944, when it switched sides to the allies. Historians say it may host many other cryptographic machines not yet discovered.

Last month, Christie's New York Books set a world auction record of $547,500 with its sale of a "four-rotor Enigma cipher machine, 1944," to an online bidder.

The Enigma was used to encode and decode messages sent by the various branches of the Nazi military, but the British mathematician Alan Turing and his team at Britain's wartime code-breaking center, Bletchley Park, cracked the codes.

By some estimates, their work shortened the war by two years.

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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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