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A Soyuz spacecraft and launch vehicle are installed on the launch pad at the Baikonur complex in Kazakhstan. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

1970s Soviet space capsule fetches $1.4M at auction

A Soyuz spacecraft and launch vehicle are installed on the launch pad at the Baikonur complex in Kazakhstan. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
A Soyuz spacecraft and launch vehicle are installed on the launch pad at the Baikonur complex in Kazakhstan. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

BRUSSELS (AFP) – A Soviet-era space capsule used for a series of key test flights in the 1970s fetched 1 million euros at auction on Wednesday.

The capsule went to an unidentified European buyer after bidding by telephone, Christine de Schaetzen, who heads German auction house Lempertz, told AFP after what it said was the first such auction in Europe.

The historic piece dating back to the Soviet-U.S. space race during the Cold War had been estimated at between $1 million and $2 million (700 to 1.4 million euros).

A British company first bought the 7-foot-high capsule, which was also used for a short unmanned mission in 1978 and then for training.

It was extensively restored with all traces removed of the searing burn marks it picked up on re-entry to the earth’s atmosphere and repainted to a pristine white.

Lempertz said it organized the sale to mark the opening of new offices in Brussels, aiming to attract attention with the highly unusual lot, known as Vozvrashchayemi Apparat (VA), or “re-entry capsule” in Russian.

Two more recent space suits also went under the hammer. One worn by anglo-American astronaut Michael Foale to reach the ISS international space station aboard a Soyuz in 2003 sold for 70,000 euros.

The other, used by cosmonaut Alexander Kalery for a flight to the MIR station in 1996, fetched 63,000 euros.


ADDITIONAL IMAGE OF NOTE


A Soyuz spacecraft and launch vehicle are installed on the launch pad at the Baikonur complex in Kazakhstan. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
A Soyuz spacecraft and launch vehicle are installed on the launch pad at the Baikonur complex in Kazakhstan. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.