July 24, 2020
A stolen manuscript of a work by Hafez, recovered earlier this year, was auctioned off at Sotheby’s in London June 10.
It was expected to sell for well over $100,000—and it did. The final price was 375,000 pounds or $470,000.
The gold-illuminated Divan of Hafez is dated to 1462 and is one of the earliest copies of the work of the Persian poet, who died in 1390. Illustrated by the calligrapher Shaykh Mahmud Pir Budaqi, the manuscript was part of the collection of Iranian Islamic art collector Jafar Ghazi, who died in Germany in 2007. After his death, his heirs discovered that many of his manuscripts had been stolen.
While 175 items were recovered by police in 2011, the Divan was still missing. When a 50,000-euro ($57,000) reward was offered by German police, it was tracked down in 2019 by Arthur Brand, a Dutch art detective.
Brand said he was contacted in late 2018 by an Iranian art dealer who claimed to have been approached by Iranian embassy officials who were interested in tracking the Divan down.
In a “race against the clock,” Brand’s search eventually led him to a man in London who had acquired the Divan, not knowing it was stolen. “The buyer was shocked and furious. After all, he was sold a stolen book and now everyone was searching for it, including the Iranian government,” said Brand.
The buyer went to Paris to try to get his money back, but Brand persuaded him to hand the manuscript to Brand to give to authorities in Germany. “If he had succeeded, the Divan would disappear again and probably forever. He had bought a book without knowing that it was stolen, but by trying to hand it back to the fence, he would incriminate himself,” Brand said.
Now Ghazi’s heirs, who have already auctioned many of his manuscripts, are set to sell the Divan at Sotheby’s, which has already sold around 60 manuscripts from Ghazi’s collection, with most at least doubling their pre-sale estimates. Sotheby’s has listed the Divan with an estimated sale price of 80,000 to 120,000 pounds or $103,000 to $155,000.
“There’s a huge reverence for Hafez in Iran and globally,” Sotheby’s specialist Benedict Carter told The Guardian of Britain. “To find copies of the Divan of great quality ” is rare enough, but this is also signed by a famous calligrapher with beautiful quality illumination, and dedicated to a key figure in the Persian and Islamic arts of the book.”
Carter said that while he had read about the alleged interest of Iran’s secret service in the manuscript, Sotheby’s had not received any such contact. “It was returned to the rightful owners, the family of Ghazi, and they decided to put it up for sale as the last manuscript of all those we’d sold before,” he said.
The manuscript is dedicated to a key patron of the arts in 15th-Century Central Asia – the Qara Qoyunlu Prince Pir Budaq, eldest son of the ruler of Azerbaijan and most of Iran. “His provenance is a sign of quality in itself because he had a great collection.” said Carter.
Sotheby’s said the “magnificent” work was a “testament to Pir Budaq’s bibliophile pursuits and an important witness to the grandeur that must have been his library.”