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Victoria Memorial | Kolkata, India
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I give it a 10.
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8.5/10
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9.5/10.
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very beautiful!
9.5/10 |
8.5/10
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9.5/10
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9,5/10
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9!
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Victorial Memorial: Imperial Calcutta at its Best
9/10
Imperial Calcutta's most identifiable monument. http://www.cse.iitb.ac.in/icvgip/inc...s/victoria.jpg http://www.etravelphotos.com/india/p...-001-21n-w.jpg http://www.janeandrichard.co.uk/trav...ar190_9072.jpg http://www.nd.edu/~kmukhopa/cal300/c...s/VICTORIA.JPG http://www.varp.net/Photos/Calcutta/calcutta-29.jpg http://www.varp.net/Photos/Calcutta/calcutta-28.jpg http://www.varp.net/Photos/Calcutta/calcutta-27.jpg http://www.varp.net/Photos/Calcutta/calcutta-32.jpg http://www.varp.net/Photos/Calcutta/calcutta-33.jpg http://www.varp.net/Photos/Calcutta/calcutta-35.jpg http://www.varp.net/Photos/Calcutta/calcutta-36.jpg |
8/10
Great dome but perhaps too stone in the build. |
I love this building. Conceived by Lord Curzon (Viceroy of India 1899 to 1905), and built of the same white Makrana marble as the Taj Mahal, the Victoria Memorial symbolised the high noon of the British Empire. It was completed in 1921 to a design of Sir William Emerson. In my opinion it ranks alongside Bombay's Victoria Terminus as the most magnificent building of the British Raj:
800x600: http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...Memorial_2.jpg 1024x768: http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v4...a_Memorial.jpg From Roughguides.com: Victoria Memorial and the Calcutta Gallery The dramatic white marble Victoria Memorial (Tues–Sun 10am–4.30pm; Rs150 [Rs10]) at the southern end of the Maidan, with its formal gardens and water courses, continues to be Kolkata's pride and joy. Other colonial monuments and statues throughout the city have been renamed or demolished, but the popularity of Queen Victoria seems to endure for ever; thirty years of attempts to change the name of the "VM" have come to nothing. This extraordinary hybrid building, with Italianate statues over its entrances, Moghul domes in its corners, and tall elegant open colonnades along its sides, was conceived by Lord Curzon to commemorate the empire at its peak. Designed by Sir William Emerson, it was completed in 1921. A sombre statue of Queen Victoria, flanked by two ornamental tanks, gazes out towards the Maidan from a pedestal lined with bronze panels and friezes. Faced with Makrana marble from Jodhpur, the building itself is capped by a dome bearing a revolving five-metre-tall bronze figure of Victory. The main entrance, at the Maidan end, leads into a tall chamber beneath the dome. The 25 galleries inside burst with mementoes of British imperialism – statues and busts of Queen Mary, King George V and Queen Victoria; paintings of Robert Clive and the Queen (again); a huge canvas of the future Edward VII entering Jaipur in 1876; French guns captured at the Battle of Plassey in 1758; and the black marble throne of a nawab defeated by Robert Clive. One chamber, converted and renamed the Calcutta Gallery, is dedicated to the Indians of the city and the Independence struggle. The evening Sound and Light show (Tues–Sun 7.15–8pm; Rs20) concentrates on the same theme. Admission to the Victoria Memorial's popular gardens (daily 4.30am–6.40pm) is free during the day. After they close, the Maidan in front of the gates is transformed. A seething mass of people come to enjoy the breeze, roadside snacks, and pony and ikka (open carriage) rides, and to watch the garish musical fountains. |
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^^^ Wow, it looks better at night than in day.
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Beautiful. 8.5/10.
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awesome. I like it a lot.10/10
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Amazing building.
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9.5/10
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