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United Kingdom
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Equestrian statue of Elizabeth II, Windsor
- Equestrian statue of Frederick Prince of Wales, Hartwell House
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Equestrian statue of Frederick Roberts, Glasgow
Duplicate of a statue erected in Kolkata, sculpted by Harry Bates. The original statue in India was inaugurated in 1898. -
Equestrian statue of Frederick Roberts, Westminster
Duplicate of the statue erected in Glasgow, sculpted by Harry Bates. The original statue was inaugurated in Kolkata in 1898. -
Equestrian statue of Garnet Wolseley
- Equestrian statue of George I, Hackwood Park
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Equestrian statue of George I, Stowe
The statue of George I was commissioned by Richard Temple, 1st Viscount Cobham (1675–1749), who is possibly linked to a bill of sale for 272 enslaved people and ivory purchased in Guinea and sold in Jamaica dating from 1715. -
Equestrian statue of George White, Westminster
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Equestrian statue of Henry Hardinge
The statue of Hardinge was originally installed in Kolkata, India, in 1858, but was repatriated to the UK in 1950 after Indian independence. -
Equestrian statue of Horatio Kitchener, Medway
The statue of Kitchener was originally erected in Kolkata in 1914. It was then relocated to Khartoum in 1920, before being repatriated to Chatham in 1959 after Sudan had declared its independence from Britain. -
Equestrian statue of Hugh Gough
The statue of Gough was originally installed in Phoenix Park in Dublin in 1878. In the mid-twentieth century, the statue became intensely contested: in 1944, it lost its head and sword, followed by its rear leg in 1956. In 1957, the Irish Republican Army (IRA) blew it off its plinth. The statue was kept in storage by the Dublin Corporation, before being sold in 1986 on the condition it left Ireland. It is now currently located at Chillingham Castle in Northumberland. -
Equestrian statue of John Hope
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Equestrian statue of King Edward VII, Westminster
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Equestrian statue of King George III, Pall Mall
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Equestrian statue of King George III, Windsor
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Equestrian statue of King George IV, Trafalgar Square
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Equestrian statue of Prince Albert, Halifax
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Equestrian statue of Prince Albert, Holborn
Accompanied by two bronze relief panels, titled "The Prince laying the first stone of the Royal Exchange, Jan 17, 1842", and "Exhibition of All Nations, 1851, Britannia distributing awards", and two bronze allegorical girls representing "History" and "Peace". -
Equestrian statue of Prince Albert, Windsor
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Equestrian statue of Prince Albert, Wolverhampton
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Equestrian statue of Prince George, the Duke of Cambridge
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Equestrian statue of Redvers Buller, Exeter
Equestrian statue of General Sir Redvers Buller and his horse "Biffen", sculpted by Adrian Jones. The statue was commissioned by the Buller Memorial Committee (established in Exeter in October 1901 after Buller's controversial dismissal from the British Army) and was unveiled in the city in 1905. The statue stands at the junction of Hele Road and New North Road, in between Exeter College and Bury Meadow Park. The statue and its plinth make direct references to Buller's colonial career. The inclusion of Buller's horse Biffen and the line on the plinth, "HE SAVED NATAL", are references to Buller's eventual victory at the relief of Ladysmith on March 1st, 1900 during the Second Boer War of 1899-1902. Other inscriptions on the plinth note the locations where Buller was involved in colonial conflicts, including India, China, Canada, Ashanti (Ghana), Sudan and South Africa. The statue of Buller is unusual in that it is a rare case of an equestrian statue depicting a military general located outside of London. Most statues of this type (which typically depicted either a monarch or a military figure) were usually installed in the metropole at the time, and the statue of Stapleton Cotton in Cheshire is probably the closest artistic counterpart to Buller's statue. Jones had considerable experience in sculpting equestrian statues beforehand, producing works such as Duncan's Horses in 1892 and Persimmon in 1895. -
Equestrian statue of Robert Napier
The statue of Napier in London is a copy of an original created by Boehm for Kolkata, India in 1883, which now stands in Barrackpore. -
Equestrian statue of Stapleton Cotton, 1st Viscount Combermere
Bronze equestrian statue of the slave-owner, colonial administrator, and military officer Stapleton Cotton, accompanied by inscriptions listing the many military campaigns and colonies Cotton was involved in. -
Equestrian statue of the Black Prince
Although a depiction of Edward, the Black Prince, Historic England describes the equestrian statue as 'almost certainly a tribute to Edward VII'. Though the origins of "The Black Prince" as an appellation for the former Edward are uncertain, the nickname also raises interesting questions about the meanings of blackness in fourteenth century Europe, or indeed how ideas of blackness have been reconfigured in the present. -
Equestrian statue of the Duke of Wellington, City of London
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Equestrian statue of the Duke of Wellington, Glasgow
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Equestrian statue of William Cobbett
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Equestrian statue of William III, Bristol
The equestrian statue of William III by John Michael Rysbrack is situated at the centre of Queen's Square, which was home to many Bristol merchants and slave-traders in the eighteenth century. According to Nicola Smith, the city's merchant community and the Society of Merchant Venturers were prominent financial backers of the statue to William, with the Society contributing at least £500 to its erection. The statue was finally unveiled in 1736 amidst the peak of Bristol's involvement in the transatlantic slave trade. -
Equestrian statue of William III, Hull
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Equestrian statue of William III, Petersfield
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Equestrian statue of William III, Westminster
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Leverhulme Memorial
The monument to Leverhulme consists of an obelisk with a bronze allegorical figure standing on its top, accompanied a free-standing group of four bronze allegorical figures at its base. -
Melville Monument
A very tall stone tower in St. Andrew's Square, Edinburgh, topped with a statue of Henry Dundas -
Memorial to Alfred Lewis Jones, Liverpool
Commemorative memorial at bust length of Alfred Lewis Jones (1845–1909) with a bronze allegorical statue of Liverpool placed above. -
Memorial to the Kings Own Scottish Borderers, Edinburgh
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Monument to the King's Liverpool Regiment, Liverpool
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Monument to Thomas Carlyle, Glasgow
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Monument to William Penn Symons
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Nelson Monument, Liverpool
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Nelson's Column
Depicts a standing figure of Nelson, on top of a high Corinthina pillar with an elaborate capitol. Nelson is in a dynamic standing posture, wearing eighteenth-century military attire, and holding a sword in his left hand. The sleeve of the amputated arm is tucked into the lapels of the court. The four sides of the pedestal are decorated with four bronze reliefs, created using captured and melted French cannons. The south-facing panel, titled 'The death of Nelson' depicts a soldier with African features, holding a musket. David Olusoga notes how contemporary observers noticed this figure, their African features, and commented on it positively. Four bronze Barbary lions were added to the base of the column much later, in 1867. -
Physical Energy equestrian statue, London
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Quintin and Alice Hogg Memorial
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Royal Artillery Boer War Memorial, London
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Royal Scots Greys Memorial, Edinburgh
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Second Battalion Royal Sussex Regiment memorial, Eastbourne
Bronze statue of a colonial officer, wearing the uniform of the Bengal Regiment prior to the Indian Mutiny, on top of a granite plinth. The plinth is accompanied by four bronze panels. The bronze plaques on the south west and north west sides are pictorial reliefs of soldiers in action in the Black Mountain and Tirah expeditions. The plaque on the south east side dedicates the memorial to the Second Battalion Royal Sussex Regiment, while the plaque on the north west side lists the names of 328 men who died in service between 1882 and 1902. -
Statue of Abraham Lincoln, Manchester
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Statue of Abraham Lincoln, Parliament Square
- Statue of Alderman John Lucas
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Statue of Alexander Taylor The statue of Taylor was originally installed by Kashmir Gate in Delhi, India in 1915. After Indian independence, however, the statue was later relocated in 1960 to the former site of the Royal Indian Engineering College in Engelfield Green in the UK. In 2007, the statue was placed into storage.