The Zeiss Bernotar were introduced in the 1930ies. I have found a paper from 1939/1940 by J. Wempe testing it for astronomy purposes. He has a transmission chart in that paper showing a strong drop down past 400nm. At 365 it was already very close to zero. In that paper it is also mentiones, that Zeiss made some special Bernotar filters „with very clear glass“, that were good a bit deeper into UV.
The picture with the aluminum is interesting, as the reflection on the „metal“ is going down as well. Maybe that is because there is always an oxide layer on Al, though only a couple of nm thick (you can grow it into the micro meter range). This layer is used in metallography on Al to reveal the crystal orientation of grains. The samples are polished, anodized (Barker) and then investigated with polarized light. Different orientation then gives different colors.