ETERNAL FLAME

The eternal flame at the Monument to the Unknown Soldier in Sofia, Bulgaria

An 'eternal flame' is a flame or torch that burns constantly. The flame that burned constantly at Delphi,[1] was an archaic feature, "alien to the ordinary Greek temple".[2] An eternal flame constantly tended by a dedicated priest was a feature of Zoroastrian religious culture.
In ancient times eternal flames were fuelled by wood or olive oil; modern examples by a measured supply of propane gas or natural gas. Eternal flames are most often used as a symbol to acknowledge and remember a person or event of national significance, or a group of brave and noble people connected to some event, or even a laudable goal such as international peace.
The eternal flame commemorating President Kennedy in the United States following his assassination in 1963 was the first time that an individual known person was given such an honor (as opposed to an Unknown Soldier). Henceforward, eternal flames would be designated more frequently around the world to honor the loss of persons of great significance, in addition to major tragic and momentous events.
Eternal flames exist in nature as well, as byproducts of natural gas deposits leaking through the ground.

Contents
Symbolic eternal flames around the world
Extinguished
Current
Europe
North America
Canada
United States
Australia
Asia
India
Israel
Japan
Africa
A mock Eternal Flame
Spontaneous natural flames
References
See also

Symbolic eternal flames around the world


Extinguished


★ The Sacred fire of Vesta in ancient Rome, which burned within the Temple of Vesta on the Roman forum

★ The Bible commands that "The fire shall ever be burning upon the altar; it shall never go out", regarding the altar of the Tabernacle. (Leviticus 6:6, KJV) Many churches (especially Catholic and Lutheran) feature an ''eternal flame'' on or hung above their altars. When a church is founded, the flame is passed from another church and the candles are regularly replaced to keep the original flame going.

★ The Olympic Flame is a kind of ''eternal flame'' which is kept lit throughout the Olympic Games

★ The eternal flame that was kept burning in the inner hearth of the Temple of Delphic Apollo at Delphi in Greece

★ The eternal flame near the Bronze Soldier of Tallinn in Estonia was extinguished after the country gained independence from the USSR
Current

Europe

Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, Moscow


Paris, France, under the archway at the Arc de Triomphe, which has burned continuously since 1921, in memory of all who died in World War I

Moscow, Russia, at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in the Alexander Garden to honor the dead of the Great Patriotic War

Budapest, Hungary, in Kossuth Square commemorating the revolutionaries of the 1956 uprising against control by the Soviet Union

Sofia, Bulgaria, at the Monument to the Unknown Soldier

The Hague, Netherlands, at the Peace Palace

Liverpool, England, at the Anfield stadium, in memorial to those who died in the Hillsborough disaster

Madonna del Ghisallo, Italy, near Lake Como, for all cyclists who have died

Rome, Italy, on the Altare della Patria, for the Unknown Soldier

Riga, Latvia, at Brothers' Cemetery

Warsaw, Poland, at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier

Munich, Germany, on the Square Of The Victims Of The National Socialism

Kaunas, Lithuania, at the Tomb of Unknown Soldier, in the Square of Unity

Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, lit after World War II

Yerevan, Armenia, in the center of the Armenian Genocide Memorial
North America

Canada


★ The Flame of Hope in London, Ontario, at 442 Adelaide Street, where Sir Frederick Banting did theoretical work leading to the discovery of human insulin

★ The Centennial Flame in Ottawa, Ontario, first lit in 1967, is in the spirit of an eternal flame; however, it is annually extinguished for cleaning and then relit. It commemorates the first hundred years of Canadian confederation as a Dominion of the British Commonwealth.

★ The Centennial Flame on the grounds of the provincial legislature in Edmonton, Alberta commemorates the same milestone as its counterpart in Ottawa
United States

Eternal Light Peace Memorial, Gettysburg, PA


John F. Kennedy Eternal Flame in Arlington National Cemetery, Virginia, lit by Jacqueline Kennedy on November 25, 1963 during the assassinated president's state funeral

Gettysburg Battlefield, Pennsylvania, in memory of the dead of the American Civil War, first lit by President Franklin Roosevelt in 1938

Decatur, Georgia at the square downtown, for the Korean War, World War II, and the Vietnam War

Atlanta, Georgia at the King Center, for assassinated civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr.

Washington, D.C., at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, first lit in 1993 by President Bill Clinton and noted Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel

New York City, New York, at Ground Zero, lit by Mayor Michael Bloomberg on the first anniversary of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks upon the financial district of the city. It is currently temporarily located at Battery Park on the southern tip of Manhattan under The Sphere, which is a sculpture that had been recovered from the World Trade Center site. The eternal flame will be relocated to the World Trade Center location when the memorial there is completed.

Shanksville, Pennsylvania, to honor the pilots and passengers aboard United Airlines Flight 93 on 9/11 in their efforts to thwart the hijacking
Eternal flame war memorial in Bowman, South Carolina


Chicago, Illinois to honor those who perished in World War II

Oral Roberts University, Tulsa, Oklahoma, atop the Prayer Tower, which represents the baptism of the Holy Spirit

Newport News Victory Arch in Virginia, commemorating American servicemen and women

Memphis, Tennessee at the grave of Elvis Presley at his home "Graceland"

University of California, Santa Barbara houses an eternal flame on its campus.

Bowman, South Carolina, lit in 1987 in honor and memory of the community's residents who died in World War I, World War II, and the Vietnam War

Washington Square (Philadelphia), site of the city's Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
Eternal flame in Brisbane, Australia's Shrine of Remembrance


Honolulu, Hawaii, USA to honor victims of 9-11
Australia


★ In the Shrine of Remembrance in Melbourne, Victoria

★ In the Shrine of Remembrance in ANZAC Square in Brisbane, Queensland

★ At the Australian War Memorial, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory

★ At the state War Memorial in Kings Park, Western Australia
Asia


★ Eternal Flame of Freedom, Corregidor, Philippines

Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan, the Victory (Pobedy) Monument
India


New Delhi, India, at the Raj Ghat, in memory of Mahatma Gandhi at the site of his cremation. The date that this flame was first lit is not known at present.

New Delhi, India, at the India Gate, first lit in 1971 to honor 90,000 soldiers, including an Unknown Warrior, who died in World War I and later conflicts

Andaman and Nicobar Islands, India, to remember the victims of the 2004 Asian Tsunami, unveiled in 2005
Israel


Tel Aviv, at Rabin Square, for assassinated Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin

★ In Jerusalem at Yad Vashem, the national Holocaust-Memorial of Israel

★ Near Jerusalem at Yad Kennedy, Israel's memorial to President Kennedy
Japan

Peace Flame at the Peace Memorial Museum in Hiroshima, Japan


★ At the Buddhist temple Daishō-in, at Mt. Misen, Itsukushima, where the flame has been burning since AD 806, for more than 1200 years[3]

Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park, to remain lit until all nuclear weapons in the world are abolished[4]
Africa


Accra, Ghana: the Eternal Flame of African Liberation
A mock Eternal Flame


Stephen Colbert created the World War III Eternal Flame on August 3, 2006 which will burn until World War III is over. The flame is a digital video of a fire framed by the fireplace on the set of The Colbert Report.

Spontaneous natural flames


Fires of Chimera, Çıralı, Turkey

Needless to say, the "eternal" nature of the following is a human fancy.

★ The Eternal Flame Falls can be found in the Shale Creek Preserve in New York, United States.

★ There is an area producing natural spontaneous flames in Olympos National Park, Turkey.

★ There is an eternal flame in Guanziling, Taiwan, as a result of methane gas.

Flaming Geyser State Park in Washington, United States.

★ An eternal flame in Australia, fueled by a coal seam instead of natural gas. Called "Burning Mountain", it is claimed to be the world's longest burning fire, at 6,000 years old.[5]

References


1. Noted by Pausanias (10.24.5) in the second century CE and earlier mentioned by Herodotus (7.141) and Euripides (''Iphigeneia in Tauris'')
2. Walter Burkert, ''Homo Necans'' (1982) translated by Peter Bing (University of California Press) 1983, p. 122 and notes 31, 32.
3. Miyajima Nihonsankei
4.
Guided Tours to Peace Memorial Park and Vicinity Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum
5. Fire in the hole, , Kevin, Krajick, Smithsonian Magazine,

See also



Olympic flame

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