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- Boer War Memorial, Bedford
- Boer War Memorial, Beeston
- Boer War Memorial, Birmingham
- 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, Glasgow
- Boer War Memorial, Islington
- Boer War Memorial, Norwich
- Boer War Memorial, Salford
- Boer War Memorial, Wallasey
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Bust of Haile Selassie The bust of Selassie, first erected in 1957, was destroyed by a group of protestors on June 30th 2020. The likely motivation for the action was a response to the killing of the Ethiopian protest singer Hachalu Hundessa in Addis Ababa the previous day.
- 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.
- Equestrian statue of Charles Vane
- Equestrian statue of Douglas Haig, Westminster
- Equestrian statue of Frederick Prince of Wales, Hartwell House
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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 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 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 King Edward VII, Westminster
- Equestrian statue of King George III, Pall Mall
- Equestrian statue of King George III, Windsor
- Equestrian statue of the Duke of Wellington, Glasgow
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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
- Equestrian statue of William III, Petersfield
- Equestrian statue of William III, Westminster
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Melville Monument A very tall stone tower in St. Andrew's Square, Edinburgh, topped with a statue of Henry Dundas
- Memorial to the Kings Own Scottish Borderers, Edinburgh
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Victor Schœlcher Memorial, Vieux-Habitants The monument consists of a high white stone base on which stands a bust of Victor Schœlcher
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Monument to Ernest Deproge Bust of Ernest Deproge, in frock coat and with a full beard, one of the symbols worn by French Republicans in the late 19th century.
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Monument to Doctor Hamy The monument in honor of Doctor Hamy consists of a pedestal on which a bronze bust of Ernest Hamy is mounted, and in front of which an allegorical female figure in a long, full dress, holding a skull in her left hand and a measuring instrument in her right. Stylized ethnographic types are engraved on three sides of the pedestal: a Breton woman on the right, a North American First Nations man and an Asian man at the back, and a South American man on the left.
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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.
- Monument to Thomas Carlyle, Glasgow
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Monument Victor Schœlcher, Schœlcher The statue, created by Martinican sculptor Marie-Thérèse Lung Fou (1909-1981), depicts abolitionist Victor Schœlcher standing in full regalia. The refined, sober work of art deco inspiration honors the memory of the abolitionist politician with dignity. The artist breaks with the paternalistic, colonial vision of older monuments, notably those in Fort-de-France and Cayenne. A plaque on the pedestal recalls the decree of the Provisional Government of March 4, 1848: “No French land shall bear slaves any longer. Victor Schœlcher 1804-1893”.
- Quintin and Alice Hogg Memorial
- Royal Artillery Boer War Memorial, London
- Statue of Alexandra, Whitechapel
- Statue of Arthur Bower Forwood
- Statue of Arthur Conan Doyle
- Statue of Augustus John
- Statue of Benjamin Disraeli, Aylesbury
- Statue of Benjamin Disraeli, Bolton
- Statue of Benjamin Disraeli, Liverpool