Albert Einstein's first violin which he was forced to hide from the Nazi's is set to be sold for a whopping £300,000. The famed physicist acquired the stringed instrument shortly before leaving Munich to move to Switzerland for his studies in the mid-1890s. He played the violin, which he later engraved 'Lina', throughout his late teens and into his adult life as he developed his groundbreaking theory of relativity. Now, the violin has been placed on the market at an estimated price of £200k to £300k, while his bicycle saddle could also fetch up to £50,000. The incredible instrument, which...