Audio By Carbonatix
One of the world's first calculating machines will not go to auction as scheduled, France, after a Paris court provisionally blocked the historic item from being exported.
Auction house Christie's has confirmed it will not proceed with a bid for the machine La Pascaline, developed by the French mathematician Blaise Pascal in 1642.
Valuations suggested the machine could fetch €2 to 3m (£1.77m to £2.65m). Christie's called it the "most important scientific instrument ever offered at auction".
Scientists and researchers made a legal appeal to grant heritage protections to the historic instrument, arguing it should be classified as a "national treasure".
Pascal was just 19 years old when he developed the earliest version of a calculator, Christie's said. There are only nine of these machines still in existence.
"It is the first attempt in history to substitute the human mind with a machine," the official collection description reads.
"Its invention marks a breakthrough, a 'quantum leap' whose importance and significance take on a very special meaning today".
La Pascaline was exhibited at Christie's venues in New York and Hong Kong throughout the year.
The machine was included in Christie's auction of the library of the late Catalonia collector Léon Parcé, which also featured Pascal's philosophical piece Pensées and the first printed version of "Pascal's wager".
On Wednesday, a Paris administrative court temporarily blocked an earlier export authorisation provided by France's culture minister in May. Two experts had signed off on the minister's certificate, including one from the Louvre Museum.
The judge concluded there were "serious doubts" over the legality of the certificate, a statement from the Paris court said, adding the decision was provisional until a final judgment is delivered.
In a statement to the AFP news agency, a Christie's spokesperson said: "Given the provisional nature of this decision and in accordance with the instructions of its client, Christie's is suspending the sale of La Pascaline".
The court noted La Pascaline's historic and scientific value could qualify as a "national treasure" guaranteeing protections under the France's heritage code.
French heritage group, Association Sites & Monuments, which was listed as an applicant, welcomed the decision.
Latest Stories
-
Mahama avoiding expensive jet rentals by using brother’s aircraft – Gov’t
4 hours -
All service contracts at Accra International Airport to be held to high delivery standards -Transport Minister warns
4 hours -
Frequent breakdown of presidential jet forced interim use of brother’s aircraft – Felix Ofosu Kwakye
4 hours -
Mother calls for thorough probe into daughter’s death at AdawsoÂ
4 hours -
World Bank Group MD to visit Ghana and Liberia
4 hours -
Automated Road Traffic Law set for passage by end of March
5 hours -
Ghana to use automated technology to catch traffic offenders in real-time
5 hours -
Two robbery suspects killed as police dismantle gang on Obuasi–Dunkwa highway
5 hours -
Mahama’s use of brother’s jet not permanent, it’s due to lack of reliable state aircraft – Felix Ofosu Kwakye
6 hours -
GACL terminates Fixed Base Operation agreement with McDan Aviation over persistent debt
6 hours -
‘What exactly is the problem if Mahama uses his brother’s jet?’ – Kwakye Ofosu asks critics
6 hours -
I’ll be surprised if Ghanaians think Mahama using his brother’s jet comes at no cost to the state – Asafo-Adjei
7 hours -
PassionAir announces Kumasi route disruptions, apologises to passengers
7 hours -
Police dismantle armed robbery gang on Obuasi–Dunkwa highway
7 hours -
Ghana could face security risks amid international intelligence cooperation – Bosome Freho MP warns
7 hours
