Combatants Of The Morro De Arica Museum
History
The museum was installed in the house where Colonel Francisco Bolognesi, killed in action during the Battle of Arica (1880), was born in 1816. The mansion, declared a national monument on January 29, 1962, was restored under the military government of Juan Velasco Alvarado, inaugurated on June 7, 1975, by then War Minister Francisco Morales Bermúdez in a ceremony assisted by the descendants of those who fought during the battle. Its interior restoration was carried out by the architect Alfonso Estremadoyro, who restored its colonial appearance, but not the façade, whose restoration was in charge of the National Institute of Culture. In 2016 the museum was restored again as well as many pieces from its collection, such as military suits and handwritten letters from Bolognesi.
Collection
The museum is divided into 12 thematic rooms. Among the most notable pieces in the collection are the paintings La respuesta and El último cartucho by Juan Lepiani, and the Peruvian flag that flew on the Morro de Arica before it became Chilean territory.
See also
References
- ^ López Mendoza, Víctor (1980). La Epopeya del Morro de Arica, 7 de junio de 1880 (in Spanish). Ministerio de Guerra, Comisión Permanente de la Historia del Ejército del Perú. pp. 11, 319–333.
- ^ "Visitamos el Museo de los Combatientes del Morro de Arica". TV Perú. 2019-02-01.
- ^ "Museo "De Los Combatientes del Morro de Arica"". ejercito.mil.pe. Archived from the original on 2009-02-26.
- ^ "Museo Combatientes del Morro de Arica" (PDF). Museos en Línea.
- ^ "Histórico Museo de los Combatientes del Morro de Arica reabre sus puertas". Andina. 2016-12-22.
- ^ Guía de museos del Perú (PDF) (in Spanish) (2nd ed.). Ministerio de Cultura. 2012. p. 241. ISBN 9786124126055. OCLC 863065737.