The same picture as the modern art gallery behind, I don't know if it is to be reused by Trip.com, but in fact, they are integrated works, and under the reality of the statue's T-junction, they can also highlight the majesty of the Greek and Roman style behind the pillars. The statue and the now very suave, often worn red ice cream hats, are said to be the coordinates of the city's attempt to change the image of the old industrial city for the direction of the cultural center
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The same picture as the modern art gallery behind, I don't know if it is to be reused by Trip.com, but in fact, they are integrated works, and under the reality of the statue's T-junction, they can also highlight the majesty of the Greek and Roman style behind the pillars. The statue and the now very suave, often worn red ice cream hats, are said to be the coordinates of the city's attempt to change the image of the old industrial city for the direction of the cultural center
Leaving George Square outside City Hall. We came to visit the nearby Glasgow Museum of Modern Art. At the entrance of this building, which is also Victorian, stands a sculpture of the Duke of Wellington, riding on the majestic statue of the horse, with a traffic control cone on his head, which is said to be the work of good people. This is the first time I have seen the black humor of the "heroic characters".
Built in 1844 on Queen's Boulevard in the heart of Glasgow, the statue of a warrior riding on a horse is in memory of Arthur Wellesley, the first Duke of Wellington, the British commander who defeated Napoleon at Waterloo. The Duke's head is often worn by naughty citizens with a traffic cone barrel, and even if it is temporarily cleaned up, there will be seagulls standing overhead, looking a bit funny.
The statue of the Duke of Wellington commemorates Arthur Wellesley, the first British commander who defeated Napoleon at Waterloo. The statue, which stood on Queen's Road in Glasgow in 1844, has been a constant prank for the past 20 years. Arthur Wellesley, the first Duke of Wellington, was a British general during the Napoleonic Wars and was the 25th and 27th Prime Minister of Britain. Originally in the Indian Army, the Spanish Peninsula War (1808) established the war and shared the victory in the Battle of Waterloo (1815) which defeated Napoleon. He eventually became the British Field Marshal, and was awarded the rank of Marshal by six countries, France, Russia, Prussia, Spain, Portugal and the Netherlands, the only person in the history of the world to have won the rank of Marshal of seven countries.
One of the major cities in the UK and Scotland region is the third most populous of Scotland's six designated cities. The city is located in the north-east of Scotland, between the Don River and the mouth of River Dee, and is the main seaport on the North Sea coast.