Posted on 12/07/2018 10:02:14 AM PST by ETL
The pottery vessel, adorned with the painting of an antelope, caught the eye of Karl Martin while he was browsing a yard sale five years ago. He picked the jar up, along with another pot, for about $5 (4 pounds).
"I liked it straight away," Martin said in a statement from Hansons Auctioneers, where he now works and where the pottery was auctioned selling for about $100 (80 pounds) in November.
The jar dates to the Indus Valley Harappan civilization, which thrived in the northwestern regions of South Asia during the Bronze Age, according to James Brenchley, head of antiquities at Hansons Auctioneers.
The Indus, along with ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, is one of the three cradles of civilizations in the Old World, he added.
That backstory was unbeknownst to Martin, a collector, at the time of his purchase. So who could blame him for plopping the jar in the bathroom, right?
"I used it in the bathroom to store my toothpaste and toothbrush it even ended up getting a few toothpaste marks on it," he said.
Years later, while helping Brenchley unload a van at the auction house, Martin noticed some of the pottery going up for auction looked similar to his toothbrush holder.
"The painting style looked the same, and it had similar crudely painted animal figures," he said in the statement.
Brenchley examined the pot and confirmed that it was a genuine artifact from Afghanistan dating to 1900 B.C.
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
The State will give you $100 for it. That is, if they dont decide that its a cultural heirloom and simply demand its forfeiture.
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