In 1967, Hoare joined
Christie's auction house in London where he was initially charged with overseeing Russian art. After spotting some carpets left lying in a corridor and recognising them as Persian, Hoare used them as the basis of a successful auction, which led to the launch of the Islamic Art Department, the first of its kind in a major auction house. At some time around the turn of the 20th century, the Shahnama mysteriously disappeared from
Istanbul and in 1903 resurfaced in the possession of Baron
Edmond de Rothschild. In 1959,
Arthur Houghton Jr. acquired it, and in 1964 he contacted Hoare to sell the manuscript and Hoare negotiated its repatriation to Iran. Another exhibition took place in 2017, this time at
Sir John Lavery's old studio in Cromwell Place where his choice of objects ranged from unicorn horns to
Bactrian treasures. It gave him a chance to tell stories and gave visitors another opportunity to experience Hoare, a private dealer with a very public persona, and an unquenchable thirst for new adventures. ==Personal life==