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The Scottish poet Robert Burns was highly popular in colonial New Zealand, especially among the Scots community. As an expression of Scottish heritage, there were four statues of Burns put up in New Zealand. The first was a large bronze figure in Dunedin's Octagon in 1887, which was a ...
- Māori
The Scottish poet Robert Burns was highly popular in...
- Cargill Monument, Dunedin
A monument to William Cargill, leader of the Free Church...
- Memorial to Tāwhiao, Ngāruawāhia
This monument to Tāwhiao, the second Māori king, was put up...
- Memorials Since 1960
In New Zealand there are Hillary statues in Ōrewa and at the...
- 19th-Century Memorials
Robert Burns. In 1887 a memorial to Scottish poet Robert...
- Memorials to The New Zealand Wars
New Zealand’s first war memorial was erected in 1865 to the...
- Memorials and Monuments
European pioneers in New Zealand; events that killed many...
- Māori
Beyond the colonial period, the chapter will assess the profound engagement with Robert Burns’s poetry in the work of New Zealand’s pre-eminent twentieth-century poet, James K. Baxter while also considering Burnsian encounters in the work of contemporary New Zealand writers.
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27 Μαρ 2012 · English: A statue of Scottish poet Robert Burns located in The Octagon in Dunedin, Otago, New Zealand. Dunedin is known as the 'Edinburgh of the South'.
Robert Burns statue at The Octagon, Dunedin city centre, Otago, New Zealand. Bronze statue of Scottish poet Robert Burns in New York's Central Park, circa 1950. Unveiled in 1880, it is the work of Sir John Robert Steell, and...
The Statue of Robert Burns in Auckland is registered by the New Zealand Historic Places Trust as a Category II structure, with registration number 637.
The poetry of Robert Burns (1759–1796) became immensely popular in 19th-century Scotland, and that enthusiasm was brought to Otago. This statue of the poet, who was also the uncle of the settlement’s first spiritual leader, Thomas Burns, was unveiled in Dunedin in 1887.