National Monument, Edinburgh

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The National Monument, on Calton Hill, Edinburgh, viewed from the front
The National Monument, viewed from the north, with Nelson's Monument in the background.

The National Monument, Edinburgh is Scotland's memorial to those who died in the Napoleonic Wars.

The monument is on the top of Calton Hill, just to the east of central Edinburgh. It was designed by Charles Robert Cockerell and his collaborator William Henry Playfair and is modelled upon the Parthenon in Athens. Construction started in 1822.

The monument is notable for appearing to be only partially complete. A local myth tells that the monument was intended to be a full replica of the Parthenon, but money ran out midway through construction and only one side of the structure was completed. The city of Glasgow apparently offered to cover the costs but Edinburgh was too proud to accept the other city's charity. As a result, the monument is often given the nickname Edinburgh's Disgrace or Edinburgh's Folly.

However, some of the surviving plans for the monument by Cockerell and Playfair depict only the existing twelve columns, suggesting either that the monument never reached an advanced stage of planning due to the lack of funds and political will, or that it perhaps was never, in fact, meant to be a complete replica.

Subsequent attempts to "complete" the National Monument have never borne fruit for reasons of either cost or lack of local enthusiasm. A proposal in 2004 [1] was met with a very mixed reception.

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Coordinates: 55°57′17.0″N 3°10′54.5″W / 55.954722°N 3.181806°W / 55.954722; -3.181806

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