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Two AJ Thorne walnut collecting cabinets housing all 58 species of British butterflies sold at Minster Auctions. One drawer, shown here, includes around 140 examples of the Large Blue, considered Britain’s rarest butterfly.

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The collection, housed in walnut cabinets by J Thorne, was assembled by brothers Bernard and Alexander Adams, two amateur lepidopterists who are known for their contribution to a pioneering work on the genitalia of geometrid moths (don’t say you haven’t read it?).

The cabinets came for sale by descent from a family member in Oxfordshire - something of a dream consignment for Minster Auctions natural history specialist Daniel Webb, himself a butterfly enthusiast.

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Label on one of two AJ Thorne walnut collecting cabinets housing all 58 species of British butterflies – this one shown made £21,000 at Minster Auctions.

Thorne, based in the Whitechapel-Stratford furniture-making district of east London, specialised in making the bespoke collecting and display cabinets that were a familiar sight in the homes of enquiring Victorians.

Empty, these two were worth perhaps £2000-3000. However, the true value of the collection lay in the quantity and quality of the specimens.

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One of two AJ Thorne walnut collecting cabinets housing all 58 species of British butterflies – this one shown made £21,000 at Minster Auctions.

Large Blue bonus

The larger of the two cabinets at 4ft 6in high x 3ft 5in wide (1.37 x 1.04m) enclosed two banks of 15 sealed glass-topped drawers housing multiple examples (featuring genetic variations and deformities) of 58 species of British butterflies including extinct and since re-introduced species such as the Black-veined White, Large Blue, Large Tortoiseshell and Large Copper.

“The array of around 140 Large Blues, a species with a remarkable life cycle that went mostly extinct in 1979 but has since been reintroduced, was particularly spectacular and created a lot of interest,” said Webb.

A handwritten exercise book listing all the specimens and when they were acquired was included with the lot that sold at £21,000 (estimate £5000-8000) to a “general collector who loved the idea of owning examples of all the British butterflies”.

A second and smaller Thorne cabinet measuring 3ft 11in x 2ft 5in (1.14m x 74cm) was guided at £3000-5000 but made £20,000.

It sold to a different buyer - a lepidopterist in London. Its 20 glass-topped drawers included two drawers completing the butterfly collection (six more of the UK’s nine blue butterfly species), a third devoted to larvae and pupae with the rest devoted to British macro-moths.