As of 2026-07-15, Berlin Peace Column tops the list with 12 m.
- #1 Berlin Peace Column — 12 m
monument in Berlin, Germany
The Peace Column is a column located in Mehringplatz in Berlin, Germany. Designed by Christian Gottlieb Cantian and erected in 1843, the 19-meter column is topped with a brass statue of Victoria, goddess of victory, designed by Christian Daniel Rauch. In 1876, allegories of the four victorious allies of Waterloo were added, and in 1879 two more sculptures followed: The Peace by Albert Wolff and Clio, writing the history of the Wars of Liberation (Befreiungskriege) by Ferdinand Hartzer. Read more on Wikipedia.
Wikidata - #2 15 July Martyrs' Memorial — 11 m
memorial in Istanbul, Turkey
source Wikidata - #3 Leineweberdenkmal — 10 m
memorial and fontain with statue in Bielefeld, Germany
source Wikidata - #4 Torre Natoli — 9.00 m
monument tower of Piraino
source Wikidata - #5 Memorial Mound — 8.00 m
memorial to Danish emigrants in Copenhagen, Denmark
The Memorial Mound, situated on a slope in Søndermarken, close to Frederiksberg Palace, is a memorial to Danish emigrants in Copenhagen, Denmark. Read more on Wikipedia.
Wikidata - #6 Bertolt Brecht monument — 6.00 m
monument by Fritz Cremer, Peter Flierl and Carlo Wloch in front of the Berliner Ensemble
source Wikidata - #7 Circ en ferro — 5.00 m
Public art in Barcelona (Catalonia)
source Wikidata - #8 Olympic Bell — 2.80 m
memorial in Berlin, Germany
source Wikidata - #9 Bell #9801 — 2.58 m
memorial bell for Prague cast in 2022
Bell #9801 is a memorial bell for Prague cast in 2022 in the Grassmayr Bell Foundry. With its weight of 9,801 kg (21,608 lb), it is intended to refer to the 9,801 bells stolen by Nazi Germany during the Second World War in the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia for the purposes of the arms industry. The #9801 bell will be placed on Rohanský ostrov, the place where the bells were taken from the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia. Read more on Wikipedia.
Wikidata - #10 Tsar Cannon — 0.89 m
large artillery piece from 1586
The Tsar Cannon is a large early modern period artillery piece on display on the grounds of the Moscow Kremlin. It is a monument of Russian artillery casting art, cast in bronze in 1586 in Moscow, by the Russian master bronze caster Andrey Chokhov. Mostly of symbolic impact, it was never used in a war. However, the cannon bears traces of at least one firing. Per the Guinness Book of Records it is the largest bombard by caliber in the world, and it is a major tourist attraction in the ensemble... Read more on Wikipedia.
Wikidata