The Enigma 1 that sold at auction. (Image: Artmark)
A professor of cryptology has auctioned off a rare and fully-functional Enigma machine used by the Nazis to encrypt messages during the Second World War. Incredibly, the collector found the machine at a flea market in Bucharest — which suggests Romania may house other machines still waiting to be discovered.
As reported in Deutsche Welle, the unnamed collector knew what he had stumbled upon at the flea market, and cooly snatched it up for 100 euros ($150). He then put it up for sale at the city’s Artmark auction house with a starting bid of 9,000 euros ($13,369). On Tuesday, the rare cryptographic machine sold to an unnamed online bidder for 45,000 euros ($67,227). A very healthy return on investment, to be sure.
Image: Artmark
Enigma machines were invented by the Germans in the 1930s and were used by its armed forces to transmit encrypted messages during the Second World War. Romania was allied to Nazi Germany at the time, so it makes sense that the unit was found in the Balkan country. Famously, the breaking of the Enigma system by computer scientist Alan Turing at Bletchley park (an even rarer Enigma M4 machine sold at auction for a record $US365,000 ($475,354). The M4, named for its four rotors (the Enigma 1 has three rotors), was manufactured during the latter stages of the war. Only 150 remain from the 1,500 ever built.