Monument_to_the_Discovery_Faith

<i>Monument to Columbus</i>, Huelva

Monument to Columbus, Huelva

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The Monument to Columbus[1] (Spanish: Monumento a Colón), also known as Monument to the Discovering Faith[2] (Spanish: Monumento a la Fe Descubridora), is a monument in Huelva, Spain. It is a work by Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney.

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Funded via a popular subscription in the United States channeled by the Columbus Memorial Fund Inc.,[3][4] the monument, 37-metre high, was built from 1927 to 1929.[5] Erected on the Punta del Sebo, the confluence of the Tinto and Odiel rivers,[6] it was inaugurated on 21 April 1929, during a ceremony attended by Prime Minister Miguel Primo de Rivera and the US ambassador Ogden H. Hammond.[7][8]

The sculpted man (leaning on a Tau cross) is sometimes described as representing a friar from La Rábida,[9] yet it originally was described (including by the author herself) as a statue of Christopher Columbus.[3][10]

It consists of a mortar structure covered by ashlar masonry (calcarenite).[5]

See also


References

Citations
  1. "Monastery of Santa María de La Rábida and the Columbus Memorial Places in Huelva". UNESCO. 29 January 2016.
  2. Sugrañés, Eduardo J. (3 August 2019). "El Monumento a Colón: Desmontando los mitos". Huelva Información.
  3. Font, Rosa (19 June 2020). "Huelva redescubre a Cristóbal Colón". ABC.
  4. Gómez Romero, Luis Carlos (6 March 2020). "¿Sabías que?". Junta de Andalucía.
Bibliography

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