Monumento all'Indiano, Florence

The Monumento all'Indiano or Monument to the Indian, more specifically Monument to the Maharajah of Kohlapur, Rajaram Chuttraputti consisting of a small dome, or baldacchino, over the bust of the indian prince, located at the east end of the Parco delle Cascine, of Florence, region of Tuscany, Italy.

Monumento all'Indiano

This is a peculiar monument attached to an unusual event. In 1870, returning from London after paying his respects to Queen Victoria, the 21 year old Maharajah, Rajaram I died from a febrile illness in his hotel room in the “La Pace Hotel"[1]

His courtiers asked to conduct a cremation, or Antyesti ceremony, at the confluence of two rivers. They were able to perform a ceremony at the confluence of the Arno and stream of the Mugnone, near this site in the park. The events and the ceremony elicited a great deal of curiosity in the public.

The act of cremation, banned in Florence, led to a fierce argument among doctors and scientists as to the merits and morals of the funeral technique.[2]

The costs of the monument were financed by the British government, who employed the sculptor Charles Francis Fuller. The base has inscriptions in English, Italian, Hindi, and Punjabi.[3]

In 1972, a modern bridge was built near the site and takes the name of Ponte all'Indiano.[4]

References

  1. Now known as the Grando Hotel in Piazza Ognissanti.
  2. Annali universali di medicina, Volume 268, edited by Carlo Giuseppe Annibale Omodei, Carlo Ampelio Calderini, Romolo Griffini, (1884) page 206.
  3. Atti, Acts of the Communal Council of Florence, (1874): pages 8-9.
  4. Toscana, by Remo Carulli, Alessandro Agostinelli, Sara Fiorillo, entry on memorial (2015).

Coordinates: 43°47′25.59″N 11°11′52.18″E / 43.7904417°N 11.1978278°E / 43.7904417; 11.1978278

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, March 27, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.