Geneva, Nov 04, 2023
ROLEX, SWITZERLAND, REF. 6098, OYSTER PERPETUAL, ALBERTO PARODI'S COMMEMORATIVE WATCH DONATED FOR HIS SUCCESSFUL PERUVIAN ANDES EXPEDITION, STAINLESS STEEL
A fine and historically important, stainless steel, self winding wristwatch given to the Peruvian geologist Alberto Parodi for his successful ascent of Solimana (6323m) in 1952
Grading System | |
---|---|
Grade: AAA |
Excellent |
Case: 3-8 |
Good Slightly scratched |
Movement: 3 * |
|
Dial: 3-7-01 |
Good Oxidized HANDS Original |
Brand Rolex, Switzerland
Model Oyster Perpetual
Reference 6098
Year 1952
Case No. 726868
Diameter 36 mm.
Signature Dial, case and movement signed
Alberto Parodi was born in 1907 in Puno, a town on Lake Titicaca in Peru, located at an altitude of 3,812 m. above sea level where Father Costantino with his family had moved. Alberto studied in Puno at the "San Carlos" college and at the age of 20 he returned to Italy to study geology at the Milan Polytechnic. After graduating he stayed in Italy as a valid geologist, he was hired by S.A.P.I.E. on 14 October 1937 with an open-ended contract, he arrived in Jubdo (Ethiopia) on 06 January 1938 and assumed command of the geo-mining exploration. At the same column and under his guidance, was assigned the young graduate Alfredo Pollini,who arrived with him in Africa, who joined him in geological and mining research. Alberto and Alfredo worked on the alluvial prospecting of the Kapi hill and on the reactivation of the abandoned mine of Tullu Kapi. They carried out alluvial exploration of the Bir-Bir river basin and its left tributaries near Jubdo and similar exploration was carried out from the column in the catchment basin of the Uva and Kobara rivers right tributaries of the Bir-Bir. In the Alaltù area, Alberto Parodi excavated about 400 wells and explored the plateau on the left of the Didessa valley, studying its geological aspectsOn 15 October 1939 he was recalled to the officers' school in Addis Ababa for military instruction which, for various reasons of study and work, he had not been able to complete.Therefore he had to leave the field service with column No. 4, not without problems for him and the mining company. After completing the officer cadet course, he was called back to war as Second Lieutenant of the mountain artillery in the 140th battery of the LXXth Colonial Artillery Group under the 70th Brigade (139th and 140th batteries). He made the Somaliland campaign and in March 1941 he began the retreat with his unit, first on Harar, then in Galla and Sidama, passing south of Addis Ababa. Reduced to the bone by the desertions of the colored troops (the Group had only 70 men left), they had to surrender earlier. Alberto was captured on April 19, 1941 in Dire Dawa and imprisoned in Eldoret (Camp 356) in Kenya, (P.O.W. 9592), with his colleagues Alfredo Pollini, Mario Maschio, Pasquale Zugno and Giuseppe Puliga. It seems that, released after the end of the war, he had to wait for his repatriation to Italy, at the port of Mombasa, for about a year. Returning home at the end of 1946 he married Professor Eugenia Tamini (biologist at the University of Milan), his fiancée, who had been waiting for him. In 1947, due to the employment crisis in post-war Italy, he decided to move back to Peru where he became a university professor at the San Agustín University in Arequipa. He specialized in Structural Geology and Volcanology and in this university he was Director of the school of Geology. Alberto's wife also taught in the same university in the chair of Comparative Anatomy and Microbiology. The Italian Republic awarded Alberto, on 02 June 1965, with the signatures of Saragat and Moro, the honor of Official Knight of Merit of the Italian Republic. Alberto Parodi was a good mountaineer; between 1955 and 1965, together with Italian mountaineers (Piero Gillon and Mario Fantin), he made several ascents on at least 20 volcanoes above 5,800 m. above sea level In particular he studied "El Misti", volcano of Arequipa, writing several scientific notes. He also wrote about the astronomical observatory of Carmen Alto, recounting that while in captivity in Kenya, he read a book that spoke of the discovery, made from that very site by the astronomer William Pikering in 1898, of a new satellite of Saturn (Phoebe). Finally, almost blind, he wrote a work on Lake Titicaca on whose shores (Puno) he was born. He was an international consultant for several hydroelectric projects and Peruvian representative at the Smithsonian Institute of Vulcanology, presenting many projects on geothermal energy, until his death in 1999.