but not just any old feather,
it is from the huia bird, (Heteralocha acutirostris), which
is an extinct species of New Zealand wattlebird, endemic to the North Island of
New Zealand. The last confirmed sighting of a huia was in 1907, although there
was another credible sighting in 1924, but here is the thing, the huia bird was
sacred to the Māori people, their feathers were often worn as headpieces by
chiefs and their families and also gifted or traded, the feather is registered
as a taonga tūturu under a system to protect Maori made objects,
male and female by Johannes Keulemans, from the book A
History of the Birds of New Zealand by Sir Walter Buller, only
collectors who had a license in the system were allowed to purchase it, and it cannot
leave the country without permission from the Ministry of Culture and Heritage,
so as you can imagine when this one was offered for sale at Webb's Auction House, the bids were fast and high, eventually being sold for NZD$46,521.50, at
today’s rate £22,344.74 or $28,372.74, making it the most expensive feather ever
sold, for the full article have a look here.
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