Paris – Christie’s said Wednesday it was suspending the Paris auction of one of just a handful of examples of the world’s first calculating machine, developed by French mathematician and inventor Blaise Pascal in 1642. The auction of “La Pascaline” had been scheduled for Wednesday afternoon, but late on Tuesday a Paris court suspended authorisation for export — meaning buyers would not be able to take it abroad. This example is one of only nine still existing and the only one believed to be in private hands — others are held in museums. Christie’s had dubbed the box, as “the most important scientific instrument ever offered at auction” and it had been expected to fetch 2-3 million euros. The auction house had described the machine as “nothing less than the first attempt in history to substitute the work of a machine for that of the human mind”. It said it had halted the sale at the instructions of the piece’s owner, after the Paris administrative court suspended an export authorisation in a provisional ruling.
Christie’s suspends Paris sale of world’s ‘first calculator’




