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- Boer War Memorial, Guernsey
- Boer War Memorial, Penzance
- Boer War Memorial, Shrewsbury
- Boer War Memorial, Wallasey
- Boer War Memorial, Winsford
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Monument aux 3 maréchaux, Saint-Gaudens Le monument a la forme d'un mur assez large, les trois maréchaux de la première Guerre mondiale sont placés en figures de proue, face aux Pyrénées. Foch est au centre, Galliéni à sa doite et Joffre à sa gauche. Tous sont en tenue militaire, enveloppés dans un grand manteau, képi sur la tête, avec leur bâton de maréchal et une liasse de documents pour Joffre. Côté Galliéni, 4 bas-reliefs ornent le monument : - un groupe de 4 combattants vêtus à l’antique - une allégorie de la guerre, - un homme laissant femme et enfant et ramassant son glaive pour combattre - une jeune femme rassemblant autour d’elle deux enfants africain et vietnamien, un troisième jeune garçon en costume malgache est assis à ses pieds. Coté Joffre, 4 bas-reliefs également : - un groupe de 4 combattants vêtus à l’antique - une allégorie de la paix - un couple avec l’homme brisant ses fers avec une masse - Adam et Eve et le serpent.
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Monument Christophe Colomb, Guadeloupe Buste de Christophe Colomb placé sur une colonne et un socle sur lequel sont fixées deux plaques gravées.
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Statue de Jacques Coeur à Bourges La statue est posée sur un piédestal dont les bas-reliefs évoquent les relations tumultueuses de Jacques Coeur avec Charles VII. Coiffé d'un turban, il est représenté à "l'orientale", épée au côté, avec à ses pieds (arrière) des vagues écumantes, autour de lui à droite des objets rappelant son implication dans le commerce maritime : globe, ancre, ballot de marchandises et sac déversant des pièces de monnaie.
- Statue of Annie Jerningham
- Statue of Britannia, South Shields
- Statue of Charles Kingsley
- Statue of Christopher Codrington
- Statue of Edward Harland
- Statue of Enriqueta Augustina Rylands
- Statue of George II, Royal Naval College
- Statue of George, Second Duke of Sutherland, Cliveden
- Statue of Hans Sloane, Physic Garden
- Statue of Henry Edwards
- Statue of Henry Temple, Southampton
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Statue of James Wilson, Hawick The statue of Wilson was originally installed in Kolkata, India. It was later repatriated to London in 1960 after Indian independence, and is now located outside the Heritage Hub in Hawick.
- Statue of John Bright, Manchester
- Statue of John Locke
- Statue of John Rolle, Bicton House
- Statue of John Rolle, Lupton House
- Statue of John Rylands
- Statue of King Edward VII, Tiverton
- Statue of Oliver Heywoods
- Statue of Prince Albert, Hull
- Statue of Prince Albert, Madingley
- Statue of Queen Anne, Hastings
- Statue of Queen Anne, St Paul's Cathedral
- Statue of Queen Victoria, Abingdon
- Statue of Queen Victoria, Belfast
- Statue of Queen Victoria, Bristol
- Statue of Queen Victoria, Harwich
- Statue of Queen Victoria, Kensington Gardens
- Statue of Queen Victoria, Nottingham
- Statue of Queen Victoria, Pearson Park, Hull
- Statue of Queen Victoria, Reading
- Statue of Queen Victoria, Royal Leamington Spa
- Statue of Queen Victoria, Royal Victoria Infirmary, Newcastle
- Statue of Queen Victoria, Southend-on-Sea
- Statue of Queen Victoria, Victoria Gardens, Brighton and Hove
- Statue of Queen Victoria, Worcester
- Statue of Queen Victoria, York
- Statue of Richard Cobden, London
- Statue of Robert Clayton, St Thomas' Hospital
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Statue of Robert Clive, in FCO London A marble statue of Robert Clive in hybrid Roman imperial outfit, modelled on Augustus Caesar, the greatest of all Roman emperors. Clive wears a cingulum militare, or a belt with hanging leather and metal straps, and sandals, to show that he is a soldier. However, on his upper body, he wears a toga, to show his concurrent civilian stature. A short straight sword is inexplicably tucked upside down under his right arm , while the left hand makes an oratorial gesture, presenting him as a philosopher. A shield with the head of Medusa is propped near his feet; since looking into Medusa's eyes was meant to turn the viewer to stone, Medusa shields were intended to be ritually protective in Roman iconography. This statue is therefore a knowledgeable but highly eclectic mix of Roman iconography, which tries to present Clive as a Roman hero, but in a manner that no Roman statue would ever be made. It was one of four marble statues commissioned by the British East India Company in the 1760s, and represented the rising British obsession with Roman-style statuary.
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Statue of Rufus Isaacs, Reading The statue was originally erected in Delhi, India in 1935, but was repatriated to Reading in 1969 and erected in its present position in 1971.
- Statue of Samuel Morley