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Items
statue consists of is exactly
bronze
- Albert Memorial
- Boer War Memorial (The Black Watch), Edinburgh
- Boer War Memorial, Aldershot
- Boer War Memorial, Bedford
- Boer War Memorial, Belfast
- Boer War Memorial, Birmingham
- Boer War Memorial, Brighton
- Boer War Memorial, Bristol
- Boer War Memorial, Bury
- Boer War Memorial, Bury St Edmunds
- Boer War Memorial, Canterbury
- Boer War Memorial, Cardiff
- Boer War Memorial, Cheltenham
- Boer War Memorial, Clifton College
- Boer War Memorial, Darlington
- Boer War Memorial, Dewsbury
- Boer War Memorial, Gateshead
- Boer War Memorial, Halifax
- Boer War Memorial, Huddersfield
- Boer War Memorial, Ipswich
- Boer War Memorial, Islington
- Boer War Memorial, Manchester
- Boer War Memorial, Newcastle
- Boer War Memorial, Norwich
- Boer War Memorial, Nuneaton
- Boer War Memorial, Penrith
- Boer War Memorial, Salford
- Boer War Memorial, Warrington
- Boer War Memorial, Worcester
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Bust of Agatha Christie, Torquay A small bust in bronze, mounted on a stone plinth, situated close to the Pavilion. It shows the author with a sympathetic expression and small smile, her head slightly titled to one side. The English Riviera website says: "The Agatha Christie Memorial Bust was commissioned by the English Riviera Tourist Board to mark the centenary of the author’s birth on September 15, 1890. Sculpted by the Dutch artist Carol Van Den Boom-Cairns, it was based on a photograph taken when the author was in her 60s. Unveiled by Agatha’s daughter, it was for many years the only bust of the author in the world, until an Agatha Christie Memorial was unveiled in London’s Theatreland in 2012 to commemorate the 60th anniversary of The Mousetrap." The statue was unveiled on 15 September 1990 by Agatha Christie's daughter, Rosalind Hicks. This day was also the occasion for a banquet, whose menu is preserved at the Torquay Museum. The Torquay Museum, about ten minutes walk from the statue, includes an Agatha Christie exhibit. This consists of furniture and props received from ITV Studios after the completion of filming of the final episode of its adaptation of Christie's Poirot novels. The furniture was installed in the museum in 2013. Further donations were received from the actor David Suchet, who had successfully played Poirot in the series. The exhibited items are framed by interpretive panels which speak of Agatha Christie's childhood, adult life, marriages, literary career and the adaptations of her novels. It barely mentions her travels in the Middle East, and makes no mention of the British Empire and its Mandates in the region.
- Bust of Henry Tate, Brixton
- Bust of John Harding, Taunton
- Bust of Rabindranath Tagore, London
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Buste de Charles de Gaulle, Vert-Pré, Le Robert Buste de Charles de Gaulle, Vert-Pré, Le Robert
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Buste de Félix Eboué, La Boucan, commune de Sainte-Rose Buste en bronze placé sur un piédestal orné d'une plaque de marbre rouge sur laquelle sont gravés des extraits du discours de Félix Eboué, en décembre 1936, aux ouvriers en grève de l'Habitation La Boucan (commune de sainte-Rose)
- Buste de Gandhi, Fort-de-France
- Bust of Victor Schœlcher, Basse-Terre
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Chindit Memorial The Chindit Memorial is a war memorial in London, which commemorates both the Chindit special forces in the Second World War and Major General Orde Wingate. There is a blue plaque depicting Wingate's portrait on the reverse side of the memorial plinth.
- Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst Memorial
- Equestrian statue of Charles II, Windsor
- Equestrian statue of Douglas Haig, Westminster
- Equestrian statue of Elizabeth II, Windsor
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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.
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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 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.
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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 John Hope
- Equestrian statue of King Edward VII, Westminster