Derbyshire War Memorials
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About War Memorials

Our glossary

We need to use some technical terms to identify features as accurately as possible, and the armed services are notorious for the abbreviations and acronyms that they use. We hope that our glossary will make it all clear.

Definition of a war memorial

There is no legal or official definition of a war memorial but the organisations involved with them have developed notes for guidance. We have used those notes to develop our own more flexible approach. Full details are in our definition.

Types of war memorial

Any object can be created or adapted to be a war memorial and human emotion has generated an incredible variety.

 A brief selection of types includes:
  • Monuments such as crosses, obelisks, cenotaphs, columns and statues such as sculpted figures etc.
  • Board, plaques or tablets.
  • Documents such as rolls of honour or books of remembrance, paintings, prints and photographs.
  • Buildings and other structures such as community or sports halls, hospitals, chapels, bus shelters, clock towers, gates etc.
  • Tapestries, flags or banners, including laid-up regimental colours.
  • Church fabric or fittings like windows, bells, organs, pews, lecterns, lighting, altars, screens, candlesticks, religious relics, etc.
  • Trophies and relics such as a preserved gun or wreckage marking an aircraft crash site.
  • Body art.
  • Land including parks, recreation grounds, gardens, moorland and woodland.
  • Gravestones and additions to gravestones.
  • Trusts, endowments and funds including endowed hospital beds.
  • Temporary memorials erected pending the erection of a permanent one.
  • Temporary displays, tableaux, well dressings etc.
  • ... and many, many others.
We also include memorials commemorating peace as well as military conflict, civil war or acts of terror.

Some types which we do not normally record include:
  • Gravestones that are the responsibility of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. (Other projects do this: it is beyond our resources and pointless to duplicate other efforts.)
  • Commercial products. (The label on Batemans’ Dark Lord beer states that it is brewed to commemorate Black Tom who fought in The Battle of Winceby near Lincolnshire’s Bolingbroke Castle in 1643. Black Tom was a courageous soldier who inspired his men with his ‘never say die’ attitude. But we do not consider it to be a war memorial.)
  • Buildings named after personalities or events. (The Lord Nelson pub or the Battle of Hastings pub would not be recorded unless they bore plaques or other specific commemorations.)
  • Items such as Next of Kin Memorial Plaques (dead man’s pennies), certificates (scrolls), citations or service medals, unless they formed part of a display clearly stating a suitable commemoration.
Numbers of war memorials

We already have information on well over 3,000 memorials in Derbyshire and from the known churches, cemeteries and village halls yet to be visited we are confident of finding several hundred more. Our estimate for the county is therefore about 4,000. Comparing the county's 1911 population with that of the whole UK we estimate that there may be nearly a quarter of a million war memorials throughout the country.

Research area

Our research area covers the modern ceremonial county of Derbyshire. We record any war memorial that has been located within that area. We do not record war memorials to Derbyshire residents, or anyone associated with Derbyshire, which are erected outside of Derbyshire.

Page © Roy Branson