Lion Monument

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  • Address
    Löwenplatz, near the Glacier Garden, Denkmalstrasse, 6006
  • Transport
    walking: Follow the Denkmalstrasse to monument from uphill side of Löwenplatz
    

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Lonely Planet review

Danish artist Bertel Thorvaldsen's Lion of Lucerne (Löwendenkmal) was built in 1819-21, a big dying beast sculptured into a former sandstone quarry wall. When author Mark Twain saw it he said it was the 'saddest and most moving piece of rock in the world'.

The Lion Monument commemorates (as the plaque says in Latin) the 'loyalty and bravery of the Swiss' who 'fell in the line of duty' or 'survived the battle through the care and attention of friends' during the French Revolution in 1792 while defending King Louis XVI, Marie-Antoinette and their children in Paris's Tuileries Palace. Some 800 Swiss mercenaries died while defending the palace, unaware that their royal employers had done a runner and were out of danger.