Napoleon’s hat sold to South Korean bidder for €1.9m

Bicorne felt hat makes almost five times more than anticipated at French auction

A two-cornered hat that belonged to French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte was sold to a South Korean bidder for €1.9 million at an auction near Paris today. The famous item was offered during the ‘Napoleonic Collection of the Prince’s Palace of Monaco’. Photograph: Bury Michel/Osenat Auction House/EPA.
A two-cornered hat that belonged to French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte was sold to a South Korean bidder for €1.9 million at an auction near Paris today. The famous item was offered during the ‘Napoleonic Collection of the Prince’s Palace of Monaco’. Photograph: Bury Michel/Osenat Auction House/EPA.

A two-cornered hat that belonged to French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte was sold to a South Korean bidder for €1.9 million at an auction near Paris today.

Jean-Pierre Osenat of the Osenat auction house in Fontainebleau said the buyer acquired the black "bicorne" felt hat in a sale of Napoleon-era items from the collections of the Prince of Monaco.

The bicorne hat was a trademark of Napoleon, who wore it athwart, the two points aligned with his shoulders.

A two-cornered hat that belonged to French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte was sold to a South Korean bidder for €1.9 million at an auction near Paris today. Photograph:  Hulton Archive/Getty Images.
A two-cornered hat that belonged to French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte was sold to a South Korean bidder for €1.9 million at an auction near Paris today. Photograph: Hulton Archive/Getty Images.

“Everybody at the time wore that kind of hat one way, but Napoleon wore it the other way so that everybody would recognise his silhouette on the battlefield,” said the auctioneer.

READ SOME MORE

During the 15 years of his reign at the start of the 19th century, Napoleon went through about 120 hats.

Mr Osenat said only about 20 surviving items had been authenticated as belonging to the emperor, most of which are in museums.

The hat went for nearly five times the €400,000 it had been expected to fetch at the auction, where about 1,000 other pieces of Napoleon memorabilia from the Monaco collection were sold over three days.

Five years ago, the same auction house sold a sabre that had belonged to Napoleon for €4.8 million, Mr Osenat said.

Reuters