Hints and tips:
...(I had to look them up: they are George IV and generals Charles Napier and Henry Havelock, who both served in India.)...
...Sir Charles Dunstone, a self-made billionaire who chaired the Royal Museums Greenwich, resigned in protest at ministers refusing to reappoint a trustee. Other boards have faced similar dilemmas....
...The summit this week, called by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, follows the toppling of a statue of slave trader Edward Colston in Bristol in June....
...The equestrian statue of Charles I standing at the top of Whitehall was made for the private garden of the Lord High Treasurer....
...The toppling of a statue of Bristolian slave-trader Edward Colston in June, in response to Black Lives Matter protests, sparked further arguments about monuments with links to the colonial past....
...WT: There’s already been a destruction — the toppling of that statue in Bristol [of Edward Colston, a 17th-18th-century merchant involved in the slave trade]....
...Public art has also become a flashpoint, from statues of Bristol’s Edward Colston and Oxford’s Cecil Rhodes to those of Confederate army leaders in the southern US....
...A 125th anniversary event had been planned at Buckingham Palace in May, to be attended by members selected by ballot and presided over by Prince Charles, the charity’s president....
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