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War memorial

A war memorial is a building, monument, statue, or other edifice to celebrate a war or victory, or (predominating in modern times) to commemorate those who died or were injured in a war.

Shrine of Remembrance in Melbourne, Australia
Jatiyo Smriti Soudho in Bangladesh commemorates those who gave their lives in the Bangladesh Liberation War of 1971
Monument for the defenders of Jerusalem in 1948 dedicated to Israeli soldiers who fought for the liberation of the Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War
An M4 Sherman tank in the centre of Bastogne, Belgium
The Monument to the dead of World War II commemorates Brazil's participation and losses in the Second World War
The National War Memorial in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
The Monument to the People's Heroes in Beijing, China
The Unknown Soldier Memorial in Cairo, Egypt honours Egyptians and Arabs who lost their lives in the 1973 October War.
Pacifist memorial at Gentioux, France with the inscription Maudite soit la guerre (Cursed be war)
German memorial commemorating soldiers from the town of Niederaltdorf who died in World War I
National War Memorial (India) in New Delhi, India
The al-Shaheed Monument in Baghdad dedicated to the Iraqi soldiers who died in the Iran–Iraq War
The Irish National War Memorial Gardens in Dublin, Ireland honour Irish soldiers who gave their lives in the First World War, as well as those who fought in Irish regiments of the various Allied armies
The Yasukuni Shrine in Japan
Main building and museum of the War Memorial of Korea
Monument to the Heroes of the Warsaw Uprising in Poland.
The Kranji War Cemetery in Singapore is the final resting place for Allied soldiers who perished during the Battle of Singapore and the subsequent Japanese occupation of the island
Monument to the Women of World War II in London, United Kingdom
The Liberty Memorial, National World War I Memorial of the USA in Kansas City, Missouri
Original 1915 war memorial in Genoa Voltri (Italy); sculptor Vittorio Lavezzari (1864–1938). The monument was melted down during the Second World War for its materials.
The Auckland War Memorial Museum in New Zealand with the Cenotaph in front
A war memorial erected in 1998 in Lahti, Finland
The Interallied Memorial of Cointe, Liège, Belgium

Symbolism edit

Historical usage edit

It has been suggested that the world's earliest known war memorial is the White Monument at Tell Banat, Aleppo Governorate, Syria, which dates from the 3rd millennium BC and appears to have involved the systematic burial of fighters from a state army.[1]

The Nizari Ismailis of the Alamut period (the Assassins) had made a secret roll of honor in Alamut Castle containing the names of the assassins and their victims during their uprising.[2]

The oldest war memorial in the United Kingdom is Oxford University's All Souls College. It was founded in 1438 with the provision that its fellows should pray for those killed in the long wars with France.[3]

War memorials for the Franco-Prussian War (1870–71) were the first in Europe to have rank-and-file soldiers commemorated by name.[4] Every soldier that was killed was granted a permanent resting-place as part of the terms of the Treaty of Frankfurt (1871).

To commemorate the millions who died in World War I, war memorials became commonplace in communities large and small around the world.[citation needed]

Modern usage edit

In modern times the main intent of war memorials is not to glorify war, but to honor those who have died. Sometimes, as in the case of the Warsaw Genuflection of Willy Brandt, they may also serve as focal points of increasing understanding between previous enemies.

Using modern technology an international project is currently archiving all post-1914 Commonwealth war graves and Commonwealth War Graves Commission memorials to create a virtual memorial (see The War Graves Photographic Project for further details).

History edit

World War I edit

During WWI, many nations saw massive devastation and loss of life. More people lost their lives in the east than in the west, but the outcome was different. In the west, and in response to the victory there obtained, most of the cities in the countries involved in the conflict erected memorials, with the memorials in smaller villages and towns often listing the names of each local soldier who had been killed in addition (so far as the decision by the French and British in 1916 to construct governmentally designed cemeteries was concerned) to their names being recorded on military headstones, often against the will of those directly involved, and without any opportunity of choice in the British Empire (whose war graves were administered by the Imperial War Graves Commission). Massive British monuments commemorating thousands of dead with no identified war grave, such as the Menin Gate at Ypres and the Thiepval memorial on the Somme, were also constructed.

The Liberty Memorial, located in Kansas City, Missouri, is a memorial dedicated to all Americans who served in the Great War. For various reasons connected with their character, the same may be said to apply to certain governmental memorials in the United Kingdom (The Cenotaph in London, relating to the Empire in general, and the Scottish National War Memorial in Edinburgh, also with a reference to the Empire, but with particular connections to the United Kingdom, having been opened by the Prince of Wales in 1927 and with the King and the Queen the first visitors and contributors of a casket of the Scottish names for addition within the Shrine). In Maryland, in the center of the city of Baltimore facing the Baltimore City Hall to the west is a geometric paved tree-lined plaza with the War Memorial Building to the east with a large marble decorated civic auditorium and historical and veterans museum below, designed by Laurence Hall Fowler, dedicated 1925.

Pacifist war memorials and those relating to war and peace edit

After World War I, some towns in France set up pacifist war memorials. Instead of commemorating the glorious dead, these memorials denounce war with figures of grieving widows and children rather than soldiers. Such memorials provoked anger among veterans and the military in general. The most famous is at Gentioux-Pigerolles in the department of Creuse. Below the column which lists the name of the fallen stands an orphan in bronze pointing to an inscription 'Maudite soit la guerre' (Cursed be war). Feelings ran so high that the memorial was not officially inaugurated until 1990 and soldiers at the nearby army camp were under orders to turn their heads when they walked past. Another such memorial is in the small town of Équeurdreville-Hainneville (formerly Équeurdreville) in the department of Manche. Here the statue is of a grieving widow with two small children.[5][6]

There seems to be no exact equivalent form of a pacifist memorial within the United Kingdom but evidently sentiments were in many cases identical. Thus, and although it seems that this has never been generally recognized, it can be argued that there was throughout the United Kingdom a construction of war memorials with reference to the concept of peace (e.g. West Hartlepool War Memorial in what is now known as Hartlepool (previously West Hartlepool) with the inscription 'Thine O Lord is the Victory' relating to amongst other architecture the 1871 Royal Albert Hall of Arts and Sciences with a frieze including the same words and concluding 'Glory be to God on high and on earth peace').

World War II and later edit

In many cases, World War I memorials were later extended to show the names of locals who died in the World War II in addition.

Since that time memorials to the dead in other conflicts such as the Korean War and Vietnam War have also noted individual contributions, at least in the West.

In relation to actions which may well in point of fact be historically connected with the world wars even if this happens, for whatever reason, not to be a matter of general discussion (e.g. occupation by Western forces in the 1920s of Palestine and other areas being the homelands of Arabs in the Near East and followed eighty years later in 2001 by the '9/11' raid on New York and elsewhere in the United States) similar historically and architecturally significant memorials are also designed and constructed (vide National September 11 Memorial).

Types edit

  • War memorials can differ significantly in type and composition. Many war memorials often take the form of a traditional monument or statue, while others consist of entire buildings, often containing a museum, while yet others are simple plaques. War memorials can take a variety of other forms, including, but not limited to, commemorative gardens, stadiums, eternal flames, urban plazas, stained glass windows, gateways, fountains and/or pools of water, military equipment, and parks.
  • War memorials often serve as a meeting place for commemorative services. As such, they are often found near the centre of town, or contained in a park or plaza to allow easy public access.
  • Many war memorials bear plaques listing the names of those that died in battle. Sometimes these lists can be very long. Some war memorials are dedicated to a specific battle, while others are more general in nature and bear inscriptions listing various theatres of war.
  • Many war memorials have epitaphs relating to the unit, battle or war they commemorate. For example, an epitaph which adorns numerous memorials in Commonwealth countries is "The Ode" by Laurence Binyon:
They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old.
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.
Blow out, you bugles, over the rich Dead.
There are none of these so lonely and poor of old,
But dying has made us rarer gifts than gold.
  • In the years following the end of World War I a heated debate occurred in the United States as to whether memorials should be the standard sort that were created after the Civil War or a more progressive sort of "living memorials." These consisted of bridges, parks, libraries, playgrounds, community centers, civic auditoriums and athletic fields.[7] Examples include Soldier Field and Veterans Stadium.
  • Underwater memorials are serving veterans and Soldiers who served as divers during their wartime missions.[8]

Tank monument edit

A tank monument or armoured memorial is a tank withdrawn from military service and displayed to commemorate a battle or a military unit. Obsolete tanks may also be displayed as gate guards outside military bases.

Immediately following the First World War, a number of obsolete tanks were presented to towns and cities throughout Britain for display and for use as memorials: most were scrapped in the 1920s and 1930s, but one that survives is a Mark IV Female tank at Ashford, Kent.

Several Second World War tanks are preserved as memorials to major armoured offensives in the Ardennes, such as the Battle of Sedan and the Battle of the Bulge. These include:[9]

A plinth-mounted T-35/85 tank commemorates the soldiers of the 5th Guards Tank Army, at Znamianka in Ukraine.[10]

In cemeteries edit

Many cemeteries tended by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission have an identical war memorial called the Cross of Sacrifice designed by Sir Reginald Blomfield that varies in height from 18 ft to 32 ft depending on the size of the cemetery. If there are one thousand or more burials, a Commonwealth cemetery will contain a Stone of Remembrance, designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens with words from the Wisdom of Sirach: "Their name liveth for evermore"; all the Stones of Remembrance are 11 ft 6 ins long and 5 ft high with three steps leading up to them.

Arlington National Cemetery has a Canadian Cross of Sacrifice with the names of all the citizens of the USA who lost their lives fighting in the Canadian forces during the Korean War and two World Wars.

Controversy edit

War memorials can sometimes be politically controversial. A notable case is that of the Yasukuni Shrine in Japan, where a number of convicted World War II war criminals are interred. Chinese and Korean representatives have often protested against the visits of Japanese politicians to the shrine. The visits have in the past led to severe diplomatic conflicts between the nations, and Japanese businesses were attacked in China after a visit by former Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi to the shrine was widely reported and criticized in Chinese and Korean media.[11]

In a similar case, former German chancellor Helmut Kohl was criticised by writers Günter Grass and Elie Wiesel for visiting the war cemetery at Bitburg (in the company of Ronald Reagan) which also contained the bodies of SS troops.[12] Unlike the case of the Yasukuni Shrine, there was no element of intentional disregard of international opinion involved, as is often claimed for the politician visits to the Japanese shrine.

Soviet World War II memorials included quotes of Joseph Stalin's texts, frequently replaced after his death. Such memorials were often constructed in city centres and now are sometimes regarded as symbols of Soviet occupation and removed, which in turn may spark protests (see Bronze Soldier of Tallinn).

The Fusiliers' memorial arch to the Royal Dublin Fusiliers who fought in the Boer War, erected at 1907 in St. Stephen's Green, Dublin, was called "Traitors' Gate" by the Redmondites and later Irish Republicans, from whose point of view Irish soldiers going off to fight the British Empire's wars were traitors to Ireland. The sharpness of the controversy gradually faded, and while the term "Traitors' Gate" is still in occasional colloquial use in Dublin daily life, it has mostly lost its pejorative meaning.

In Australia, in 1981, historian Henry Reynolds raised the issue of whether war memorials should be erected to Indigenous Australians who had died fighting against British invaders on their lands.

How, then, do we deal with the Aboriginal dead? White Australians frequently say that 'all that' should be forgotten. But it will not be. It cannot be. Black memories are too deeply, too recently scarred. And forgetfulness is a strange prescription coming from a community which has revered the fallen warrior and emblazoned the phrase 'Lest We Forget' on monuments throughout the land. [...] [D]o we make room for the Aboriginal dead on our memorials, cenotaphs, boards of honour and even in the pantheon of national heroes? If we are to continue to celebrate the sacrifice of men and women who died for their country can we deny admission to fallen tribesmen? There is much in their story that Australians have traditionally admired. They were ever the underdogs, were always outgunned, yet frequently faced death without flinching. If they did not die for Australia as such they fell defending their homelands, their sacred sites, their way of life. What is more the blacks bled on their own soil and not half a world away furthering the strategic objectives of a distant Motherland whose influence must increasingly be seen as of transient importance in the history of the continent.[13]

Reynolds' suggestion proved controversial.[14] Occasional memorials have been erected to commemorate Aboriginal people's resistance to colonisation, or to commemorate white massacres of Indigenous Australians. These memorials have often generated controversy. For example, a 1984 memorial to the Kalkadoon people's "resistance against the paramilitary force of European settlers and the Queensland Native Mounted Police" was "frequently shot at" and "eventually blown up".[15]

With the advent of long war, some memorials are constructed before the conflict is over, leaving space for extra names of the dead. For instance, the Northwood Gratitude and Honor Memorial in Irvine, CA, memorializes an ongoing pair of US wars, and has space to inscribe the names of approximately 8,000 fallen servicemembers,[16] while the UK National Memorial Arboretum near Lichfield in England hosts the UK's National Armed Forces Memorial which displays the names of the more than 16,000 people who have already died on active service in the UK armed forces since World War II, with more space available for future fatalities.

List of war memorials edit

Africa edit

Egypt edit

Somaliland edit

Americas edit

Brazil edit

Canada edit

Falkland Islands edit

United States edit

 
Valley Forge Memorial Arch, Valley Forge, Pennsylvania
Memorial coliseums and stadiums in the United States edit

Asia edit

Bangladesh edit

China edit

Hong Kong edit

India edit

 
War memorial of the 49th Bengalee Regiment (Bangali Platoon) at College St., Kolkata.
 
The Victory War Memorial

Iraq edit

Israel edit

Japan edit

Lebanon edit

Malaysia edit

Myanmar edit

Nepal edit

Philippines edit

Singapore edit

South Korea edit

Thailand edit

United Arab Emirates edit

  • Oasis of Dignity

Europe edit

Austria edit

Belarus edit

Belgium edit

Croatia edit

Denmark edit

Estonia edit

France edit

Germany edit

Ireland edit

Italy edit

Latvia edit

Malta edit

Netherlands edit

Poland edit

Romania edit

Russia edit

Slovenia edit

Spain edit

Switzerland edit

Turkey edit

UK edit

Oceania edit

Australia edit

New Zealand edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Site in Syria could be world's oldest war memorial, study finds". The Guardian. 27 May 2021.
  2. ^ Bressler, Richard (2018). The Thirteenth Century: A World History. McFarland. p. 123. ISBN 978-1-4766-7185-7.
  3. ^ "History of the College". All Soul's College, University of Oxford. Retrieved 29 May 2016.
  4. ^ Varley, Karine. Under the Shadow of Defeat: The War of 1870–71 in French Memory. Palgrave 2008.
  5. ^ Coëpel, Philippe (1997). Que maudite soit la guerre. Bricqueboscq: Editions des champs. p. 204. ISBN 2-910138-08-9.
  6. ^ For pictures of the pacifist memorials at Gentioux-Pigerolles and at Équeurdreville-Hainneville and elsewhere see fr:Monument aux morts pacifiste
  7. ^ Piehler, G. Kurt Remembering War the American Way, Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington D.C., 1995 pp. 105–109
  8. ^ Sean Kimmons, Army News Service (August 14, 2019) Army veterans find healing in new underwater memorial The underwater memorial can be visited by scuba divers.
  9. ^ "Ardennes Area Battlefield", World War II, Dorling Kindersley, 2010, p. 318, ISBN 978-1405335201
  10. ^ "Шукач – dombrovskii_a посетил(а) '5-я гвардейская танковая армия. Памятник освободителям Знаменки'". www.shukach.com. Retrieved 31 March 2018.
  11. ^ Japan: Chinese foreign minister on fence-mending visitRadio Australia program transcript, date unknown
  12. ^ Reagan Joins Kohl in Brief Memorial at Bitburg GravesNew York Times, Monday 6 May 1985
  13. ^ Reynolds, Henry, The Other Side of the Frontier: Aboriginal resistance to the European invasion of Australia, 1981, ISBN 0-86840-892-1, p. 202
  14. ^ Reynolds, Henry, Why Weren't We Told?, 1999, ISBN 0-14-027842-7, chapter 12: "Lest We Forget", pp. 169–184
  15. ^ ibid, pp. 177–178
  16. ^ "northwood_memorial.jpg (image)". 3.bp.blogspot.com. Retrieved 31 March 2018.
  17. ^ "Northwood Gratitude and Honor Memorial > Home". www.northwoodmemorial.com. Retrieved 31 March 2018.

External links edit

General edit

  • Sites of Memory (Historical markers, memorials, monuments, and cemeteries worldwide)

France edit

  • Mémorial pacifist in French
  • Queutchny1418 (As of 26 April 2014, more than 5240 pictures of 1914–1918 memorials)(in French)
  • Mémorial-GenWeb (French war memorials (photos and inscriptions), in French)

Germany edit

  • German war memorials (photos and inscriptions), in German
  • Remembering The Reich (German World War II and Holocaust memorials, private travel blog entry)

Ireland edit

  • Irish War Memorials, (An inventory of war memorials in Ireland)

Japan edit

  • Kamikaze Images – Monuments, (monuments for WWII Special Attack Forces including Kamikaze Corps)

United Kingdom edit

  • Architecture (from the Commonwealth War Graves Commission website)
  • UK War Memorials Register (the comprehensive national register of over 68,000 UK war memorials and the names of over 900,000 of the individuals they commemorate)
  • Scottish War Memorials Project (public access forum recording all of Scotland's War Memorials)
  • Charity recording North East War Memorials including names and images.

United States edit

  • United States Navy Memorial (including Navy Log and naval history information)
  • Vietnam Unit Memorial Monument, (Coronado California)

memorial, other, uses, memorial, disambiguation, memorial, building, monument, statue, other, edifice, celebrate, victory, predominating, modern, times, commemorate, those, died, were, injured, shrine, remembrance, melbourne, australia, jatiyo, smriti, soudho,. For other uses see War Memorial disambiguation A war memorial is a building monument statue or other edifice to celebrate a war or victory or predominating in modern times to commemorate those who died or were injured in a war Shrine of Remembrance in Melbourne Australia Jatiyo Smriti Soudho in Bangladesh commemorates those who gave their lives in the Bangladesh Liberation War of 1971 Monument for the defenders of Jerusalem in 1948 dedicated to Israeli soldiers who fought for the liberation of the Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem during the 1948 Arab Israeli War An M4 Sherman tank in the centre of Bastogne Belgium The Monument to the dead of World War II commemorates Brazil s participation and losses in the Second World War The National War Memorial in Ottawa Ontario Canada The Monument to the People s Heroes in Beijing China The Unknown Soldier Memorial in Cairo Egypt honours Egyptians and Arabs who lost their lives in the 1973 October War Pacifist memorial at Gentioux France with the inscription Maudite soit la guerre Cursed be war German memorial commemorating soldiers from the town of Niederaltdorf who died in World War I National War Memorial India in New Delhi India The al Shaheed Monument in Baghdad dedicated to the Iraqi soldiers who died in the Iran Iraq War The Irish National War Memorial Gardens in Dublin Ireland honour Irish soldiers who gave their lives in the First World War as well as those who fought in Irish regiments of the various Allied armies The Yasukuni Shrine in Japan Main building and museum of the War Memorial of Korea Monument to the Heroes of the Warsaw Uprising in Poland The Kranji War Cemetery in Singapore is the final resting place for Allied soldiers who perished during the Battle of Singapore and the subsequent Japanese occupation of the island Monument to the Women of World War II in London United Kingdom The Liberty Memorial National World War I Memorial of the USA in Kansas City Missouri Original 1915 war memorial in Genoa Voltri Italy sculptor Vittorio Lavezzari 1864 1938 The monument was melted down during the Second World War for its materials The Auckland War Memorial Museum in New Zealand with the Cenotaph in front A war memorial erected in 1998 in Lahti Finland The Interallied Memorial of Cointe Liege Belgium Contents 1 Symbolism 1 1 Historical usage 1 2 Modern usage 2 History 2 1 World War I 2 2 Pacifist war memorials and those relating to war and peace 2 3 World War II and later 3 Types 3 1 Tank monument 4 In cemeteries 5 Controversy 6 List of war memorials 6 1 Africa 6 1 1 Egypt 6 1 2 Somaliland 6 2 Americas 6 2 1 Brazil 6 2 2 Canada 6 2 3 Falkland Islands 6 2 4 United States 6 2 4 1 Memorial coliseums and stadiums in the United States 6 3 Asia 6 3 1 Bangladesh 6 3 2 China 6 3 2 1 Hong Kong 6 3 3 India 6 3 4 Iraq 6 3 5 Israel 6 3 6 Japan 6 3 7 Lebanon 6 3 8 Malaysia 6 3 9 Myanmar 6 3 10 Nepal 6 3 11 Philippines 6 3 12 Singapore 6 3 13 South Korea 6 3 14 Thailand 6 3 15 United Arab Emirates 6 4 Europe 6 4 1 Austria 6 4 2 Belarus 6 4 3 Belgium 6 4 4 Croatia 6 4 5 Denmark 6 4 6 Estonia 6 4 7 France 6 4 8 Germany 6 4 9 Ireland 6 4 10 Italy 6 4 11 Latvia 6 4 12 Malta 6 4 13 Netherlands 6 4 14 Poland 6 4 15 Romania 6 4 16 Russia 6 4 17 Slovenia 6 4 18 Spain 6 4 19 Switzerland 6 4 20 Turkey 6 4 21 UK 6 5 Oceania 6 5 1 Australia 6 5 2 New Zealand 7 See also 8 References 9 External links 9 1 General 9 2 France 9 3 Germany 9 4 Ireland 9 5 Japan 9 6 United Kingdom 9 7 United StatesSymbolism editHistorical usage edit It has been suggested that the world s earliest known war memorial is the White Monument at Tell Banat Aleppo Governorate Syria which dates from the 3rd millennium BC and appears to have involved the systematic burial of fighters from a state army 1 The Nizari Ismailis of the Alamut period the Assassins had made a secret roll of honor in Alamut Castle containing the names of the assassins and their victims during their uprising 2 The oldest war memorial in the United Kingdom is Oxford University s All Souls College It was founded in 1438 with the provision that its fellows should pray for those killed in the long wars with France 3 War memorials for the Franco Prussian War 1870 71 were the first in Europe to have rank and file soldiers commemorated by name 4 Every soldier that was killed was granted a permanent resting place as part of the terms of the Treaty of Frankfurt 1871 To commemorate the millions who died in World War I war memorials became commonplace in communities large and small around the world citation needed Modern usage edit In modern times the main intent of war memorials is not to glorify war but to honor those who have died Sometimes as in the case of the Warsaw Genuflection of Willy Brandt they may also serve as focal points of increasing understanding between previous enemies Using modern technology an international project is currently archiving all post 1914 Commonwealth war graves and Commonwealth War Graves Commission memorials to create a virtual memorial see The War Graves Photographic Project for further details History editWorld War I edit Main article World War I memorials During WWI many nations saw massive devastation and loss of life More people lost their lives in the east than in the west but the outcome was different In the west and in response to the victory there obtained most of the cities in the countries involved in the conflict erected memorials with the memorials in smaller villages and towns often listing the names of each local soldier who had been killed in addition so far as the decision by the French and British in 1916 to construct governmentally designed cemeteries was concerned to their names being recorded on military headstones often against the will of those directly involved and without any opportunity of choice in the British Empire whose war graves were administered by the Imperial War Graves Commission Massive British monuments commemorating thousands of dead with no identified war grave such as the Menin Gate at Ypres and the Thiepval memorial on the Somme were also constructed The Liberty Memorial located in Kansas City Missouri is a memorial dedicated to all Americans who served in the Great War For various reasons connected with their character the same may be said to apply to certain governmental memorials in the United Kingdom The Cenotaph in London relating to the Empire in general and the Scottish National War Memorial in Edinburgh also with a reference to the Empire but with particular connections to the United Kingdom having been opened by the Prince of Wales in 1927 and with the King and the Queen the first visitors and contributors of a casket of the Scottish names for addition within the Shrine In Maryland in the center of the city of Baltimore facing the Baltimore City Hall to the west is a geometric paved tree lined plaza with the War Memorial Building to the east with a large marble decorated civic auditorium and historical and veterans museum below designed by Laurence Hall Fowler dedicated 1925 Pacifist war memorials and those relating to war and peace edit After World War I some towns in France set up pacifist war memorials Instead of commemorating the glorious dead these memorials denounce war with figures of grieving widows and children rather than soldiers Such memorials provoked anger among veterans and the military in general The most famous is at Gentioux Pigerolles in the department of Creuse Below the column which lists the name of the fallen stands an orphan in bronze pointing to an inscription Maudite soit la guerre Cursed be war Feelings ran so high that the memorial was not officially inaugurated until 1990 and soldiers at the nearby army camp were under orders to turn their heads when they walked past Another such memorial is in the small town of Equeurdreville Hainneville formerly Equeurdreville in the department of Manche Here the statue is of a grieving widow with two small children 5 6 There seems to be no exact equivalent form of a pacifist memorial within the United Kingdom but evidently sentiments were in many cases identical Thus and although it seems that this has never been generally recognized it can be argued that there was throughout the United Kingdom a construction of war memorials with reference to the concept of peace e g West Hartlepool War Memorial in what is now known as Hartlepool previously West Hartlepool with the inscription Thine O Lord is the Victory relating to amongst other architecture the 1871 Royal Albert Hall of Arts and Sciences with a frieze including the same words and concluding Glory be to God on high and on earth peace World War II and later edit In many cases World War I memorials were later extended to show the names of locals who died in the World War II in addition Since that time memorials to the dead in other conflicts such as the Korean War and Vietnam War have also noted individual contributions at least in the West In relation to actions which may well in point of fact be historically connected with the world wars even if this happens for whatever reason not to be a matter of general discussion e g occupation by Western forces in the 1920s of Palestine and other areas being the homelands of Arabs in the Near East and followed eighty years later in 2001 by the 9 11 raid on New York and elsewhere in the United States similar historically and architecturally significant memorials are also designed and constructed vide National September 11 Memorial Types editWar memorials can differ significantly in type and composition Many war memorials often take the form of a traditional monument or statue while others consist of entire buildings often containing a museum while yet others are simple plaques War memorials can take a variety of other forms including but not limited to commemorative gardens stadiums eternal flames urban plazas stained glass windows gateways fountains and or pools of water military equipment and parks War memorials often serve as a meeting place for commemorative services As such they are often found near the centre of town or contained in a park or plaza to allow easy public access Many war memorials bear plaques listing the names of those that died in battle Sometimes these lists can be very long Some war memorials are dedicated to a specific battle while others are more general in nature and bear inscriptions listing various theatres of war Many war memorials have epitaphs relating to the unit battle or war they commemorate For example an epitaph which adorns numerous memorials in Commonwealth countries is The Ode by Laurence Binyon They shall grow not old as we that are left grow old Age shall not weary them nor the years condemn At the going down of the sun and in the morning We will remember them The Memorial Arch at the Royal Military College of Canada which remembers ex cadets who died on military service includes lines of Rupert Brooke s poem The Dead Blow out you bugles over the rich Dead There are none of these so lonely and poor of old But dying has made us rarer gifts than gold In the years following the end of World War I a heated debate occurred in the United States as to whether memorials should be the standard sort that were created after the Civil War or a more progressive sort of living memorials These consisted of bridges parks libraries playgrounds community centers civic auditoriums and athletic fields 7 Examples include Soldier Field and Veterans Stadium Underwater memorials are serving veterans and Soldiers who served as divers during their wartime missions 8 Tank monument edit A tank monument or armoured memorial is a tank withdrawn from military service and displayed to commemorate a battle or a military unit Obsolete tanks may also be displayed as gate guards outside military bases Immediately following the First World War a number of obsolete tanks were presented to towns and cities throughout Britain for display and for use as memorials most were scrapped in the 1920s and 1930s but one that survives is a Mark IV Female tank at Ashford Kent Several Second World War tanks are preserved as memorials to major armoured offensives in the Ardennes such as the Battle of Sedan and the Battle of the Bulge These include 9 an Achilles tank destroyer in La Roche a Panther tank in the village Celles a Sherman tank in the town square of Bastogne a Tiger II tank in the village of La Gleize A plinth mounted T 35 85 tank commemorates the soldiers of the 5th Guards Tank Army at Znamianka in Ukraine 10 In cemeteries editMany cemeteries tended by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission have an identical war memorial called the Cross of Sacrifice designed by Sir Reginald Blomfield that varies in height from 18 ft to 32 ft depending on the size of the cemetery If there are one thousand or more burials a Commonwealth cemetery will contain a Stone of Remembrance designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens with words from the Wisdom of Sirach Their name liveth for evermore all the Stones of Remembrance are 11 ft 6 ins long and 5 ft high with three steps leading up to them Arlington National Cemetery has a Canadian Cross of Sacrifice with the names of all the citizens of the USA who lost their lives fighting in the Canadian forces during the Korean War and two World Wars Controversy editWar memorials can sometimes be politically controversial A notable case is that of the Yasukuni Shrine in Japan where a number of convicted World War II war criminals are interred Chinese and Korean representatives have often protested against the visits of Japanese politicians to the shrine The visits have in the past led to severe diplomatic conflicts between the nations and Japanese businesses were attacked in China after a visit by former Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi to the shrine was widely reported and criticized in Chinese and Korean media 11 In a similar case former German chancellor Helmut Kohl was criticised by writers Gunter Grass and Elie Wiesel for visiting the war cemetery at Bitburg in the company of Ronald Reagan which also contained the bodies of SS troops 12 Unlike the case of the Yasukuni Shrine there was no element of intentional disregard of international opinion involved as is often claimed for the politician visits to the Japanese shrine Soviet World War II memorials included quotes of Joseph Stalin s texts frequently replaced after his death Such memorials were often constructed in city centres and now are sometimes regarded as symbols of Soviet occupation and removed which in turn may spark protests see Bronze Soldier of Tallinn The Fusiliers memorial arch to the Royal Dublin Fusiliers who fought in the Boer War erected at 1907 in St Stephen s Green Dublin was called Traitors Gate by the Redmondites and later Irish Republicans from whose point of view Irish soldiers going off to fight the British Empire s wars were traitors to Ireland The sharpness of the controversy gradually faded and while the term Traitors Gate is still in occasional colloquial use in Dublin daily life it has mostly lost its pejorative meaning In Australia in 1981 historian Henry Reynolds raised the issue of whether war memorials should be erected to Indigenous Australians who had died fighting against British invaders on their lands How then do we deal with the Aboriginal dead White Australians frequently say that all that should be forgotten But it will not be It cannot be Black memories are too deeply too recently scarred And forgetfulness is a strange prescription coming from a community which has revered the fallen warrior and emblazoned the phrase Lest We Forget on monuments throughout the land D o we make room for the Aboriginal dead on our memorials cenotaphs boards of honour and even in the pantheon of national heroes If we are to continue to celebrate the sacrifice of men and women who died for their country can we deny admission to fallen tribesmen There is much in their story that Australians have traditionally admired They were ever the underdogs were always outgunned yet frequently faced death without flinching If they did not die for Australia as such they fell defending their homelands their sacred sites their way of life What is more the blacks bled on their own soil and not half a world away furthering the strategic objectives of a distant Motherland whose influence must increasingly be seen as of transient importance in the history of the continent 13 Reynolds suggestion proved controversial 14 Occasional memorials have been erected to commemorate Aboriginal people s resistance to colonisation or to commemorate white massacres of Indigenous Australians These memorials have often generated controversy For example a 1984 memorial to the Kalkadoon people s resistance against the paramilitary force of European settlers and the Queensland Native Mounted Police was frequently shot at and eventually blown up 15 With the advent of long war some memorials are constructed before the conflict is over leaving space for extra names of the dead For instance the Northwood Gratitude and Honor Memorial in Irvine CA memorializes an ongoing pair of US wars and has space to inscribe the names of approximately 8 000 fallen servicemembers 16 while the UK National Memorial Arboretum near Lichfield in England hosts the UK s National Armed Forces Memorial which displays the names of the more than 16 000 people who have already died on active service in the UK armed forces since World War II with more space available for future fatalities List of war memorials editAfrica edit Egypt edit Unknown Soldier Memorial Egypt Port Said Martyrs Memorial Somaliland edit Hargeisa War Memorial Americas edit Brazil edit Monument to the dead of World War II Monument to the Expeditionary Canada edit List of Canadian war memorials Falkland Islands edit 1982 Liberation Memorial United States edit The Hiker Kitson and The Hiker Newman Indiana World War Memorial Plaza Iron Mike Korean War Veterans Memorial Liberation Holocaust memorial Liberty Memorial List of memorials to the Grand Army of the Republic List of Confederate monuments and memorials List of monuments of the Gettysburg Battlefield List of Union Civil War monuments and memorials Middle East Conflicts Wall Memorial National Cemetery Navy Merchant Marine Memorial Northwood Gratitude and Honor Memorial 17 Prison Ship Martyrs Monument Soldier Field Spirit of the American Doughboy Spirit of the American Navy Tomb of the Unknown Revolutionary War Soldier Tomb of the Unknowns United States Marine Corps War Memorial United States Navy Memorial Vietnam Veterans Memorial Vietnam Women s Memorial World War I Memorial Kansas City Missouri World War I Memorial Washington D C World War II Memorial nbsp Valley Forge Memorial Arch Valley Forge Pennsylvania Memorial coliseums and stadiums in the United States edit Memorial Coliseum Lexington Kentucky Memorial Coliseum Corpus Christi Texas Veterans Memorial Coliseum Portland Oregon Allen County War Memorial Coliseum Fort Wayne Indiana Legion Field Birmingham Alabama Coleman Coliseum Tuscaloosa Alabama Beard Eaves Memorial Coliseum Auburn Alabama Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Los Angeles California Lawrence Joel Veterans Memorial Coliseum Winston Salem North Carolina Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Coliseum Jacksonville Florida VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena Jacksonville Florida Arizona Veterans Memorial Coliseum Phoenix Arizona Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Coliseum Evansville Indiana Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum Uniondale New York New Haven Veterans Memorial Coliseum New Haven Connecticut Veterans Memorial Coliseum Marion Ohio Veterans Stadium Philadelphia Pennsylvania War Memorial Stadium Buffalo New York War Memorial Stadium Arkansas Little Rock Arkansas Asia edit Bangladesh edit Jatiyo Smriti Soudho Savar in Bangladesh Mainamati War Cemetery Comilla in Bangladesh WWII Chittagong War Cemetery Chattogram in Bangladesh WWII China edit Monument to the People s Heroes Beijing Hong Kong edit The Cenotaph Hong Kong India edit Amar Jawan Jyoti to commemorate the dead and unknown soldiers of the Indian Armed Forces who sacrificed their lives defending India India Gate Dedicated to the soldiers of the British Indian army Khalanga War Memorial Dehradun National War Memorial New Delhi National War Memorial NWM at India Gate built on the sprawling lawns of India Gate in memory of the war heroes of Indian forces War Memorial Darjeeling nbsp War memorial of the 49th Bengalee Regiment Bangali Platoon at College St Kolkata War Memorial of the 49th Bengalee Regiment Kolkata dedicated to the soldiers of 49th Bengali Regiment who died in World War I Victory War Memorial formerly called the Cupid s bow is a memorial in Chennai India erected in the memory of those from the Madras presidency who died in the world wars nbsp The Victory War Memorial Iraq edit Al Shaheed Monument Israel edit National Memorial Hall Mount Herzl site of Israel s national cemetery and other memorial facilities Yad Vashem located on the Mount of Remembrance in Jerusalem dedicated to gentiles who at personal risk and without a financial or evangelistic motive chose to save Jews from genocide Garden of the Righteous Among the Nations dedicated to honor those gentiles who during the Holocaust of World War 2 risked their lives to save Jews Yom Hazikaron lit The Day of Remembrance dedicated for the Fallen Soldiers of Israel and Victims of Terrorism Victims of Acts of Terror Memorial Israeli casualties of war memorials Davidka memorial Memorial for the Defenders of the Old City of Jerusalem Beit Lid memorial Ashdod Port memorial Avivim school bus memorial Avshalom Feinberg memorial Hill 69 memorial Jaffa Road bombing memorial Mahal memorial Ma alot memorial Six Day War memorial Coastal Road memorial Maxim restaurant massacre memorial Be erot Izhak memorial Bus suicide bombing memorial in Tel Aviv Haganah memorial Second Lebanon War memorial 1948 Arab Israeli War Dolphinarium massacre memorial Combat Engineering Corps memorial Druze soldiers memorial in Daliyat Al Karmel Olei Hagardom memorial Fatality victims of Palestinian rocket attacks memorial Beersheba suicide terror attack memorial Fallen Israeli policemen memorial Memorial for the fallen soldiers of the Israeli Engineering Corp Convoy of the Lamed Heh memorial Kiryat Anavim military cemetery Independence War Memorial in Kibbutz Malkia Yad La Shiryon lit The Armored Corps Memorial Site and Museum at Latrun Japan edit Yasukuni Shrine Chidorigafuchi National Cemetery Lebanon edit Mleeta museum Malaysia edit Tugu Negara National Monument Myanmar edit Taukkyan War Cemetery British Commonwealth Burma Nepal edit Gurkha Memorial Park Dharan Philippines edit Mausoleum of the Veterans of the Revolution Singapore edit Kranji Memorial South Korea edit The War Memorial Museum Gapyeong Canada Monument Thailand edit Victory Monument United Arab Emirates edit Oasis of Dignity Europe edit Austria edit Soviet war memorial Vienna Belarus edit Brest Fortress Brest Khatyn massacre Belgium edit The Interallied Memorial of Cointe Liege Menin Gate Memorial Ypres Saint Julien Memorial Langemark Island of Ireland Peace Park Messines Lion s Mound Waterloo Croatia edit Petrova Gora Monument Slabinja Monument Denmark edit Jutland Memorial park Estonia edit Independence War Victory Column Tallinn France edit Beaumont Hamel Newfoundland Memorial Park Douaumont Ossuary Verdun Welsh Memorial at Mametz Wood Notre Dame de Lorette Pozieres Memorial British World War I Memorial Verdun Memorial Villers Bretonneux Australian National Memorial Australian World War I Memorial Vimy Ridge Memorial Canadian World War I Memorial Thiepval Memorial to the Missing of the Somme British World War I Memorial Normandy American Cemetery and Memorial USA World War II Memorial see also Monuments aux Morts Germany edit Tannenberg memorial Volkerschlachtdenkmal Befreiungshalle Hermannsdenkmal Soviet War Memorial Treptower Park Neue Wache Berlin Prussian National Monument for the Liberation Wars Aegidienkirche Hanover church ruined in World War II with a Hiroshima peace bell Ireland edit Garden of Remembrance all those who gave their lives in the cause of Irish Freedom 1798 1921 Irish National War Memorial Gardens to the memory of the 49 400 Irish soldiers who gave their lives in the Great War 1914 1918 Italy edit Redipuglia War Memorial Asiago War Memorial Sacrario militare di Pocol Sacrario militare dei Caduti Oltremare di Bari Latvia edit Freedom Monument Malta edit Malta Memorial War Memorial Netherlands edit National Monument Amsterdam Waalsdorpervlakte Erebegraafplaats Bloemendaal Netherlands American Cemetery Groesbeek Memorial Canadian War Cemetery Liberty Monument Welberg Welberg Steenbergen Poland edit Tomb of the Unknown Soldier Westerplatte Monument Warsaw Uprising Monument Maly Powstaniec Monument to the Heroes of Warsaw Monument to the Ghetto Heroes Monument to the Polish Underground State and Home Army Monument to the Fallen and Murdered in the East Monument to the Battle of Monte Cassino in Warsaw Romania edit Mausoleum of Mărăsesti Tomb of the Unknown Soldier Arcul de Triumf Bucharest Heroes Cross on Caraiman Peak Mausoleum of Mateiaș Argeș County Russia edit Tomb of the Unknown Soldier Moscow Piskarevskoye Memorial Cemetery Siege of Leningrad Poklonnaya Hill Battle of Moscow Mamayev Kurgan Battle of Stalingrad Slovenia edit Tomb of National Heroes Ljubljana Vojko s Plaque Monument to the Victims of All Wars List of World War II monuments and memorials in Slovenia Monuments to the Slovene Partisans Spain edit Fossar de les Moreres Valle de los Caidos Valley of the Fallen Switzerland edit Lion Monument Turkey edit Monument of Liberty Istanbul Aviation Martyrs Monument Balkan Wars Memorial Cemetery in Edirne Canakkale Martyrs Memorial 57th Infantry Regiment Memorial Respect to Mehmetcik Monument Ataturk and Serife Baci Monument Victory Monument Ankara Cyprus Memorial Forest in Silifke UK edit Animals in War Memorial The National Armed Forces Memorial in Alrewas Staffordshire The Cenotaph Whitehall London The Cenotaph Belfast Commando Memorial Spean Bridge Highland Great Eastern Railway War Memorial at Liverpool Street station to the east Great Western Railway War Memorial at Paddington station to the west Hall of Memory Birmingham Lewis War Memorial Stornoway Western Isles London Brighton and South Coast Railway War Memorial at London Bridge station to the south east Battle of Maiwand Reading Midland Railway War Memorial in Derby War memorials in Monmouth Wales National Firefighters Memorial North Eastern Railway War Memorial in York Northern Ireland War Memorial Scottish National War Memorial Edinburgh Castle Edinburgh Scottish War Memorials Shot at Dawn Memorial Southampton Cenotaph Lutyens first memorial The Unknown Warrior in Westminster Abbey Welsh National War Memorial Cardiff Women of World War II London Women of Steel Sheffield Oceania edit Australia edit ANZAC War Memorial Sydney Australian War Memorial Canberra Fremantle War Memorial Fremantle Great Ocean Road Victoria Hobart Cenotaph Hobart State War Memorial Perth National War Memorial Adelaide Shrine of Remembrance Brisbane and World War I memorials in Queensland Shrine of Remembrance Melbourne Mount Macedon Memorial Cross Mount Macedon New Zealand edit Auckland War Memorial Museum National War Memorial Wellington See also editAlexander Carrick Scottish sculptor responsible for several Scottish war memorials Avenue of Honour Battlefield Cross To honor an individual soldier Commemorative plaque Mausolea Peace movement Removal of Confederate monuments and memorials Tomb of the Unknown Soldier memorials specifically dedicated to unknown soldiers Tropaeum Traiani in Romania UK National Inventory of War Memorials online database listing all war memorials in the UK War Memorials Trust UK charity that gives free advice about and grants towards war memorial conservation War Memorial Stadium for list of stadiums so named in the United States References edit Site in Syria could be world s oldest war memorial study finds The Guardian 27 May 2021 Bressler Richard 2018 The Thirteenth Century A World History McFarland p 123 ISBN 978 1 4766 7185 7 History of the College All Soul s College University of Oxford Retrieved 29 May 2016 Varley Karine Under the Shadow of Defeat The War of 1870 71 in French Memory Palgrave 2008 Coepel Philippe 1997 Que maudite soit la guerre Bricqueboscq Editions des champs p 204 ISBN 2 910138 08 9 For pictures of the pacifist memorials at Gentioux Pigerolles and at Equeurdreville Hainneville and elsewhere see fr Monument aux morts pacifiste Piehler G Kurt Remembering War the American Way Smithsonian Institution Press Washington D C 1995 pp 105 109 Sean Kimmons Army News Service August 14 2019 Army veterans find healing in new underwater memorial The underwater memorial can be visited by scuba divers Ardennes Area Battlefield World War II Dorling Kindersley 2010 p 318 ISBN 978 1405335201 Shukach dombrovskii a posetil a 5 ya gvardejskaya tankovaya armiya Pamyatnik osvoboditelyam Znamenki www shukach com Retrieved 31 March 2018 Japan Chinese foreign minister on fence mending visit Radio Australia program transcript date unknown Reagan Joins Kohl in Brief Memorial at Bitburg Graves New York Times Monday 6 May 1985 Reynolds Henry The Other Side of the Frontier Aboriginal resistance to the European invasion of Australia 1981 ISBN 0 86840 892 1 p 202 Reynolds Henry Why Weren t We Told 1999 ISBN 0 14 027842 7 chapter 12 Lest We Forget pp 169 184 ibid pp 177 178 northwood memorial jpg image 3 bp blogspot com Retrieved 31 March 2018 Northwood Gratitude and Honor Memorial gt Home www northwoodmemorial com Retrieved 31 March 2018 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to War memorials General edit Sites of Memory Historical markers memorials monuments and cemeteries worldwide France edit Memorial pacifist in French Queutchny1418 As of 26 April 2014 more than 5240 pictures of 1914 1918 memorials in French Memorial GenWeb French war memorials photos and inscriptions in French Germany edit German war memorials photos and inscriptions in German Remembering The Reich German World War II and Holocaust memorials private travel blog entry Ireland edit Irish War Memorials An inventory of war memorials in Ireland Japan edit Kamikaze Images Monuments monuments for WWII Special Attack Forces including Kamikaze Corps United Kingdom edit Architecture from the Commonwealth War Graves Commission website UK War Memorials Register the comprehensive national register of over 68 000 UK war memorials and the names of over 900 000 of the individuals they commemorate Scottish War Memorials Project public access forum recording all of Scotland s War Memorials Charity recording North East War Memorials including names and images United States edit United States Navy Memorial including Navy Log and naval history information Vietnam Unit Memorial Monument Coronado California Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title War memorial amp oldid 1211597355, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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