Live Auction

April 2025 Auction

Monthly Auction
Past auction
Started
25 April 2025
Closed
05 May 2025
1 - 32 of 1406 Lots
Image for Hanyu 2000 Ichiro's Malt 'Card' #9000 / Nine of Hearts
46%
70cl
UK
46%
70cl

Hanyu 2000 Ichiro's Malt 'Card' #9000 / Nine of Hearts

Since its stills were turned off in 2000, Hanyu has become one of Japan's most sought after single malts. An economic recession at the turn of the millennium forced the distillery to shut its doors, and the remaining casks of its unblended whisky stock were purchased by Venture Whisky, a firm established by the Hanyu distillery founder's grandson, Ichiro Akuto, in 2004. In 2005 he bottled his first single casks under the Ichiro's Malt label. He later cemented his legacy with the opening of the acclaimed Chichibu distillery, but his finest achievement will surely always be considered to be the Hanyu 'Card' series. The bottles are a collection of 58 releases, each displaying one of 52 playing cards on the label, two jokers, and a second batch of follow up releases to the original 2005 Ace of Spades, Queen of Hearts, King of Diamonds, and Jack of Clubs bottlings. Each unique in its own right, every one of these have become a true collector's piece and an important moment in the history Japanese whisky.

Distilled in 2000 and bottled in 2006, this was initially matured in hogshead prior to being finished in an American Oak sherry butt.

One of 210 bottles.

Image for Hanyu 1985 Ichiro's Malt 'Card' #9109 / Queen of Diamonds
58.5%
70cl
UK
58.5%
70cl

Hanyu 1985 Ichiro's Malt 'Card' #9109 / Queen of Diamonds

Since its stills were turned off in 2000, Hanyu has become one of Japan's most sought after single malts. An economic recession at the turn of the millennium forced the distillery to shut its doors, and the remaining casks of its unblended whisky stock were purchased by Venture Whisky, a firm established by the Hanyu distillery founder's grandson, Ichiro Akuto, in 2004. In 2005 he bottled his first single casks under the Ichiro's Malt label. He later cemented his legacy with the opening of the acclaimed Chichibu distillery, but his finest achievement will surely always be considered to be the Hanyu 'Card' series. The bottles are a collection of 58 releases, each displaying one of 52 playing cards on the label, two jokers, and a second batch of follow up releases to the original 2005 Ace of Spades, Queen of Hearts, King of Diamonds, and Jack of Clubs bottlings. Each unique in its own right, every one of these have become a true collector's piece and an important moment in the history Japanese whisky.

This Hanyu was distilled in 1985 and bottled in 2007. Initially matured in a hogshead before being finished in a French oak cognac cask. 

Bottle number 66 of 223.

 

Image for Hanyu 1988 Ichiro's Malt 'Card' #9108 / King of Clubs
58%
70cl
UK
58%
70cl

Hanyu 1988 Ichiro's Malt 'Card' #9108 / King of Clubs​

Since its stills were turned off in 2000, Hanyu has become one of Japan's most sought after single malts. An economic recession at the turn of the millennium forced the distillery to shut its doors, and the remaining casks of its unblended whisky stock were purchased by Venture Whisky, a firm established by the Hanyu distillery founder's grandson, Ichiro Akuto, in 2004. In 2005 he bottled his first single casks under the Ichiro's Malt label. He later cemented his legacy with the opening of the acclaimed Chichibu distillery, but his finest achievement will surely always be considered to be the Hanyu 'Card' series. The bottles are a collection of 58 releases, each displaying one of 52 playing cards on the label, two jokers, and a second batch of follow up releases to the original 2005 Ace of Spades, Queen of Hearts, King of Diamonds, and Jack of Clubs bottlings. Each unique in its own right, every one of these have become a true collector's piece and an important moment in the history Japanese whisky.

Distilled in 1988 and matured in a hogshead prior to being finished in an ex-Cognac cask, this was bottled in 2010. 

Bottle number 65 of 417. 

Image for Glen Mhor 1937-1959 Thompson Bros 50cl - One of 37
48.6%
50cl
UK
48.6%
50cl

Glen Mhor 1937-1959 Thompson Brothers 50cl / One of 37

A private bottling of Glen Mhor distilled in 1937 and drawn from cask in 1959 for a private customer. Held in two stoneware flagons until it was sold at auction in 2014, whereupon the whisky was married and bottled by the Thompson Brothers and Angus MacRaild.

Glen Mhor was one of three distilleries based in Inverness along with Millburn and Glen Albyn, all of which closed within two years of each other. Glen Mhor was one of the earlier, in 1983, and it was demolished just three years later. A historically significant malt, this was just a small two still operation, but was bottled both as a single malt in the late 19th and early 20th century, as well as making its way into high profile blends such as the one discovered in ice under Ernest Shackleton's hut. The owners for the majority of its history were Charles Mackinlay & Co, who produced several official releases for the emerging Italian single malt market in the late 1960s, but this stopped when DCL took over 1972. They licensed the brand to Gordon & MacPhail until its closure, and Diageo later included it in the Rare Malts Selection series, all of which remain rare and increasingly sought after. Bottlings from independent labels like this are equally so.

The Thompson Brothers began their whisky bottling in enterprise in 2013, establishing the Black Isle Whisky Company in their native Dornoch. The brothers, Simon and Philip, renamed the operation as the Dornoch Distilling Company in 2015, opening the Dornoch distillery the following year. In addition to distilling their own whisky, their independent bottlings continue to flourish, with many exceptional tasting and fantastically labelled single malts and rums released under the Thompson Bros banner.

A very hard to find bottle which was awarded 94 points on Whiskyfun.com

One of only 37 bottles.

Image for Hanyu 1988 Ichiro's Malt 'Card' #7100 / Eight of Clubs
57.5%
70cl
UK
57.5%
70cl

Hanyu 1988 Ichiro's Malt 'Card' #7100 / Eight of Clubs

Since its stills were turned off in 2000, Hanyu has become one of Japan's most sought after single malts. An economic recession at the turn of the millennium forced the distillery to shut its doors, and the remaining casks of its unblended whisky stock were purchased by Venture Whisky, a firm established by the Hanyu distillery founder's grandson, Ichiro Akuto, in 2004. In 2005 he bottled his first single casks under the Ichiro's Malt label. He later cemented his legacy with the opening of the acclaimed Chichibu distillery, but his finest achievement will surely always be considered to be the Hanyu 'Card' series. The bottles are a collection of 58 releases, each displaying one of 52 playing cards on the label, two jokers, and a second batch of follow up releases to the original 2005 Ace of Spades, Queen of Hearts, King of Diamonds, and Jack of Clubs bottlings. Each unique in its own right, every one of these have become a true collector's piece and an important moment in the history Japanese whisky.

This Hanyu was distilled in 1988 and initially matured in a hogshead, then finished in American oak puncheon #7100. It was bottled in 2011.

One of 561 bottles.

Image for Hibiki 30 Year Old
43%
70cl
UK + % VAT
43%
70cl

Hibiki 30 Year Old

Suntory are one of the founding fathers of Japanese whisky, established by Shinjirō Torii in 1899 as a wine store in Osaka. The venture was hugely successful, and the company was renamed Kotobukiya in 1921, which built its first distillery three years later, Yamazaki. The distillery produced both malt and grain whiskies which the company blended together, releasing its first Suntory White Label in 1929, the resulting popularity of which saw the firm renamed after it 1963. Expansion in the next decade saw the company move its grain production to a new Chita distillery in 1972, and open a second malt distillery, Hakushu, the following year. Suntory today has a large stake in both the bourbon and Scotch whisky industry, but remains at the forefront of its native whisky market too.

This is Suntory's most popular blend, the Hibiki. Launched in 1989, it contains malt whisky from Yamazaki and Hakushu, and grain from the Chita distillery. It was developed by fourth generation chief blender Shinji Fukuyo with production overseen by third generation master blender and great-grandson of the founder, Shingo Torii, and is presented in a bottle with 24 facets representing the 24 seasons of the Japanese lunar calendar. 

The 30 year old was first released in 1997, and although unprecedented demand for Japanese whiskies in the years since have seen the discontinuation of most age-statements, this and a 21 year old remain part of the Hibiki portfolio.

55.6%
70cl
EU
55.6%
70cl

Glenlivet 1975 Gordon and MacPhail Private Collection

Well-known as the oldest licensed distillery in Scotland, for many years ‘Glenlivet’ was a byword for quality, with many single malts using the Glenlivet suffix in an attempt to reap the benefits of associating themselves with the Banffshire distillery. Indeed, owners Pernod-Ricard now put a heavy focus on the brand being ‘The Glenlivet’, encouraging their consumers not to accept any imitations. Glenlivet is in a long-running battle with Glenfiddich for the title of best-selling single malt, with both now selling over a million cases a year. George Smith secured a license to legally distil at Glenlivet in 1824, and it remained family-run until 1978 when Seagram bought a controlling stake in what had by then become The Glenlivet Distilleries Ltd, and counting assets such as Glen Grant, Benriach and Longmorn among its portfolio. When Seagram collapsed in 2001, Pernod-Ricard acquired its sizeable Chivas Brothers Scotch whisky division, with Glenlivet the crown jewel in an empire rivalled only by Diageo.

This whisky was filled on 5th June 1975 and aged in refill American hogshead #15371. It was bottled in May 2023.

Gordon & MacPhail are one of the largest and most recognisable whisky companies in the world. Although they began distilling at the newly refurbished Benromach distillery in 1998, for most of their history they were an independent bottler. Their labels are recognised by whisky lovers the world over, and their licensed bottlings from distillery's like Macallan and Talisker in the 1970s and 1980s, when the companies were not bottling themselves, are a huge part of the success of those distillers today.

This is part of the Private Collection range from the Elgin-based bottlers. As of 2018, this line fully replaced the Rare Old series as its most premium offerings, and come exceptionally presented in decadent glass bottles.

One of 124 bottles.

52.6%
70cl
EU
52.6%
70cl

Glenfarclas 1959 Signatory Vintage 35 Year Old

Glenfarclas is considered by many to be one of the finest distilleries in Speyside. Its direct-fired stills produce a heavy single malt that is almost exclusively matured in Jerez sherry casks. The distillery focuses on single malt over blends, and a cool microclimate around the distillery that means that their casks are particularly stingy to the \"angels,\" resulting in an incredible depth of stock. Glenfarclas also feel they share some credit for the modern day love of cask strength whisky, introducing their acclaimed 105 proof expressions back in 1968.

This whisky was distilled on 29th May 1959 and aged in single sherry cask #1813 for 35 years. It was bottled in January 1995.

Signatory Vintage were established in 1988 by Andrew Symington and are one of Scotland's most prolific independent bottlers. Their offices and bottling facility are located next to Edradour distillery, which they have also owned since 2002.

One of 248 bottles.

Image for Hanyu 2000 Ichiro's Malt 'The Game' #1302 / Shinanoya
59.5%
70cl
UK + % VAT
59.5%
70cl

Hanyu 2000 Ichiro's Malt 'The Game' #1302 / Shinanoya

Since its stills were turned off in 2000, Hanyu has become one of Japan's most sought after single malts. An economic recession at the turn of the millennium forced the distillery to shut its doors, and the remaining casks of its unblended whisky stock were purchased by Venture Whisky, a firm established by the Hanyu distillery founder's grandson, Ichiro Akuto, in 2004. In 2005 he bottled his first single casks under the Ichiro's Malt label.

This is an exclusive bottling from Japanese food and spirits importer, Shinanoya. This is the fifth release in their acclaimed \"The Game\" series which contains Hanyu from the final year that the distillery was producing.

This was finished in Mizunara Wood 

One of 299 bottles.

50.6%
70cl
EU
50.6%
70cl

Highland Park 1967 John Scott's 37 Year Old

Highland Park was built by David Robertson all the way back in 1798. The distillery's relationship with blenders, Robertson & Baxter, saw it acquired by Highland Distillers in 1937, who were subsequently bought by Edrington in 1999, who run it today. The modern Highland Park single malt brand was first officially bottled in the 1970s, with the release of an 8 year old age statement, but distillery bottlings first appeared around the 1950s. The look of the brand has changed many times over the years, but its cult following and popularity has never diminished. It remains one of the most recognisable single malts in the world to this day.

The John Scott's bottlings of Highland Park are incredibly sought after releases. They were bottled by Duncan Taylor on behalf of John Scott's Whisky in Kirkwall.

This was distilled in 1967 and aged for 37 years before being bottled in 2004.

One of 227 bottles.

Image for Glenlivet 1970 Samaroli Sherry Wood / A. Bleve
45%
70cl
EU
45%
70cl

Glenlivet 1970 Samaroli Sherry Wood / A. Bleve

Samaroli is perhaps Italy's most revered independent bottler of Scotch whisky. With an impeccable taste in single cask whiskies, and an eye for aesthetics (if not English spelling at times!), he is regarded by many as a visionary. Many of his bottles now occupy deserved sports on the pantheon of whisky greats.

This Glenlivet was distilled in 1970 and bottled in 2001 from single sherry cask #6810, which was privately selected by Antonio Bleve. Silvano Samaroli would later appoint Bleve as his successor in 2008, and he remains at the helm to this day.

Well-known as the oldest licensed distillery in Scotland, for many years ‘Glenlivet’ was a byword for quality, with many single malts using the Glenlivet suffix in an attempt to reap the benefits of associating themselves with the Banffshire distillery. Indeed, owners Pernod-Ricard now put a heavy focus on the brand being ‘The Glenlivet’, encouraging their consumers not to accept any imitations. Glenlivet is in a long-running battle with Glenfiddich for the title of best-selling single malt, with both now selling over a million cases a year. George Smith secured a license to legally distil at Glenlivet in 1824, and it remained family-run until 1978 when Seagram bought a controlling stake in what had by then become The Glenlivet Distilleries Ltd, and counting assets such as Glen Grant, Benriach and Longmorn among its portfolio. When Seagram collapsed in 2001, Pernod-Ricard acquired its sizeable Chivas Brothers Scotch whisky division, with Glenlivet the crown jewel in an empire rivalled only by Diageo.

One of 204 bottles. 

Image for Glenrothes 1970 Extraordinary Single Cask #10573
40.6%
70cl
UK + % VAT
40.6%
70cl

Glenrothes 1970 Extraordinary Single Cask #10573

Released in April 2012, this Glenrothes is part of the \"Extraordinary Single Cask\" series of bottlings. 

Earmarked from an early stage an ideal component in blended Scotch whiskies, Glenrothes has long been a key part of big brands such as Cutty Sark and Famous Grouse. Its relationship with the former, lead to a two decade-long association with London wine-merchants, Berry Brothers & Rudd, when they traded their famous blend for the rights to the Glenrothes single malt brand in 2010. The distillery itself remained with Edrington through, and the two were reunited when the now hugely successful brand was returned in 2017.

This whisky was distilled in 1970 and laid to rest in single cask #10573 before being bottled on 2nd April 2012.

This beautiful set comes with leather presentation case with wooden plinth, cleaning cloth and leather bound book.

One of just 179 bottles.

There will be a shipping charge for 2 bottles.​

Image for Highland Park 1967 Single Cask 37 Year Old #10197 75cl
47.5%
75cl
UK
47.5%
75cl

Highland Park 1967 Single Cask 37 Year Old #10197 75cl

Highland Park was built by David Robertson all the way back in 1798. The distillery's relationship with blenders, Robertson & Baxter, saw it acquired by Highland Distillers in 1937, who were subsequently bought by Edrington in 1999, who run it today. The modern Highland Park single malt brand was first officially bottled in the 1970s, with the release of an 8 year old age statement, but distillery bottlings first appeared around the 1950s. The look of the brand has changed many times over the years, but its cult following and popularity has never diminished. It remains one of the most recognisable single malts in the world to this day.

This Highland Park was distilled in 1967 and matured in single cask #10197 for 37 years. It was bottled in 2004 for the Asian market.

One of 480 bottles.

50.2%
70cl
EU
50.2%
70cl

Glenfarclas 1959 Signatory Vintage 34 Year Old

Glenfarclas is considered by many to be one of the finest distilleries in Speyside. Its direct-fired stills produce a heavy single malt that is almost exclusively matured in Jerez sherry casks. The distillery focuses on single malt over blends, and a cool microclimate around the distillery that means that their casks are particularly stingy to the \"angels,\" resulting in an incredible depth of stock. Glenfarclas also feel they share some credit for the modern day love of cask strength whisky, introducing their acclaimed 105 proof expressions back in 1968.

This whisky was distilled on 29th December 1959 and aged in single ex-Sherry casks #3238-40 for 34 years.

Signatory Vintage were established in 1988 by Andrew Symington and are one of Scotland's most prolific independent bottlers. Their offices and bottling facility are located next to Edradour distillery, which they have also owned since 2002.

One of 280 bottles.

Image for Glenturret 24 Year Old Annabel's Bespoke Release
44.3%
70cl
UK
44.3%
70cl

Glenturret 24 Year Old Annabel's Bespoke Release

Glenturret claims to be one of the oldest distilleries in Scotland, although it was dismantled for over 25 years before James Fairlie built a new facility within the walls of the former site in 1959, using old equipment procured from Perthshire neighbours, Tullibardine. Despite using traditional whisky-making methods, the distillery was also a pioneer, opening Scotland’s second ever visitor centre in 1981. It was then transformed into the home of The Famous Grouse by Edrington in 2002, before changing hands again in 2018 when it was bought by the owner of Lalique crystal. With former Macallan whisky maker, Bob Dalgarno at the helm, the new ownership relaunched the Glenturret single malt brand in 2020 with a predictably luxurious new bottle design.

This is a special release for Annabel's club in London.

One of just 20 bottles.

 

Image for Glen Garioch 1966 Samaroli Very Limited Edition
43%
70cl
EU
43%
70cl

Glen Garioch 1966 Samaroli Very Limited Edition

Glen Garioch is one of the oldest distilleries in Scotland. For most of the 20th century it was self-sufficient, malting its own barley using peat from Pitsligo, giving it a unique smoky character. In fact, in 1968 it was short-listed by then-owners DCL, to convert to heavily peated production in order to make up for a shortfall on Islay caused by a drought. In an odd twist of fate, the decision was instead made to re-open Brora for the job, and close Glen Garioch down. Morrison Bowmore then sprang to its rescue, restarting production in 1973. The maltings and distillery were shut down again by Beam Suntory in 1995, and only the latter resumed operations two years later, with contemporary Glen Garioch becoming an un-peated single malt. These pre-1995 vintages are worth investigating while you can.

A 1966 vintage Glen Garioch, bottled by the legendary Samaroli from casks #1309 and #1299 in 1997. The label is an homage to the early Glen Cawdor bottlings from the 1980. Glen Cawdor was a label Samaroli devised to bottle an over-supply of Glen Garioch 1973 that he had purchased, while giving his catalogue the illusion of variety. This is no discredit to them however, and they are some of the most collectable whiskies you can find. Interestingly, the label states Stanley P. Morrison as the distillery, however this was still a DCL vintage.

Samaroli are perhaps Italy's most revered independent bottler of Scotch whisky. With an impeccable taste in single cask whiskies, and an eye for aesthetics (if not English spelling at times!), founder Silvano Samaroli is regarded by many as a visionary. Since his passing in 2017, the company has been run by his friend Antonio Bleve, who continues his tradition of high quality releases. Many of Silvano’s early bottlings occupy deserved spots on the pantheon of all-time whisky greats.

One of 696 bottles.

Image for Glen Elgin 1971 Samaroli Natural Strength
50%
75cl
EU
50%
75cl

Glen Elgin 1971 Samaroli Natural Strength

Glen Elgin was built in at the very end of the 19th century, with distilling commencing in 1900. Its success was sporadic in the early days, but it eventually joined DCL in 1930 as part of their White Horse Distillers arm. Unusually, the distillery had no electricity until 1950, and was entirely powered by paraffin until then. Although a key component in their blends, the fruity character of Glen Elgin was deemed worthy of being bottled as a single malt too, appearing as a 12 year old under White Horse branding from as early as the 1970s, with occasional sought after independent releases appearing from around this time onwards as well.

This Glen Elgin was distilled in 1971 and bottled by R.W. Duthie in 1985 for Silvano Samaroli.

Samaroli is perhaps Italy's most revered independent bottler of Scotch whisky. With an impeccable taste in single cask whiskies, and an eye for aesthetics (if not English spelling at times!), he is regarded by many as a visionary. Many of his bottles now occupy deserved sports on the pantheon of whisky greats.

One of 1200 bottles.

Image for Glen Garioch 21 Year Old Cask Strength 1980s / Soffiantino Import
57.8%
75cl
EU
57.8%
75cl

Glen Garioch 21 Year Old Cask Strength 1980s / Soffiantino Import

Glen Garioch is one of the oldest distilleries in Scotland. For most of the 20th century it was self-sufficient, malting its own barley using peat from Pitsligo, giving it a unique smoky character. In fact, in 1968 it was short-listed by then-owners DCL, to convert to heavily peated production in order to make up for a shortfall on Islay caused by a drought. In an odd twist of fate, the decision was instead made to re-open Brora for the job, and close Glen Garioch down. Morrison Bowmore then sprang to its rescue, restarting production in 1973. The maltings and distillery were shut down again by Beam Suntory in 1995, and only the latter resumed operations two years later, with contemporary Glen Garioch becoming an un-peated single malt. These pre-1995 vintages are worth investigating while you can.

This is a distillery bottling from the Morrison Bowmore era, bottled as a 21 year old.

Image for Glenlivet 1971 Samaroli Sherry Wood / Aquarelles 1993
46%
70cl
EU
46%
70cl

Glenlivet 1971 Samaroli Sherry Wood / Aquarelles 1993

A fantastic vintage bottling of Glenlivet from Silvano Samaroli. This was bottled in 1993 as part of the Aquarelles series, along with a 1977 Ardmore, and a 1979 vintage Springbank. An 'aquarelle' is a type of watercolour painting produced using thin transparent watercolours. All of the paintings featured on these labels were produced by Silvano himself. He also used the image on this example for a 25th anniversary bottling of Glenlivet in the same year.

Samaroli is perhaps Italy's most revered independent bottler of Scotch whisky. With an impeccable taste in single cask whiskies, and an eye for aesthetics (if not English spelling at times!), he is regarded by many as a visionary. Many of his bottles now occupy deserved sports on the pantheon of whisky greats.

This was distilled in 1971 and bottled from sherry wood cask #10214 by R.W. Duthie, one of the last of their partnership with Samaroli which ended not long after due to their workload commitments with parent firm, Wm. Cadenhead.

One of 900 bottles.

50.8%
70cl
EU
50.8%
70cl

Glenfarclas 1973 Single Cask 32 Year Old / Highlander Inn

Glenfarclas is considered by many to be one of the finest distilleries in Speyside. Its direct-fired stills produce a heavy single malt that is almost exclusively matured in Jerez sherry casks. The distillery focuses on single malt over blends, and a cool microclimate around the distillery that means that their casks are particularly stingy to the \"angels,\" resulting in an incredible depth of stock. Glenfarclas also feel they share some credit for the modern day love of cask strength whisky, introducing their acclaimed 105 proof expressions back in 1968.

A single cask Glenfarclas, distilled on 21st May 1973 and bottled on 11th August 2005 for the Highlander Inn in Craigellachie.

Bottle number 21 of only 234 yielded from single cask #4796.

55.9%
50cl
EU
55.9%
50cl

Glenallachie 1978 Single Cask #10296 50cl / 50th Anniversary - Signed by Billy Walker

Glenallachie distillery was built by Mackinlays in 1967 to meet the demands of its blends following an upturn in sales in the US. In its short history it has passed through the hands of Invergordon Distillers and Pernod-Ricard. During this period the focus was always on the provision of blends, with over 20 years between the first Mackinlay’s distillery bottlings of its single malt and the next official release from Chivas Brothers in 2005. Now in the hands of Billy Walker, Glenallachie is finally being pushed as an increasingly popular single malt brand since 2017.

This Glenallachie was distilled in December 1978 and matured in single cask #10296. It was bottled in February 2018 as part of a range of single cask bottlings produced to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the distillery, which began production in February 1968. These were among the first bottlings produced by Billy Walker when he took ownership the distillery.

This is one of only 68 bottles signed by Billy Walker himself.

Image for Glendronach 1994 Vintage 26 Year Old / Signed by Rachel Barrie
44.9%
70cl
UK
44.9%
70cl

Glendronach 1994 Vintage 26 Year Old / Signed by Rachel Barrie

Glendronach was built in 1826 by James Allardice, and rebuilt following a fire in 1852 by an individual named Walter Scott (although not the one you might be thinking of). It eventually passed into the hands of perhaps Scotland's greatest distilling dynasty, the Grants of Glenfiddich. Charles, the youngest son of William Grant procured the then-silent distillery from the government in 1920, and it remained in the family until they sold it to Wm. Teacher 40 years later. The Grants and Teachers were early champions of the single malt category, and distillery bottlings of Glendronach were produced for most of the 20th century until it was mothballed by Allied Distillers in 1996. The distillery was revived in 2002, and has since become one of the strongest single malt brands in the world.

This Glendronach was distilled in 1994 and matured in Pedro Ximénez and Oloroso Sherry Casks for 26 years. It was made exclusive to the travel retail market.

One of 1,310 bottles.

This particular bottle has been signed by master blender Rachel Barrie.

Image for Highland Park 12 Year Old 1970s / Ferraretto Import
43%
75cl
EU
43%
75cl

Highland Park 12 Year Old 1970s / Ferraretto Import

Highland Park was built by David Robertson all the way back in 1798. The distillery's relationship with blenders, Robertson & Baxter, saw it acquired by Highland Distillers in 1937, who were subsequently bought by Edrington in 1999, who run it today. The modern Highland Park single malt brand was first officially bottled in the 1970s, with the release of an 8 year old age statement, but distillery bottlings first appeared around the 1950s. The look of the brand has changed many times over the years, but its cult following and popularity has never diminished. It remains one of the most recognisable single malts in the world to this day.

This 12 year old malt was bottled in the early 1970s. This is the first iteration of the Highland Park single malt brand introduced by Highland Distillers. When this 12 year old age-statement was first bottled in the 1960s, the labels shared the same aesthetic with the company's other distilleries, Tamdhu and Glenrothes.

Image for Glen Avon 15 Year Old Gordon and MacPhail 57% / Sestante Import
57%
75cl
EU
57%
75cl

Glen Avon 15 Year Old Gordon and MacPhail 57% / Sestante Import

Gordon & MacPhail are one of the largest and most recognisable whisky companies in the world. Although they began distilling at the newly refurbished Benromach distillery in 1998, for most of their history they were an independent bottler. Their labels are recognised by whisky lovers the world over, and their licensed bottlings from distillery's like Macallan and Talisker in the 1970s and 1980s, when the companies were not bottling themselves, are a huge part of the success of those distillers today.

This Glen Avon is a wonderful old bottling of a mystery Speyside by Gordon and MacPhail, specially bottled for Sestante in Italy.

The Sestante import company was founded in the 1970s by Ernesto Mainardi, and he bottled his first single casks under the name in 1985. Alongside his contemporary, Silvano Samaroli, Mainardi pioneered giving his customers a choice of both standard 40-46% bottlings, and cask strength releases from the same casks. Along with his other brand, Silver Seal, Mainardi's bottlings are incredibly sought after. Mainardi imported a lot of Glen Avon in the 1980s, bottling several spectacular dark sherry casks in his famous crystal decanters.

This is a cask strength version of the 15 year old Glen Avon. Mainardi has previously stated that Glen Avon was Glenfarclas single malt, but this has never been confirmed (or denied) by Gordon & MacPhail.

 

58%
75cl
EU
58%
75cl

Glen Moray 22 Year Old Moon Import / Half Moon

Moon Import was founded by Pepi Mongiardino in 1980 and he bottled his first whisky in 1982. Always beautifully labelled, Pepi is acclaimed for designing the packaging for Moon Import bottles himself, often using images found in old books. These iconic designs, coupled with the quality of the liquid saw Moon Import steadily grow in popularity. The company is still going strong, and their early releases are some of the brightest gems in any whisky collection.

This 22 year old Glen Moray is from Moon Import's inaugural Half Moon series, bottled in 1982.

Originally built as a brewery, Glen Moray was converted into a whisky distillery during the market boom of the late 19th century. The subsequent slump saw it mothballed, before being bought by MacDonald & Muir in 1923, who later became the Glenmorangie Company in 1996. In the latter days of their ownership it was sadly treated as their budget single malt, but it has always been a high quality whisky, and its reputation it is now beginning to recover under the ownership of La Martiniquaise, who took over in 2008. Thankfully the distillery's excellent single malt has always been treated with the reverence it deserves by independent labels like this.

One of 600 bottles.

Image for Glendronach Grandeur 24 Year Old Batch #009
48.7%
70cl
EU
48.7%
70cl

Glendronach Grandeur 24 Year Old Batch #009

Glendronach was built in 1826 by James Allardice, and rebuilt following a fire in 1852 by an individual named Walter Scott (although not the one you might be thinking of). It eventually passed into the hands of perhaps Scotland's greatest distilling dynasty, the Grants of Glenfiddich. Charles, the youngest son of William Grant procured the then-silent distillery from the government in 1920, and it remained in the family until they sold it to Wm. Teacher 40 years later. The Grants and Teachers were early champions of the single malt category, and distillery bottlings of Glendronach were produced for most of the 20th century until it was mothballed by Allied Distillers in 1996. The distillery was revived in 2002, and has since become one of the strongest single malt brands in the world.

First bottled in 2010, the Grandeur is the most premium entry in the distillery's permanent range. The nionth release, this was matured in Oloroso sherry casks and bottled at cask strength.

One of 1,487 bottles.

Image for Glenfarclas 40 Year Old / Taiwan 2014 Edition
46.1%
70cl
UK
46.1%
70cl

Glenfarclas 40 Year Old / Taiwan 2014 Edition

Glenfarclas is considered by many to be one of the finest distilleries in Speyside. Its direct-fired stills produce a heavy single malt that is almost exclusively matured in Jerez sherry casks. The distillery focuses on single malt over blends, and a cool microclimate around the distillery that means that their casks are particularly stingy to the \"angels,\" resulting in an incredible depth of stock. Glenfarclas also feel they share some credit for the modern day love of cask strength whisky, introducing their acclaimed 105 proof expressions back in 1968.

The depth of stock in the Glenfarclas warehouses means there are a number of impressive age-statements like this in its core range. The 40 year old is bottled from casks specially selected by George S. Grant, Director of Sales and the sixth generation of the family who own and manage the distillery.

43%
70cl
EU
43%
70cl

Glenury Royal 1973 Whisky Agency 37 Year Old / The Nectar

Glenury Royal is so-called due to its earliest proprietor, Captain James Barclay, being a close friend of King William IV. The distillery is one of many picked up by DCL (now Diageo) during an era of optimism in the mid-20th century, before being closed down in the early 1980s after a market downturn created an oversupply. Indeed, Glenury closed in 1985 and was subsequently demolished. As such, official bottlings are rare, especially those under the Downie and Garron brand names. Bottlings from independent labels like this are increasingly so as well.

This whisky was distilled in 1973 and matured for 37 years in an ex-Bourbon hogshead. It was bottled by The Whisky Agency in 2011 and specially selected for The Nectar.

The Whisky Agency was founded in Germany by Carsten Ehrlich, who is also the driving force behind The Whisky Fair in Limburg, one of the world's most renowned annual whisky gatherings. Their passion is unquestionable, and they have a regular release schedule of high quality single casks, often in collaboration with some of the most respected whisky bars and retailers. The Whisky Agency's labels include The Perfect Dram, Liquid Library, Private Stock, and Liquid Sun.

One of only 146 bottles.

Image for Glenfarclas 40 Year Old / Taiwan 2014 Edition
46.1%
70cl
UK
46.1%
70cl

Glenfarclas 40 Year Old / Taiwan 2014 Edition

Glenfarclas is considered by many to be one of the finest distilleries in Speyside. Its direct-fired stills produce a heavy single malt that is almost exclusively matured in Jerez sherry casks. The distillery focuses on single malt over blends, and a cool microclimate around the distillery that means that their casks are particularly stingy to the \"angels,\" resulting in an incredible depth of stock. Glenfarclas also feel they share some credit for the modern day love of cask strength whisky, introducing their acclaimed 105 proof expressions back in 1968.

The depth of stock in the Glenfarclas warehouses means there are a number of impressive age-statements like this in its core range. The 40 year old is bottled from casks specially selected by George S. Grant, Director of Sales and the sixth generation of the family who own and manage the distillery.

Image for Glenfarclas 40 Year Old / Taiwan 2015 Edition
43.2%
70cl
UK
43.2%
70cl

Glenfarclas 40 Year Old / Taiwan 2015 Edition

Glenfarclas is considered by many to be one of the finest distilleries in Speyside. Its direct-fired stills produce a heavy single malt that is almost exclusively matured in Jerez sherry casks. The distillery focuses on single malt over blends, and a cool microclimate around the distillery that means that their casks are particularly stingy to the \"angels,\" resulting in an incredible depth of stock. Glenfarclas also feel they share some credit for the modern day love of cask strength whisky, introducing their acclaimed 105 proof expressions back in 1968.

The depth of stock in the Glenfarclas warehouses means there are a number of impressive age-statements like this in its core range. The 40 year old is bottled from casks specially selected by George S. Grant, Director of Sales and the sixth generation of the family who own and manage the distillery.

40%
70cl
EU
40%
70cl

Glendronach 33 Year Old

Glendronach was built in 1826 by James Allardice, and rebuilt following a fire in 1852 by an individual named Walter Scott (although not the one you might be thinking of). It eventually passed into the hands of perhaps Scotland's greatest distilling dynasty, the Grants of Glenfiddich. Charles, the youngest son of William Grant procured the then-silent distillery from the government in 1920, and it remained in the family until they sold it to Wm. Teacher 40 years later. The Grants and Teachers were early champions of the single malt category, and distillery bottlings of Glendronach were produced for most of the 20th century until it was mothballed by Allied Distillers in 1996. The distillery was revived in 2002, and has since become one of the strongest single malt brands in the world.

Matured in a legendary batch of Oloroso sherry casks, this Glendronach was released in 2004 to great acclaim, going on to receive a gold medal during blind judging at the San Francisco Spirits Competition.

Image for Glen Keith 1971 Duncan Taylor 33 Year Old
50.8%
70cl
EU
50.8%
70cl

Glen Keith 1971 Duncan Taylor 33 Year Old

Glen Keith was built by Canadian drinks giant, Seagram, in the late 1950s to supply malt for their Chivas, 100 Pipers and Passport blends. The distillery was an experimental facility, with a range of different stills, trialling different mash and yeast types, and methods of peat smoking. One of the peated variants it produced was the rare Glenisla. Seagram collapsed in the early 2000s, and Glen Keith was perhaps an early indication of its ill-fate, closing in 1999. It was re-opened in 2013 by Chivas Brothers, who continue its experimental traditions by housing their lab there. Despite its importance to Seagram blends, Glen Keith was always deemed worthy of bottling as a single malt, both by the distillery and by independent companies.

An independent bottle from Glen Keith distillery bottled in January 2005 by Huntley's own Duncan Taylor.

Distilled in December 1971 and aged for 33 years in a single Sherry cask 8066.

One of 531 bottles.

Filter

Bidding advice

You can place bids either under the lot image on the main auction page or on the right side of the individual lot page.

Placing a Maximum Bid
Use the "Set your bid limit" button on the left side of the bidding panel to enter the highest amount you're willing to bid on a lot. Our system will then automatically raise your bid in set increments if you’re outbid, up to your maximum. If someone bids above your set limit, we’ll notify you by email so you can choose whether to increase your bid.

Placing a Single Bid
Alternatively, place a single bid by selecting the button on the right side of the bidding panel. The button displays the amount needed for the next increment. For example, if the current highest bid is £50.00, the button will show "+ £55.00" (reflecting a £5.00 increment).

Incremental Bidding Explained
Our system increases bids based on preset increments, as shown in the table below, whether you set a maximum bid or make a single bid.

£1 - £99£25
£100 - £499£100
£500 - £2499£200
£2500 - £9999£500
£10000 - £49999£1000
£50000 - £99999£2500
£100000 - £199999£5000
£200000 - £499999£10000
£500000 - £999999£20000
£1000000 - £1999999£50000
£2000000 - £4999999£100000
£5000000 - £9999999£200000
£10000000 - £24999999£500000
£25000000 - £49999999£1000000
£50000000 - £99999999£2500000
£100000000 - £0£5000000
Each lot listing includes a location icon. Hover over the icon (or tap on mobile) to view more information.
To place a bid above £2,000, we require an identity check to ensure bid validity.

Live and upcoming auctions

Live
Monthly Auction

Alex Quick Test for deleting bids

Started
17 April 2025
Ending
27 April 2029
Upcoming
Monthly Auction

May 2025 Auction

Starting
30 May 2025
Ending
09 June 2025
Upcoming
Monthly Auction

June 2025 Auction

Starting
27 June 2025
Ending
07 July 2025

Interested in Buying?

Discover and bid on old, rare and collectible whiskies in our online auctions each month.

How To Bid

Interested in Selling?

Our global whisky auctions give your bottles the attention they deserve. Get started with a free valuation today.

Sell with Us

Any questions?

Bid on bottles you love

Each month, we host whisky auctions featuring thousands of bottles from iconic whisky regions around the world.

Whether you're searching for old and rare Scotch whisky, legendary independent bottlings, exciting new world whiskies, or incredible single casks, our auctions are the perfect place to discover your next prized bottle.

Learn about bidding
Sell whisky from your collection

Our global whisky auctions connect your bottles with passionate whisky enthusiasts worldwide. If you'd like to consign whisky for auction, simply complete our Seller Form today.

Complete our Seller Form
Body

You will always be shown as an anonymous bidder when using Whisky Auctioneer.

When browsing the bidding history on a specific lot,  the list of recent bidders is shown as 'anonymised bidders' with the exception of any bids placed through your account - which would appear as your username.

When logged into your account your bids are shown with your username, however, other users are not able to see this and you will appear as an 'anonymised bidder'.

User information/identity will never be revealed in the bidding process. We take user data and information protection very seriously at Whisky Auctioneer.  

Body

All the information you need to sell your whisky can be found in our Step-by-Step Guide to Selling Whisky at Auction which has been designed to guide newcomers through our easy and hassle-free service to get started selling whisky online.

Body

Customers across the world can choose to sell their rum with Whisky Auctioneer. Our Client Service team will support sellers by providing valuations for their bottles and advice on the best way to get their whisky to us for sale into our auctions.

The bottles will be checked-in, authenticated, photographed, and then listed into the next available auction, or an auction of your choice, by our expert team. Whisky Auctioneer hosts monthly auctions, where registered users from across the globe can bid on bottles via our website.  

After the auction closing date, the highest bidder will be notified by email. Payment is required within 72hrs. The buyer can then choose to ship, store, or collect the bottle(s). Buyer fees are applied during the online checkout process.  

The seller will receive payment within 21 working days of the end of the auction, directly to their chosen bank account. Seller fees will be applied to the seller’s invoice after the auction. 

Our monthly auctions feature the most comprehensive selection of old, rare and collectable whisky online. Whisky Auctioneer is the best choice to buy or sell whisky online at auction.

Auction closed.
You've won 0 lot(s).
Please checkout to purchase your item(s).