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Posted: 2023-12-08T16:20:26Z | Updated: 2023-12-08T16:20:26Z Menu Autographed By Mao Zedong Brings $275,000 At Auction | HuffPost

Menu Autographed By Mao Zedong Brings $275,000 At Auction

The menu, which was for a state banquet in 1956, included delicacies like Consomm of Swallow Nest and White Agaric, Sharks Fin in Brown Sauce, and Roast Peking Duck.
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An official menu for a state banquet that bears the signature of former Chinese leader Mao Zedong has been auctioned for $275,000.Undated photograph.
Bettmann via Getty Images

BOSTON (AP) — An official menu for a state banquet that bears the signature of former Chinese leader Mao Zedong has been auctioned for $275,000.

Boston-based RR Auction said the menu auctioned Wednesday was for a banquet held in Beijing on October 19, 1956, and commemorated the first state visit to China by Pakistan’s Prime Minister Huseyn Shaheed Suhrawardy.

The menu was signed in fountain pen by six influential Chinese statesmen, including Mao and Premier Zhou Enlai. The banquet featured foods from both nations and included delicacies such as “Consommé of Swallow Nest and White Agaric,” “Shark’s Fin in Brown Sauce,” and “Roast Peking Duck.”

“To hold a menu signed by Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai is to hold a piece of the past – a piece that tells a story of diplomatic engagement, cultural exchange, and the forging of friendships that have endured through the decades,” Bobby Livingston, executive vice president at RR Auction, said in a statement.

Other items auctioned off included a fully operational World War II-era Enigma coding machine for $206,253, a Thomas Edison-signed document for a light bulb patent for $22,154, and a check signed by Steve Jobs to Radio Shack was sold for $46,063.

The check, dated July 23, 1976, is payable to RadioShack for a whopping $4.01, and was signed by Jobs the same year he and Steve Wozniak launched Apple in a Silicon Valley garage.

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Before You Go

8 Myths About Mao
Who was Mao Zedong? Mao as a different kind of communist leader.(01 of08)
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Historical figures merit objective biographies. Mao, however, has more often than not been portrayed as simply a destructive tyrant like other Communist dictators. Yet, he was not only a revolutionary who transformed Chinese society, but also a national hero who completed China's anti-imperialist national revolution begun by Dr. Sun Yat-sen. Because he succeeded in making the whole world respect China, the Chinese people will never forget the Great Helmsman. Mao was a complex figure whose portrait cannot be painted just in tones of black and white. Furthermore, he underwent a lengthy evolution from an idealist young man to a hardened veteran revolutionary whose image and ideas were disseminated throughout the world.
Maos image as a philosopher, a thinker, and an idealist, not a power-hungry despot(02 of08)
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The Great Helmsman was a multifaceted figure a revolutionary and a tyrant, a poet and a despot, a philosopher and a politician, a husband and a philanderer. He was a complicated figure who tried his best to bring about prosperity and gain international respect for his country. That he succeeded in some respects is why he is still venerated in contemporary China; that he failed abysmally in other respects is the core of China's tragic history in the middle of the 20th century. The biographers' task is neither to blame nor exculpate Mao, but to understand him. It is too late to settle scores with Mao. He is dead and answerable only, as he himself said, to Karl Marx.
McCarthyite views of China(03 of08)
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John King Fairbank and Benjamin Schwartz, pioneer American scholars of Chinese communism seek to counter Cold War, McCarthyite views of China by interpreting Chinese communism as an authentically Chinese political movement with Mao as its rightful leader.In the late 1940s and early 1950s, leading American China scholars including John King Fairbank, Benjamin I. Schwartz, Conrad Brandt, and Robert North propounded the classical formulation about Maos independence, both with respect to his relations with Stalin and his views of China. They wrote that Stalin mistrusted Mao and considered him a peasant nationalist rather than a communist. On closer inspection, however, the received wisdom regarding Maos relationship to Stalin and the Soviet Union turns out to be wrong. In reality, as newly available Soviet and Chinese archives reveal, Mao was a faithful follower of Stalin who took pains to reassure the Boss of his loyalty and who dared to deviate from the Soviet model only after Stalins death.
American disillusionment with Chiang Kai-shek and his corrupt regime.(04 of08)
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In the early 1940s in China a complicated and important game was in play; its outcome would determine the fate of Mao's lifes work. Stalin and Mao wanted to neutralize America, squeeze Chiang Kai-shek and his supporters out of power, and ultimately enable the Chinese Communists to seize power. This was the essence of Maos famous New Democracy. Books by Edgar and Helen Foster Snow, Agnes Smedley, and other Western journalists facilitated these plans. With one voice, they assured the world that the Chinese communists were liberal nationalists who had nothing in common with Marxism-Leninism. The surly dictator Chiang Kai-shek and his regime steadily lost ground in the eyes of many Americans to the liberal nationalist Mao and his peoples government.
Roots of the Sino-Soviet Rift in the late 1950s and early 1960s(05 of08)
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Mao began to underestimate Nikita Khrushchev in 1954 when the Soviet leader who had just succeeded Stalin visited Beijing for the first time. Mao came to view Khrushchev as an untrustworthy buffoon and deliberately treated him with contempt. We show that personal enmity between Mao and Khrushchev was one of the main reasons for the Sino-Soviet rift. By the late 1960s this rift had escalated to a degree that has often been underestimated. Drawing upon the former Soviet secret archives we demonstrate that in the late 1960s Sino-Soviet relations became so tense that the Soviet leadership had even begun to consider armed intervention in the affairs of the PRC, such as undertaking an atomic attack against the PRCs industrial centers or blowing up Chinese atomic sites.
The American fascination with all things Chinese in the early 1970's after Nixon's China trip in February 1972 when he met Mao.(06 of08)
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Americans have long had a love-hate relationship with China. President Nixon's pilgrimage to China in February 1972, reignited American interest in every aspect of China, from politics and security affairs to education, the arts, medicine, food, and clothing. A China craze gripped the country symbolized by fashionable women wearing so-called Mao suits. American tourists returned to China in ever increasing numbers and trade resumed as well. Interest in Mao and the Chinese revolution peaked. Here Mao's special assistant (aka his confidante and mistress) Zhang Yufeng stands between the Great Helmsman and President Nixon.
Chinese propaganda depicting Mao as wise and benevolent leader. (07 of08)
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The Cultural Revolution (1966-1976) was not merely Maos final struggle for power, but a serious if tragically flawed effort to achieve a utopian vision of a new society. Based on his reading of the degeneration of Soviet society after Stalin, Mao became convinced that building communism required the destruction of the old, traditional values of Chinese culture and molding a new socialist man and woman through education and work. Maos hubris and/or misjudgment caused the failure not only of the Cultural Revolution, but also of the entire Maoist project. The stark and regimented society, that Mao envisioned died with him.
Lack of access to Soviet and Chinese official archives.(08 of08)
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The truth has long reposed in the secret archives of the CCP, the Soviet Communist Party, and the Communist International (Comintern). The dossier on Mao Zedong alone runs to fifteen volumes including political reports; private correspondence; stenographic records of meetings with Stalin, Khrushchev, and others. Also Maos medical records, compiled by Soviet physicians; secret accounts by KGB and Comintern agents; personal materials regarding Maos wives and children, accusations against Mao written by his political foes within the CCP leadership; and Soviet embassy and KGB classified messages about politics in the PRC. Mao: The Real Story is the first book to utilize all these invaluable materials in reassessing Maos life.