ENSIKLOPEDIA Cari Tekan Enter untuk memulai pencarian cepat. Kembali ke Ensiklopedia Arsip Wikipedia Indonesia Statue of Captain James Cook, The Mall Statue of Captain James Cook, The MallStatue by Thomas Brock in The Mall, London, England Captain James CookThe sculpture in 2014ArtistThomas BrockYear1914; 112 years ago (1914)TypeStatueMediumBronzeSubjectJames CookLocationLondon, WC2Coordinates51°30′23″N 0°07′45″W / 51.50629°N 0.12925°W / 51.50629; -0.12925 Listed Building – Grade IIOfficial nameStatue of Captain CookDesignated5 February 1970Reference no.1239083[1] A bronze statue of Captain James Cook by Thomas Brock is located near Admiralty Arch on the south side of The Mall in London, United Kingdom.[2] The statue was completed in 1914 and is maintained by The Royal Parks.[2] It is mounted on a stone plinth.[2] The idea for the memorial was first proposed by Joseph Carruthers, the former premier of New South Wales, who had written to The Times complaining of the lack of a statue to Captain Cook in London. The completed work was unveiled on 7 July 1914 by Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn.[3] See also List of public art in St James's References ↑ Historic England. "Statue of Captain Cook (1239083)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 11 February 2021. 1 2 3 "Monuments in St James's Park". The Royal Parks. Retrieved 8 August 2014. ↑ Ward-Jackson, Philip (2011). Public Sculpture of Historic Westminster: Volume 1. Public Sculpture of Britain. Vol. 14. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. pp. 139–140. ISBN 978-1-84631-691-3. External links Media related to Statue of Captain James Cook, The Mall, London at Wikimedia Commons vteCaptain James CookVoyages First voyage (Transit of Venus) Second voyage Third voyage (Death) Indigenous relations Seamanship Vessels HMS Adventure HMS Discovery HMS Eagle HMS Endeavour HMS Grenville HMS Pembroke HMS Resolution Associates Joseph Banks William Bayly William Bligh Alexander Buchan James Burney Charles Clerke James Colnett Alexander Dalrymple Georg Forster Johann Reinhold Forster Tobias Furneaux John Gore Charles Green Zachary Hickes James King John Ledyard David Nelson Omai Hugh Palliser Sydney Parkinson Nathaniel Portlock Edward Riou Henry Roberts David Samwell Daniel Solander Herman Spöring William Taylor James Trevenen William Wales John Watts John Webber Thomas Willis Commemorations Commemorations Paintings of Cook's death Statues Anchorage Christchurch The Mall, London Fitzroy Gardens, Melbourne St Kilda, Melbourne Hyde Park, Sydney Victoria Books An Account of the Voyages A Journal of a Voyage to the South Seas Characteres generum plantarum A Voyage Round the World Observations Made During a Voyage Round the World Related Birthplace Museum Cooks' Cottage James Cook Collection: Australian Museum Memorial Museum Puhi Kai Iti / Cook Landing Site Places named after Cook Fiction Stormy Was the Weather (1948) Voyage on a Dinner Table (1954) Captain James Cook (1986) vteThomas BrockSculptures Statues of Robert Raikes London, 1880 Toronto, 1929 Statue of Henry Bartle Frere (London, 1888) Statues of Queen Victoria Hove, 1901 Bangalore, 1906 Statue of Henry Irving (London, 1910) Statue of Captain James Cook (London, 1914) Titanic Memorial (Belfast, 1920) Joseph Lister Memorial (London, 1924) Victoria Memorial (London, 1924) Medal designs North West Canada Medal (1885) Colonial Auxiliary Forces Long Service Medal (1899) vtePublic art and memorials in LondonPortrait sculptureBritish and Englishroyalty Boudica Alfred the Great Richard I Queen Eleanor (Charing Cross) Edward VI St Thomas' Hospital: bronze stone Charles I (Interregnum: Oliver Cromwell) Charles II Chelsea Soho Stocks Market† James II William III Kensington Palace St James's Anne St Paul's Westminster George II Greenwich Soho George III Pall Mall Somerset House George IV King's Cross† Trafalgar Square Duke of York William IV Duke of Kent Duke of Cambridge Victoria Kensington Palace Victoria Memorial Prince Albert Albert Memorial Memorial to the Great Exhibition Edward VII George V George VI and Elizabeth Elizabeth II (planned) Arts Walter Besant John Betjeman Marc Bolan Robert Burns Lord Byron Thomas Carlyle Charlie Chaplin Geoffrey Chaucer† Agatha Christie John Donne Edward Onslow Ford Henry Irving Michael Jackson† Samuel Johnson John Keats Guy's Hospital Moorgate John Stuart Mill John Everett Millais John Milton† Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart George Orwell Joshua Reynolds William Shakespeare Heminges and Condell Memorial Leicester Square Park Lane† Sarah Siddons Arthur Sullivan Oscar Wilde Chelsea Covent Garden Amy Winehouse Virginia Woolf Explorers Christopher Columbus James Cook John Franklin Yuri Gagarin Robert Falcon Scott Merchants John Cass† Thomas Guy Quintin Hogg Robert Milligan† Hugh Myddelton Military Lord Alanbrooke Lord Baden-Powell† John Fox Burgoyne Lord Clyde Lord Dowding Ferdinand Foch Charles George Gordon Earl Haig Arthur Harris Henry Havelock Lord Kitchener Lord Montgomery Lord Mountbatten Charles James Napier Lord Napier Admiral Lord Nelson (Nelson's Column) James Outram Keith Park Lord Portal Lord Roberts Władysław Sikorski Viscount Slim Lord Trenchard Duke of Wellington City Hyde Park Corner Woolwich George Stuart White James Wolfe Lord Wolseley Nurses Edith Cavell Florence Nightingale Mary Seacole PoliticsBritishPrime ministers Clement Attlee George Canning William Pitt the Younger Winston Churchill Parliament Square Woodford Lord Derby Benjamin Disraeli David Lloyd George William Ewart Gladstone Lord Palmerston Robert Peel Other politicians Duke of Bedford Lord George Bentinck Robert Clayton Robert Clive Richard Cobden Lord Curzon Duke of Devonshire William Edward Forster Charles James Fox Henry Bartle Frere Sidney Herbert Lord Holland William Huskisson Lord Lawrence Wilfrid Lawson Simon Milton (Paddington, St James's, Southwark) Marquess of Westminster John Wilkes International Simón Bolívar Mahatma Gandhi Bloomsbury Westminster Charles de Gaulle Haile Selassie† John F. Kennedy† Abraham Lincoln Nelson Mandela Karl Marx Bernardo O'Higgins Peter the Great José de San Martín Jan Smuts Trajan Volodymyr George Washington Religion 20th-century martyrs at Westminster Abbey Thomas Becket John Henry Newman William Tyndale John Wesley St Paul's Shoreditch Science andengineering Joseph Bazalgette Isambard Kingdom Brunel Thomas Cubitt Sigmund Freud James Henry Greathead Nigel Gresley Edward Jenner Joseph Lister Isaac Newton Robert Stephenson† Social reformersand humanitarians Thomas Barnardo Millicent Fawcett Margaret MacDonald Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst Sylvia Pankhurst Robert Raikes Raoul Wallenberg Sport Harry Kane Bobby Moore Upton Park—with Geoff Hurst, Martin Peters and Ray Wilson Wembley Fictionalcharacters Film characters in Leicester Square Sherlock Holmes Paddington Bear Peter Pan See also Talking Statues Statues in London on Wikimedia Commons Other monuments and memorials 7 July bombings AIDS (planned) UK AIDS Memorial Quilt† Queen Alexandra Anti–air war Bali bombings Lady Burdett-Coutts Catrin ferch Owain Glyndŵr Lord Cheylesmore Cleopatra's Needle Conscientious objectors COVID-19 pandemic Michael Faraday Firefighters W. G. Grace Great Fire of London Golden Boy of Pye Corner The Monument Cherry Groce Heroic self-sacrifice Journalists Samuel Plimsoll Police Queen Elizabeth Gate Silver Jubilee Crystal Crown John Hanning Speke Star and Garter Home Stratford Martyrs Suffragettes Victims of the Atlantic slave trade (planned) Virginia colonists Wellington Arch Wellington Monument Whittington Stone Windrush generation Custard Apple (Annonaceae), Breadfruit (Moraceae) and Soursop (Annonaceae) National Windrush Monument Mary Wollstonecraft War memorialsPre-C20 Animals in War Britannia Triumphant (unrealised) Guards Brigade (Crimean War) Gurkhas (1816–) Marble Arch New Zealand Campaign (1863–1864) Siege of Cádiz Westminster School Boer Wars 61st Battery Royal Field Artillery (Woolwich) Barnet Boys School Royal Artillery (The Mall) Royal Marines WWI · WWII The Cenotaph Africa and the Caribbean Australia Battle of Britain Belgium Blood Swept Lands and Seas of Red Burma Railway Canada La Délivrance Flanders Fields Memorial Garden Malta Memorial Gates Merchant Navy Ships named on the memorial New Zealand Poland South Africa Submarines Women of World War II Regimental 24th Division Cavalry Chindits Civil Service Rifles Eagle Squadrons Fleet Air Arm Guards Brigade Imperial Camel Corps Machine Gun Corps Rifle Brigade Royal Air Force RAF Bomber Command Royal Artillery Royal Fusiliers Royal Naval Division Royal Tank Regiment Local London Troops Arkley Bromley parish Chingford Chipping Barnet Cockfosters Croydon East Barnet Enfield Town (3 memorials) Finchley Friern Barnet (parish) Fulham Golders Green Hampstead Hampton Wick Hendon Hornsey Islington Kingston Monken Hadley Mortlake and East Sheen New Barnet New Malden Paddington Poplar Rainham Richmond Romford St Michael, Cornhill (parish) St Saviour, Southwark (parish) Silvertown Streatham Twickenham Promenade de Verdun, Woodcote Wood Green Corporate Baltic Exchange Bank of England British Medical Association Dulwich College Old New Great Eastern Railway Great Western Railway Lincoln's Inn London and North Western Railway London, Brighton and South Coast Railway Pearl Assurance† South Suburban Gas Company Holocaust Victoria Tower Gardens (planned) Hyde Park Kindertransport Stolperstein Post-WWII Victims of Communism Korean War Iraq and Afghanistan Blue plaques Camden Kensington and Chelsea City of Westminster Other worksSculptures Atalanta The Barbican Muse Bellerophon Taming Pegasus The Bermondsey Lion Big 4‡ Bull The Burghers of Calais Christ Child Cornerstone Crystal Palace Dinosaurs "Deus Lunus" The Diver Dolphin lamp standards Dragon boundary marks Elfin Oak Enwrought Light Father Time Fulcrum The Gold Smelters Gorilla The Hampstead Figure Homage to Leonardo Icarus Labyrinth Liberty Clock London Booster† London Noses London Pride The Meeting Place The Messenger Millennium Dial Monolith and Shadow The Naked Ladies The Neighbours Nelson's Ship in a Bottle Nike Paternoster Vents Peckham Arch Physical Energy Platforms Piece Pope's Urn Putney Sculpture Trail The Queen's Beasts The Rush of Green St Paul's Cross Sculpture in the City‡ Skylon† Slipstream South Bank Lion Still Water Tortoises with Triangle and Time Traffic Light Tree Union (Horse with Two Discs) The Watchers The World Turned Upside Down The Young Lovers Fourth plinth, Trafalgar Square‡ The End Hahn/Cock Nelson's Ship in a Bottle One & Other Elisabeth Frink Blind Beggar and his Dog Horse and Rider Paternoster Barbara Hepworth Meridian† Single Form (Memorial) Two Forms (Divided Circle)† Winged Figure Henry Moore The Arch 1979–1980 Draped Seated Woman 1957–58 Knife Edge Two Piece 1962–65 Large Standing Figure (Knife Edge) Locking Piece Three Standing Figures 1947 Eduardo Paolozzi The Artist as Hephaestus† Piscator The Line‡ ArcelorMittal Orbit Here Quantum Cloud Liberty Grip A Slice of Reality Fountains Buxton Memorial Diana, Princess of Wales, Memorial Diana Fountain, Bushy Park Diana Fountain, Green Park Edward VII Jewish Memorial Henry Fawcett Memorial Guilford Place The Horses of Helios Matilda Fountain Poets' Fountain† Readymoney Drinking Fountain Revolving Torsion Roehampton RSPCA St Lawrence Jewry and St Mary Magdalene Shaftesbury Memorial ("Eros") Lady Henry Somerset Memorial Philip Twells Memorial Victoria Park Murals Brixton Children at Play Cable Street Dulwich Old Kent Road National Covid Memorial Wall Poplar Rates Rebellion Poured Lines Sutton twin towns Sutton Heritage Mosaic Banksy Animal series From this moment despair ends and tactics begin Girl with Balloon† One Nation Under CCTV† Pulp Fiction† Royal Courts of Justice mural† Slave Labour† Waterloo Place statue Land art Northala Fields See also Art on the Underground Tube map covers Commission for Diversity in the Public Realm London Mural Preservation Society Metropolitan Drinking Fountain and Cattle Trough Association By location City of London Barking and Dagenham Barnet Bexley Brent Bromley Camden Croydon Ealing Enfield Greenwich Hackney Hammersmith and Fulham Haringey Harrow Havering Hillingdon Hounslow Islington Kensington and Chelsea Kingston Lambeth Lewisham Merton Newham Redbridge Richmond Southwark Sutton Tower Hamlets Waltham Forest Wandsworth City of Westminster Belgravia1 Covent Garden2 Green Park Hyde Park Kensington1 Kensington Gardens1 Knightsbridge1 Mayfair Millbank Paddington Pimlico St James's St Marylebone Soho Strand Trafalgar Square Victoria Victoria Embankment3 Westminster Whitehall 1 Partly in Kensington and Chelsea 2 Partly in Camden 3 Partly in the City of London Key: † No longer extant, on public display or in London (see List of public art formerly in London) · ‡ Changing displays Portals: British Empire London Transport United Kingdom Visual arts This London-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by adding missing information.vte This article about a sculpture in the United Kingdom is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by adding missing information.vte