Monument

Monument
The National Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall is a famous monument in Taipei, Taiwan
The Parthenon is regarded as an enduring symbol of Ancient Greece and of Athenian democracy and one of the world's greatest cultural monuments.
De Klaver, Bolsward, a windmill built in the Netherlands in 1802, and Rijksmonument number 9860.
A dusty monument from the Monumental Cemetery of Staglieno in Genoa, c.1910
The Eiffel Tower, in Paris, a monument commemorating the French Revolution.

A monument is a type of structure either explicitly created to commemorate a person or important event or which has become important to a social group as a part of their remembrance of historic times or cultural heritage, or simply as an example of historic architecture. In English the word "monumental" is often used in reference to something of extraordinary size and power, as in monumental sculpture, but also to mean simply anything made to commemorate the dead, as a funerary monument or other example of funerary art. The word comes from the Latin "monere," which means 'to remind' or 'to warn.' The term is often used to describe any structure that is a significant and legally protected historic work, and many countries have equivalents of what is called in United Kingdom legislation a Scheduled Monument, which often include relatively recent buildings constructed for residential or industrial purposes, with no thought at the time that they would come to be regarded as "monuments".

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Creation and Functions

Monuments have been created for thousands of years, and they are often the most durable and famous symbols of ancient civilizations. Prehistoric tumuli, dolmens, and similar structures have been created in a large number of prehistoric cultures across the world, and the many forms of monumental tombs of the more wealthy and powerful members of a society are often the source of much of our information and art from those cultures.[1] As societies became organized on a larger scale, so monuments so large as to be difficult to destroy and the Egyptian Pyramids, the Greek Parthenon or the Moai of Easter Island have become symbols of their civilizations. In more recent times, monumental structures such as the Statue of Liberty and Eiffel Tower have become iconic emblems of modern nation-states. The term monumentality relates to the symbolic status and physical presence of a monument.

Monuments are frequently used to improve the appearance of a city or location. Planned cities such as Washington D.C., New Delhi and Brasília are often built around monuments. For example, the Washington Monument's location was conceived by L'Enfant to help organize public space in the city, before it was designed or constructed. Older cities have monuments placed at locations that are already important or are sometimes redesigned to focus on one. As Shelley suggested in his famous poem "Ozymandias" ("Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!"), the purpose of monuments is very often to impress or awe.

Structures created for others purposes that have been made notable by their age, size or historic significance may also be regarded as monuments. This can happen because of great age and size, as in the case of the Great Wall of China, or because an event of great import occurred there such as the village of Oradour-sur-Glane in France. Many countries use Ancient monument or similar terms for the official designation of protected structures or archeological sites which may originally have been ordinary domestic houses or other buildings.

Monuments are also often designed to convey historical or political information. They can be used to reinforce the primacy of contemporary political power, such as the column of Trajan or the numerous statues of Lenin in the Soviet Union. They can be used to educate the populace about important events or figures from the past, such as in the renaming of the old General Post Office Building in New York City to the James A. Farley Building (James Farley Post Office), after former Postmaster General James Farley.

The social meanings of monuments are rarely fixed and certain and are frequently 'contested' by different social groups. As an example: whilst the former East German socialist state may have seen the Berlin Wall as a means of 'protection' from the ideological impurity of the west, dissidents and others would often argue that it was symbolic of the inherent repression and paranoia of that state. This contention of meaning is a central theme of modern 'post processual' archaeological discourse.

Until recently, it was customary for archaeologists to study large monuments and pay less attention to the everyday lives of the societies that created them. New ideas about what constitutes the archaeological record have revealed that certain legislative and theoretical approaches to the subject are too focused on earlier definitions of monuments. An example has been the United Kingdom's Scheduled Ancient Monument laws.

Types of monuments

Gallery of large iconic monuments

See also

References

  1. ^ Patton, Mark Statements in Stone: Monuments and Society in Neolithic Brittany, Routledge, London 1993 pp. 1-7

Further reading

  • Cynthia Phillips and Shana Priwer, Ancient Monuments, M E Sharpe Reference, 2008
  • Françoise Choay, The invention of the historic monument, Cambridge University Press, 2001
  • Henri Stierlin, Great monuments of the ancient world, Thames & Hudson, 2005
  • Subinoy Gangopadhyay, Testimony of Stone : Monuments of India, Dasgupta & Co., 2002

External links


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  • monument — [ mɔnymɑ̃ ] n. m. • 980; lat. monumentum 1 ♦ Ouvrage d architecture, de sculpture, destiné à perpétuer le souvenir de qqn, qqch. Monument commémoratif : arc de triomphe, colonne, trophée, etc. ⇒ mémorial. Monument funéraire, élevé sur une… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Monument — Marie Skłodowska Curie à Vieille ville de Police (Pologne) Le mot « monument » provient du latin monumentum, de moneo « se remémorer » désigne toute sculpture ou ouvrage architectural qui permet de rappeler un évènement ou une …   Wikipédia en Français

  • monument — MONUMÉNT, monumente, s.n. 1. Operă de sculptură sau de arhitectură destinată să perpetueze amintirea unui eveniment sau a unei personalităţi remarcabile; p. ext. construcţie arhitectonică de proporţii mari sau de o deosebită valoare. ♦ fig. Orice …   Dicționar Român

  • Monument — Monument, CO U.S. town in Colorado Population (2000): 1971 Housing Units (2000): 770 Land area (2000): 4.626053 sq. miles (11.981421 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 4.626053 sq. miles (11.981421… …   StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places

  • Monument — «Monument» Canción de Depeche Mode Álbum A Broken Frame Publicación 27 de septiembre de 1982 …   Wikipedia Español

  • monument — I noun achievement, cairn, cenotaph, cromlech, dolmen, lasting reminder, mark, memorial, monumentum, permanent structure, remembrance, reminder, shrine, testimonial II index landmark (conspicuous object), remembrance (commemorati …   Law dictionary

  • Monument — Sn std. (16. Jh.) Entlehnung. Entlehnt aus l. monumentum (eigentlich Erinnerungszeichen, Denkzeichen ), zu l. monēre erinnern, mahnen . Ausgehend von der besonderen Größe vieler solcher Bauten dann die Bedeutung sehr groß von monumental.… …   Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache

  • Monument — Mon u*ment, n. [F., fr. L. monumentum, fr. monere to remind, admonish. See {Monition}, and cf. {Moniment}.] 1. Something which stands, or remains, to keep in remembrance what is past; a memorial. [1913 Webster] Of ancient British art A pleasing… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • monument — (n.) late 13c., a sepulchre, from O.Fr. monument grave, tomb, monument, and directly from L. monumentum a monument, memorial structure, statue; votive offering; tomb; memorial record, lit. something that reminds, from monere to remind, warn (see… …   Etymology dictionary

  • monument — MONUMENT. sub. m. Marque publique qu on laisse à la posterité pour conserver la memoire de quelque personne illustre, ou de quelque action celebre. Monument illustre, superbe, magnifique, durable, glorieux, éternel. c est un monument à la… …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie française

  • Monument, CO — U.S. town in Colorado Population (2000): 1971 Housing Units (2000): 770 Land area (2000): 4.626053 sq. miles (11.981421 sq. km) Water area (2000): 0.000000 sq. miles (0.000000 sq. km) Total area (2000): 4.626053 sq. miles (11.981421 sq. km) FIPS… …   StarDict's U.S. Gazetteer Places

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