A letter penned by King George III of England on the eve of war has sold for more than $14,000 at auction.
The 1803 missive sold for 11,430 British pounds, or $14,670.97, the BBC reported. The anonymous seller really cleaned up, according to the news agency: He or she had bought the note for only 55 pounds ($70.60) in 1966. That's 974.05 pounds ($1,250.97), adjusted for inflation.
The letter dates to May 14, 1803, in the midst of a decades-long series of wars between Britain and France. In the wake of the French Revolution, France had gone on a bit of a conquering spree, fearing the monarchies around it would attempt to crush the fledgling republic. Great Britain entered the fray in 1793. The fighting continued on and off until 1802, when Britain and France agreed to peace in the Treaty of Amiens. [10 Epic Battles that Changed History]
"The conduct of France has been equally unfair to the last and though conscious of the Evils that must be entailed on many Countries by the renewal of War, yet the conviction that by the restless disposition of the Ruler of France could not long have been kept off, it seems necessary to attend alone to the best modes of repelling the violence with effect, and the attacking those objects which our present means render attainable," King George wrote.
The note was sent to the British Secretary of State, Lord Hawkesbury, and is unique because it shows the King's thinking on the eve of war, said Charles Ashton, the director of the auction house Cheffins, which brokered the sale of the note.
"This letter is a defining moment of history showing the King's intention to go to war with France and Napoleon," Ashton said in a statement.
It's not unusual to find short notes in private collections penned in King George III's hand, or papers signed by him, Ashton said in the statement, but it is unusual to find such a long and historically important document.
"The letter is unusual in that it is written by the King himself, as opposed to have been dictated to a scribe and then countersigned," Ashton said ahead of the sale. "This is what adds the value here."
Cheffins had pegged the value of the letter at between 500 and 1,000 pounds ($642.43 to $1,284.85). The buyer, according to the BBC, was a private collector from Cambridge.
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Originally published on Live Science.