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  1. Sir Edwin Lutyens
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    The Cenotaph is a major British war memorial. Standing in Whitehall, London, it was designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens and first unveiled on 19 July 1919. It provided an immediate focus for public grief following the First World War and has remained central to British commemorative events.
    It was designed by the eminent architect Sir Edwin Lutyens - who also designed the Theipval Memorial and several English country houses. The Cenotaph was supposed to be temporary structure, used as a saluting point during a victory parade through London.
     
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    The Cenotaph - Wikipedia

    Amongst the most prominent designers of war memorials was Sir Edwin Lutyens, described by Historic England as "the foremost architect of his day". [1] . See more

    The Cenotaph is a war memorial on Whitehall in London, England. Designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens, it was unveiled in 1920 as the United Kingdom's national memorial to the dead of Britain and the British Empire of … See more

    Origins: the temporary Cenotaph image
    Reconstruction in stone image

    The First World War ended with the Armistice of 11 November 1918, although it was not officially declared over until the signing of the Treaty of Versailles on 28 June 1919. The … See more

    Suggestions that the temporary cenotaph should be re-built as a permanent structure began almost immediately, coming from members of the public and national newspapers. Four days after the parade, William Ormsby-Gore, Member of Parliament for See more

    On the day of its unveiling, The Times praised the Cenotaph as "simple, massive, unadorned". Catherine Moriarty, of the Imperial War Museum's See more

    Overview image
    Background image

    The First World War produced casualties on a scale previously unseen by developed nations. More than 1.1 million men from the British Empire were killed. In the war's aftermath, … See more

    Design image
    Unveiling image

    The Cenotaph is made from Portland stone formed as a pylon on a rectangular plan (two long sides and two short ones), with gradually … See more

    No date was announced for the completion of the Cenotaph at first, but the British government was keen to have it in place for See more

     
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  3. History of the Cenotaph - English Heritage

    Edwin Lutyens (1869–1944), the son of a soldier turned artist, was articled to the country-house architect Sir Ernest George. He established his own practice in 1888, becoming a celebrated designer of Arts and Crafts houses in the south …

  4. The History of the Cenotaph - English Heritage

    Learn how Edwin Lutyens designed the Cenotaph in 1919 as a temporary memorial for the Peace Day parade and how it became a permanent symbol of remembrance for over 100 years. Listen to the podcast interview with experts …

  5. The Cenotaph: Lutyens' simple but enduring design - London On …

  6. The Cenotaph, War Memorial London - e-architect

  7. Cenotaph - 1914-1918-Online

    Lloyd George invited the eminent architect Sir Edwin Lutyens (1869-1944) to create a structure to be built within two weeks. Inspired by the classical Greek kenotaphion , an “empty tomb” to mark absent remains, Lutyens responded …

  8. 1920: The Cenotaph, London – The Twentieth …

    The Cenotaph is arguably the most important work of architecture erected in Britain in our period as it is a national shrine, the memorial to the dead of two world wars. It is also the work that brought England’s greatest twentieth …

  9. Cenotaph - Wikipedia

    It was designed by French émigré architect Maximilian Godefroy in 1815, and construction was completed in 1827. It is considered [ who? ] the first war memorial in America, and an early example of a memorial to individual soldiers.

  10. Lutyens and the Cenotaph in London - Lives of the First World War

  11. A Brief Introduction to Architect Sir Edwin Lutyens

    Nov 7, 2015 · Learn about Sir Edwin Lutyens, the architect who designed the Cenotaph in Whitehall and over fifty other war memorials in England and abroad. Discover his legacy and the listing status of his works.

  12. The Cenotaph, Whitehall, London, by E. L. Lutyens

    In Lutyens' own lifetime, architectural historian Sir Lawrence Weaver wrote: He has by one little work — the Cenotaph — made joy in fine architecture a possession of the people. Wholly admirable as it is in its own right as a piece …

  13. Cenotaph | Memorial, Monument & Tribute | Britannica

  14. The Cenotaph, London - All You Need to Know | The Bumper Crew

  15. A history of the cenotaph - BBC News

  16. The Cenotaph - dcms.shorthandstories.com

  17. Cenotaph for Newton / Etienne-Louis Boullée - Architecture Lab

  18. Cenotaph for Sir Isaac Newton, proposed by Étienne-Louis Boullée

  19. AD Classics: Cenotaph for Newton / Etienne-Louis Boullée

  20. Newton's Cenotaph. - Library of Congress