Mangalore, Feb 14: The museum at St Aloysius College, received a unique exhibit from the German musketeer Peter Rodermann for his bravery on the front during the World War I.
It is an original certificate of the award of the Cross of Honour for Peter Peter Rodermann. Two of his brothers, Michel and Johann fell in the war; only he survived because of his bravery.
According to a press release by the College, the certificate rolled up was preserved in the attic of his house in the remote German village Birresborn in the Eifel. It was discovered recently after nearly a century by his daughter Margaret Rodermann while rummaging through the attic. The certificate is designed in the contemporary Jugendstil of that time and is written in Gothic script. It also bears a small faded photograph of Peter Rodermann. Margaret Rodermann a frequent visitor to Mangalore and to the Museum has presented the certificate to the Aloyseum. The exhibit will be inaugurated by a group of German visitors to the museum on February 19 at 2.30pm.
Prior to this, a pencil drawing made by Antonio Moscheni, the painter of the St Aloysius College Chapel, was presented to the Aloyseum, by Silvana RIzzi, the great grandniece of Antonio Moscheni. Moscheni was a master painter trained at the Academia Carrara in Bergamo, one of the foremost art academies of Italy.
Aloyseum boasts of rare old coins of different countries, lamps, statues and other antique artefacts. The attraction in the museum is a whale's skeleton which is mounted to the ceiling. The first car to hit Mangalore roads is also on display at the museum. The museum also has a notable collection of old utensils, tiles and vessels that were in use in the coastal, and statues of Mother Mary made of wood from pre-Tipu Sultan period.
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