A walking stick reputedly owned by Michael Collins has sold for more five times its estimate at auction.
The phone buyer purchased the stick for £52,000 (€60,000) plus fees at a sale at Belfast auctioneer Bloomfield, a record for the auction house.
Police files tracking Collins’ activities during Ireland’s War of Independence also sold for £6,800 at the police and military-themed sale.
Both were purchased by Irish buyers.
The intelligence reports on Collins, who led the IRA’s fight against British forces in the War of Independence, were contained in a dossier of Royal Irish Constabulary documents that cover the period 1920 to 1922.
The Collins walking stick, which has a silver collar and tip, was accompanied by a letter of provenance.
Karl Bennett, the managing director of Bloomfield Auctions, said the stick had been estimated to go for potentially £10,000.
“Today saw an auction house record,” he told the PA news agency.
“We are delighted to see that the Michael Collins stick made an incredulous £52,000 plus fees.
“We are delighted to see it go to someone in the south.
“At this stage we don’t know who that is but we’re sure it will go to a good home.”
The century-old artefacts related to the Irish republican leader were among a series of historical lots that went under the hammer.
Other items included a service medal from the 1916 Rising complete with its original box.
It sold for £1,800.
A gate from inside one of the H blocks in the Troubles-era Maze paramilitary prison sold for £340.
Away from the island of Ireland, the auction also included two pieces from dining sets, a porcelain cream jug and a spoon, that would have been used by high-ranking Nazis Heinrich Himmler and Joseph Goebbels on their personal train carriages during the Second World War.
The jug sold for £1,700 and the spoon for £1,100, both to private collectors from Northern Ireland.
A drummer’s belt worn by a Scottish soldier, Captain William McDonald of the 93rd Highlanders, recording every battle he fought in, including during the Crimean War, before his death at the battle of Lucknow in India in 1858 sold for £300 to a buyer in Scotland.
Going back even further in time, the sale also included a small bronze penal cross from 1729, an item designed to be easily hidden from view during a time when the practice of Catholicism was suppressed under the repressive penal laws.
It sold for £450.