hidden europe 45

Tall statements

by hidden europe

Summary

Faith has evidently replaced politics as the motivation for some of the world's tallest sculptures. In Europe, the largest such structure is the massive statue of Jesus Christ at Swiebodzin in western Poland.

The Brittany statues described in Patricia Stoughton’s feature in this issue of hidden europe, though impressive by virtue of the scale of the Vallée des Saints project, are mere tiddlers in the league table of tall sculptures. Europe’s tallest sculptures are in the former Soviet Union. When it was completed in 1967, the Motherland Calling sculpture on a hill overlooking the Russian city of Volgograd was the highest figure in the world — as measured to the tip of the sword held aloft by Mother Russia.

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For Odesa writer Issac Babel, his home town was 'the most charming city of the Russian empire'. For many visitors today, Odesa is one of the most striking Black Sea ports. Join us as we head up the Potemkin Steps to discover Odesa.

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The humblest homes in many villages in the Carpathians are built of wood. So, too, are the grandest buildings - almost invariably the church. Wood has its own benign beauty, and it is the carrier of tradition. We explore the wooden architecture of that part of the Carpathian region which lies to the east of the High Tatras.