Maiwand Lion
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The Maiwand Lion is a sculpture and war memorial in the Forbury Gardens, a public park in the town of Reading, in the English county of Berkshire. The statue was named after the Battle of Maiwand and was erected in 1886 to commemorate the deaths of 329 men from the 66th Berkshire Regiment during the campaign in Afghanistan between 1878 and 1880. It is sometimes known locally as the Forbury Lion.
The inscription on the statue reads as follows:
This monument commemorates the names and records the valour and devotion of XI (11) officers and CCCXVIII (318) non-commissioned officers and men of the LXVI (66th) Berkshire Regiment who gave their lives for their country at Girishk Maiwand and Kandahar during the Afghan Campaign MDCCCLXXIX (1878) - MDCCCLXXX (1880) History does not afford any grander or finer instance of gallentry and devotion to Queen and country than that displayed by the LXVI Regiment at the Battle of Maiwand on the XXVII (27th) July MDCCCLXX (1880) Despatch of General Primrose
Only 11 men of the regiment survived the fighting that day, having faced an Afghan army ten times the size of the British contingent. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle based his character Doctor Watson on the regiments Medical officer, Surgeon Major A F Preston who was injured in battle.[1][2]
The sculptor was George Blackall Simonds, a member of a Reading brewing family from Simonds' Brewery. At 9½ metres long (31'), and having taken two years to design and complete, the lion is one of the world's largest cast iron statues. Rumours persist that Simonds committed suicide on learning that the lion's gait was incorrectly that of a domestic cat. In fact, he made careful observations on lions and the stance was anatomically correct. He also lived for another 43 years, enjoying continuing success as a sculptor going on to create a Statue of Queen Victoria (1887), a statue of George Palmer (1891). He retired from Sculpting in 1903 and worked in the family business eventually becoming its chairman in 1910. In 1922 he temporarily came out of retirement to build the Bradfield war memorial which commemorated the deaths in the first world war of those in the 2nd Battalion, South Wales Borderers which included his son.[3]
The Maiwand Lion features in the masthead of one of the local daily newspapers, the Reading Evening Post, and also on the Reading Football Club crest.
The statue is made of cast iron, weighing 16 tons, cast by Casters Young and Co of Pimlico in 1886. It is supported on a terracotta pedestal. The rectangular pilastered plinth carries tablets recording the names of the dead, together with inscription above. The whole is listed grade II by English Heritage.[4]
[edit] References
- ^ Maiwand Lion – Forbury Gardens, Reading. Reading Museums. Retrieved on 2007-11-26.
- ^ The story of the Infantry of Berkshire and Wiltshire (to 1881). The Rifles (Berkshire and Wiltshire) Museum. Retrieved on 2007-11-26.
- ^ Reading's Great People - George Blackall-Simonds. Reading Borough Libraries. Retrieved on 2007-11-26.
- ^ Images of England - Maiwand Memorial. English Heritage. Retrieved on 2007-11-26.