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King of Kings (also referred to as Touchdown Jesus) was a 62-foot (19 m) tall statue of Jesus on the east side of Interstate 75 at the Solid Rock Church, a 4000+ member Christian megachurch near Monroe, Ohio, in the United States. It was destroyed by a lightning strike and subsequent fire on June 14, 2010.
Lux Mundi (Latin for "Light of the World") is a 52-foot (15.8 m) [2] tall statue of Jesus at Solid Rock Church, a Christian nondenominational church near Monroe, Ohio, in the United States. Designed by Tom Tsuchiya, Lux Mundi replaced the statue King of Kings which was struck by lightning and destroyed by fire in 2010. [3] [4]
A statue of Queen Elizabeth II was unveiled at York Minster on 9 November 2022 by King Charles III, two months after the Queen's death in September 2022. The 6ft 7in (2m) tall sculpture was intended to mark the late monarch's Platinum Jubilee and was completed in August 2022, a month before her death. [1]
The stonemason who sculpted a statue of the Queen for the entrance to York Minster said it was his first portrait piece. In front of hundreds of people outside the 850-year-old cathedral, the King ...
A new monument honoring the late Queen Elizabeth will be open to the public to mark what would have been her 100th birthday in 2026. TheDaily Mirror reported that the sculpture honoring the life ...
The King unveils a statue of Queen Elizabeth II (Maja Smieskowska/PA) The event will commemorate the service and sacrifice of servicemen and women and mark 80 years since The Battle of the ...
Here's all the royal news you need to know for the weekend of April 22, 2024. View this post on Instagram A post shared by The Royal Family (@theroyalfamily) The royal family celebrated Earth Day ...
The earliest English equestrian statue. Originally commissioned in 1630 by Charles I's Lord Treasurer, Sir Richard Weston, for his house Mortlake Park in Roehampton. Erected on the site of the Charing Cross in 1674–5, when the pedestal was carved by Joshua Marshall. [18] Temple Bar Gate, Paternoster Square c. 1670–2: John Bushnell