Betsy Ross
Buddha
Cleopatra had numerous statues made in her likeness, with estimates suggesting there were at least 200 statues erected in her honor throughout Egypt and other parts of the Roman Empire. The most notable among these were those that depicted her as the goddess Isis, reinforcing her divine status. These statues served both political and religious purposes, symbolizing her power and connection to the divine.
The Virgin Mary, mother of Jesus who was the unrecognized Messiah of the Jews and all who will believe Him.
The statue of the Spirit of the American Doughboy was most likely first erected in Nashville, Georgia, as a tribute to the local soldiers who served in World War I. This memorial reflects the community's desire to honor and remember the sacrifices made by its veterans. Such statues were commonly erected in towns across the United States during the post-war era to foster patriotism and commemorate the contributions of military personnel.
In this context, a monument is a structure or object erected to honor or commemorate something or someone. A statue is a sculpted likeness, form or figure of a person, animal or other 'living' creature and is most often created out of stone, metal or wood. Statues may be used as monuments, but not all statues are monuments, by any means. Conversely, monuments may be statues, but they may also be other forms, structures or objects that have no relationship to a statue.
About the only war heroes that Rome honored with statues were Pompey, Caesar and Marcus Agrippa. Pompey's statue was self-erected in his theater. Most of the war hero statues were of the emperor as he was the head of the armies and, at least in Roman eyes, the hero. However, the Romans did make busts of famous men, among them military leaders.
Reagan and Pope John Paul II were the two people most responsible for the collapse of the Soviet Union that soon led to Poland's independence.
Buddah
The Easter Island statues, or moai, are all different in height, shape and decoration. It is assumed that the statues represent males, although some have female symbols carved on them, but the consensus is that they represent important ancestor figures.Originally the statues had "eyes" of coral and red stone, but these have in most cases been lost; they also had red stone "hats" or hairstyles. All the erect statues look inwards, not out to sea, and slightly upwards. The natives who designed, carved, moved and erected the statues have become practically extinct and replaced by immigrants from other islands, so it is difficult to understand their reasons for doing the work.Some clues have been found in the way the statues are posed: they have carved arms and hands resting on their stomachs, which in Polynesian thought meant protecting tribal traditions and ritual knowledge - these were thought to be stored in the stomach. It is likely that groups of statues were erected by different social groups, clans who divided the island up between them. There was therefore rivalry and competition, which led to each group attempting to make and move larger and larger statues to "outdo" their rivals.Eventually all the palm trees and the plants used for making ropes were gone and the statues could no longer be moved, so many had to be left in the quarries, unfinished.
She was the most beautiful woman in the legend, and there are lots of pictures and statues of Aphrodite, It's planet is Venus etc.
Surely there are more statues of the Virgin Mary?
Most Greek statues are broken because they are thousands of years old