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The Statue of Equality is a statue of the 11th-century Indian philosopher Ramanuja, located on the premises of the Chinna Jeeyar Trust at Muchintal, Ranga Reddy district in the outskirts of Hyderabad. [2] It is the second tallest sitting statue in the world.
A view of Statue of Social Justice at afternoon. The Statue of Social Justice is the tallest Ambedkar's statue in the world. [2] [3] The Statue of Social Justice is 206 feet tall and is built on an 81-foot plinth, giving a total height of 206 feet. [11] [18] It is the fourth tallest, and the second tallest standing statue in India. [19]
Statues for Equality is an initiative to improve the gender parity in public monuments worldwide. Creators Gillie and Marc noted that up to 2019, only five of New York City's 150 monuments commemorated nonfictional women. [1] The project's first public exhibit opened on August 26, 2019, to coincide with Women's Equality Day.
The statue is 125 feet tall and stands on a 50 feet high plinth, thus its total height is 175 feet. [2] [3] After the Statue of Social Justice in Vijayawada, this is the tallest statue of B. R. Ambedkar in the world. It is the fifth tallest, and third tallest standing statue in India. [4]
The statue will be located at Indu Mills Compound in Mumbai in the state of Maharashtra. [4] [5] The statue will be 137.3-metre (450 ft) in total height, including a 30.5-metre (100 ft) pedestal. [6] [7] The Ambedkar statue will be the third tallest statue in the world after the Statue of Unity (182 m) and the Spring Temple Buddha (153 m). [8]
The official Statue of Liberty tour operator claims it’s losing thousands of customers daily to fake ticket scammers — and accused the city of blowing off its request for a crackdown.. Statue ...
Statue of Equality may refer to: Statue of Equality (Ambedkar), a statue of B. R. Ambedkar under construction in Mumbai; Statue of Equality (Ramanuja) ...
The larger-than-life statue was created by the husband-and-wife artist team Gillie and Marc Shattner (who earlier made a bronze bust of her with her approval), as part of their Statues for Equality initiative. [10] [11] [12] Through 2019, only five of New York City's 150 monuments commemorated real-life women.