Olympics-Medal from first modern Olympics fetches three times estimate at auction


March 1 (Reuters) - A ⁠medal awarded at the first modern ⁠Olympic Games smashed auction estimates, selling ‌for about four times its expected high price at a Danish auction house on Sunday.

The silver medal ​from the 1896 Athens Olympics ⁠was hammered down ⁠for DKK 900,000 ($141,658.67) excluding buyer's premium, or ⁠DKK 1,152,000 ($181,323.09) ‌including fees, at Bruun Rasmussen Arts Auctioneers' online sale. The ⁠piece had been estimated to fetch between ​DKK ‌200,000-300,000 ($31,480-$47,220).

Engraved by French artist Jules-Clement Chaplain, the ⁠medal features ​Zeus holding a globe topped by Nike, the Goddess of Victory, brandishing an olive ⁠branch. The reverse shows the ​Acropolis and Parthenon with a Greek inscription that translates to International Olympic Games - Athens 1896.

The ⁠historic 1896 Games featured 241 athletes from 14 countries, including Denmark. While the auction house stated that Viggo Jensen became ​the country's first Olympic ⁠weightlifting champion, they could not confirm whether ​the medal was awarded specifically ‌for this achievement.

($1 = 6.3530 ​Danish crowns)

(Reporting by Angelica Medina in Mexico City; Editing by Bill Berkrot)

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