Albania Sulejman Pasha Mosque was destroyed during
World War II, although its
minaret remained until 1967 when the
communist regime of
Enver Hoxha built a
war memorial in its place.
Austria Cathedral of St. Stephen in
Vienna was severely damaged in 1945, towards the end of the
Second World War. Incendiary bombs and shelling set the roof on fire, and the cathedral's original
larch girders, said to be made from an entire forest of larches, were destroyed, as were the Rollinger choir stalls, carved in 1487. The building was rebuilt soon after the war.
Belgium • The
Palace of Coudenberg in
Brussels burned down in 1731, and its ruins were demolished half a century later. • Many churches and abbeys were demolished during the
French occupation in the late 18th century, among them
St. Lambert's Cathedral in
Liège,
St. Donatian's Cathedral and
Eekhout Abbey in
Bruges,
Florennes Abbey in
Florennes, and
St. Michael's Abbey in
Antwerp. • In 1826, a fire destroyed much of
Herkenrode Abbey in
Hasselt, and the remaining ruins were demolished in 1844. • During World War I, the city of
Ypres was destroyed, including its town hall and the
Cloth Hall. These monuments were later rebuilt. • On 25 August 1914, during
World War I, the university library of
Leuven was
destroyed by the Germans amid the
Rape of Belgium. 230,000 volumes were lost, including medieval and Renaissance manuscripts and over a thousand
incunables. After the war, a new library was built. During World War II, the new building was again set on fire, and nearly a million books were lost. • The
Maison du Peuple in
Brussels, one of the largest works of architect
Victor Horta, was demolished in 1965 to make way for an office building. • The Valemprez farm, a 13th-century farmhouse rebuilt in the 18th century in Dottignies, was demolished again in 2008. •
Château Miranda, a 19th-century
neo-Gothic castle in Celles, was demolished in 2016–17.
Bosnia and Herzegovina , a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and the monumental Serbian Orthodox
Cathedral of the Holy Trinity (white church in the background) were destroyed by Croat forces in the Bosnian War but were later rebuilt. Through the course of the
Bosnian War, numerous sites of cultural and religious heritage were destroyed: • During the
Siege of Sarajevo, the
National and University Library of Bosnia and Herzegovina was specifically targeted and besieged by cannons positioned around the city and was destroyed in the fire, along with 80 percent of its contents. Three million books were destroyed, along with hundreds of original documents from the Ottoman Empire and the Austro-Hungarian monarchy. • Muslim heritage sites suffered the most, with 614 mosques and several other religious facilities, schools, and institutions destroyed by the authorities of the
Republic of Srpska as part of the ethnic cleansing campaign against the local Muslim populations. The best known among them include
Mehmed Pasha Kukavica Mosque,
Arnaudija Mosque, and
Ferhat Pasha Mosque. A substantial proportion of these mosques dated back to the Ottoman and
Austro-Hungarian eras. Many of them, such as the Ferhadija and Arnaudija mosques, have since been rebuilt with financial and professional assistance from Turkey. • The Ottoman was also destroyed in the efforts to eliminate Ottoman heritage sites in the region. • Roman Catholic sites suffered, with over 269 churches destroyed, which was associated with the killings of
Bosnian Croats, mostly by
Bosnian Serbs. • As many as 125
Serbian Orthodox religious buildings were destroyed in the war, such as the 13th-century
Sase Monastery and
Vozuća Monastery. • Parts of the old city of
Mostar, including the
Stari Most, were destroyed by the
Croatian Defence Council. The Stari Most has since been rebuilt. Another symbol of the city, the monumental Serbian Orthodox
Cathedral of the Holy Trinity, was shelled, set afire, and finally blown up by local Croat forces. The reconstruction of the church is ongoing as of 2020.
Croatia • In the
Independent State of Croatia, 450 Serb Orthodox churches and monasteries were destroyed along with monumental
iconostases, thousands of icons, manuscripts, and books. • During the
Croatian War of Independence, thousands of cultural monuments and religious buildings were destroyed or looted, with the total damage estimated at 407 million
DM. • After Croatia gained independence, about 3,000 memorials dedicated to the
anti-fascist resistance and the victims of fascism were destroyed. • In September 1991,
Croatian forces entered the memorial site of the
Jasenovac Concentration Camp and vandalized the museum building. Exhibitions and documentation were destroyed, damaged, and looted.
Cyprus Following
Cypriot intercommunal violence, many
Ottoman-era mosques were destroyed after the Turkish Cypriots left.
Czech Republic • The
Old Town Hall in
Prague was severely damaged by fire during the
Prague uprising of 1945. The chamber where
George of Poděbrady was elected King of Bohemia was devastated, the town hall's bell, the oldest in Bohemia, dating from 1313, was melted, and the city archives, comprising 70,000 volumes (most of which were transported to the outskirts of Prague due to the fear of bombardment), as well as historically priceless manuscripts, were destroyed. • The Vinohrady Synagogue, one of Europe's largest synagogues, was destroyed during the
Bombing of Prague.
Denmark •
Christiansborg Palace, the main residence of the
Danish kings, was destroyed by fire in 1794. •
Hirschholm Palace, the summer residence of the Danish kings, was demolished in 1809–1813 after it played a role in the affair between
Johann Friedrich Struensee and Queen
Caroline Matilda of Great Britain in the 1770s. • Frederiksborg Castle, residence and coronation castle of the Danish king, was severely damaged by fire in 1859. • The
Børsen, a 17th-century stock exchange building in
Copenhagen, was partially destroyed in a
fire on 16 April 2024, along with its iconic spire.
Estonia During
World War II, 98% of the town of
Narva was destroyed due to
Soviet bombing raids. Only three pre-war buildings, including the
town hall, remain.
France • In the aftermath of the
French Revolution, many historic structures, such as castles and monasteries, were destroyed by revolutionaries as tangible symbols of the
ancien régime. Examples include the
Bastille (rapidly demolished in 1789),
Cluny Abbey (the largest church in Christendom when built, demolished between 1800 and 1810, and quarried for stone thereafter) and
Jumièges Abbey. • Most of the
French Crown Jewels, including the famous
Crown of Charlemagne, were melted down or destroyed during the
French Revolution. • During the
Siege of Strasbourg at the height of the
Franco-Prussian War in 1870, the total destruction by
shelling and fire of the municipal library and the municipal art and archaeology collections resulted in the loss of 400,000 books, 3,446 medieval manuscripts, and thousands of
incunables, as well as hundreds of paintings,
stained glass windows, and archaeological artifacts. The most famous lost object was the original manuscript of the
Hortus deliciarum. • On 23 May 1871, the
Tuileries Palace, which had been the usual Parisian residence of French monarchs, was almost entirely gutted in a fire set by members of the
Paris Commune, leaving only the stone shell. It was subsequently demolished in 1883. • The
Château de Saint-Cloud was destroyed by Prussians during the Franco-Prussian War. Other destroyed palaces in France include the
Château de Meudon and the
Château de Bellevue. • In 1914,
Reims Cathedral was burned as a result of shelling during the initial phase of the
First World War. The cathedral was rebuilt after the war. • In 1917,
Château de Coucy was blown up by the retreating Germans, destroying its important 13th-century
donjon. • The
1978 Palace of Versailles bombing severely damaged parts of the
Palace of Versailles, including several priceless pieces of art. The palace was rebuilt and reopened to the public within four years. • The roof of
Notre-Dame de Paris, a major medieval Catholic cathedral,
caught fire on 15 April 2019, severely damaging the cathedral's
bell towers and resulting in the total collapse of the central
spire and roof. The fire is believed to have been caused by the ongoing
restoration, though an investigation is ongoing. Repairs to the building were completed in 2024, and the cathedral
reopened in December of the same year.
Germany in 1950 • Several hundred cities were destroyed during
World War II and the post-war period as a result of Allied area bombing of cities in the German Reich. Among the destroyed cultural heritage were
Berlin Palace,
Monbijou Palace, and
City Palace, Potsdam, as well as churches like
Dresden Frauenkirche,
Berlin Cathedral, and
Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church. Since the 1990s, all of the buildings mentioned above, with the exception of Monbijou Palace and Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, have been rebuilt. • Numerous synagogues throughout Germany were destroyed during the Nazi era (1933–1945), especially during or shortly after the
November Pogroms of 1938. Their post-war reconstruction was hampered by the diminished Jewish community and, in some cases, by former Nazis remaining in local administrative positions and preventing rebuilding. •
Paulinerkirche, a medieval church from 1231 in
Leipzig, survived the war practically unscathed but was dynamited in 1968 during the communist regime of East Germany. After the reunification of Germany, a new building in a contemporary style, the
Paulinum, was built on the site. • Much of Germany's industrial heritage, including railways, historic factories, and canals, has been destroyed. Very little of the
Bavarian Ludwig Railway (Germany's first passenger steam railway) remains; the
Ludwig-Donau-Main-Kanal was abandoned, and much of it was subsequently filled in to build
German federal highway A73, and the historic
Lehrter Bahnhof in Berlin was torn down to make way for the current
Berlin Hauptbahnhof. • Some important representative buildings of East Germany were demolished after reunification, most notably the
Palast der Republik, where
asbestos contamination was cited as a reason for demolition. • The
Duchess Anna Amalia Library in
Weimar, containing numerous irreplaceable rare books, burned down in 2004. • The building of the
Historical Archive of the City of Cologne collapsed on 3 March 2009 during construction of an extension of the
Cologne Stadtbahn. • The
Church of St. Lambertus in
Immerath was demolished on 9 January 2018 as part of the demolition of the entire village to make way for an expansion of the
Garzweiler surface mine. • In October 2020, artworks displayed at museums on
Museumsinsel in
Berlin were vandalized with a liquid that left stains on the artifacts.
Greece • The
Colossus of Rhodes, one of the
Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, was destroyed in the
226 BC Rhodes earthquake, and its remains were destroyed in the 7th century CE while Rhodes was under Arab rule. • The
Statue of Zeus at Olympia, also a Wonder of the Ancient World, was destroyed around the 5th century CE due to unknown causes. • The
Parthenon was
extensively damaged by Ottoman occupiers from the 17th to the 19th century. •
Las Incantadas was demolished in 1864 by Emmanuel Miller, who attempted to transfer the entire monument to France. The building collapsed, though Miller managed to take the sculptures, which are now placed in the Louvre.
Hungary Numerous historical buildings in
Budapest were damaged or destroyed during
World War II, including the
Hungarian Parliament Building, the
Chain Bridge, and the
Sándor Palace.
Ireland • During the
Battle of Dublin at the beginning of the
Irish Civil War in 1922, munitions were stored at the
Four Courts building, which housed 1,000 years of Irish records in the Public Record Office. Under circumstances that are disputed, the munitions exploded, destroying much of
Ireland's historical record. • The
Irish Republican Army followed a policy of deliberate
destruction of Irish country houses.
Italy • Many
ancient Roman temples, statues, scrolls, buildings, and entire cities have been destroyed. • In around 1505,
Pope Pius II had the ancient
St. Peter's Basilica demolished to make way for a replacement. The architect of the new building,
Donato Bramante, also carelessly destroyed many of the
tombs in the Basilica. • Many historic gardens and villas were destroyed in Rome in the 19th century, including
Villa Ludovisi and
Villa Negroni. • The
Tower of Paul III and
Convent of Aracoeli were demolished to make room for the
Victor Emmanuel II Monument. • Various historic buildings, for example the
Castello di Villagonia and the
Real Cittadella in
Sicily, were demolished in the 19th and 20th centuries to make way for railways, industrial areas, or other modern buildings. • Many historic buildings in Italy were destroyed or damaged during
World War II. These include the monastery of
Monte Cassino, which was destroyed during the
Battle of Monte Cassino. • Several historic buildings, books, paintings, and sculptures were destroyed during the
1966 flood of the Arno. • Churches and other heritage sites were damaged or destroyed during earthquakes such as the
1997 Umbria and Marche earthquake, the
2009 L'Aquila earthquake, and the
August 2016 Central Italy earthquake.
Kosovo • During the Yugoslavia period, and especially the
Kosovo conflict (1998–1999), mass destruction of Albanian heritage was endorsed by the state.
kulla dwellings (traditional stone tower houses), Ottoman-period architecture, public libraries, and more. • A number of
Serbian Orthodox religious sites were damaged or destroyed during World War II, the 1968 and
1981 protests and the
NATO bombing in March–June 1999. • Serbian cultural sites in Kosovo were systematically destroyed in the aftermath of the
Kosovo War and
2004 ethnic violence. According to the
International Center for Transitional Justice, this includes 155 destroyed
Serbian Orthodox churches and monasteries as well as
Medieval Monuments in Kosovo, which were inscribed on the
List of World Heritage in Danger.
Malta • Parts of the megalithic
Xagħra Stone Circle in
Gozo were deliberately destroyed around 1834–1835, and its megaliths were broken down to form masonry used in the construction of a nearby farmhouse. The site was forgotten for over a century before being rediscovered in the late 20th century. • A number of buildings of historical or architectural importance that had been included on the Antiquities List were destroyed by aerial bombardment during
World War II, including
Auberge d'Auvergne,
Auberge de France, and the
Slaves' Prison in Valletta, the
Clock Tower,
Auberge d'Allemagne and
Auberge d'Italie in Birgu, and two out of three
megalithic temples at Kordin. Others, such as
Fort Manoel, also suffered severe damage but were rebuilt after the war. • Other buildings that were not included on the Antiquities List but had significant cultural importance were also destroyed during the war. The most notable of these was the
Royal Opera House in Valletta, which is considered to be "one of the major architectural and cultural projects undertaken by the British" by the Superintendence of Cultural Heritage. • The
Gourgion Tower in Xewkija, which was included on the Antiquities List, was demolished by American forces in 1943 to make way for an airfield. Many of its inscriptions and decorated stones were retrieved and are currently stored at
Heritage Malta. •
Palazzo Fremaux was gradually demolished between 1990 and 2003. The demolition was condemned by local residents, the local government, and non-governmental organizations. • The
Azure Window, a limestone natural arch on the island of Gozo in Malta was one of Malta's major tourist attractions and was featured in several films. It was located in Dwejra Bay in the limits of San Lawrenz, close to the Inland Sea and Fungus Rock. The formation was anchored on the east end by the seaside cliff, arching over open water to a freestanding pillar in the sea to the west of the cliff. It was created when two limestone sea caves collapsed. Following years of natural erosion causing parts of the arch to fall into the sea, the arch and free standing pillar collapsed completely during a storm in March 2017. •
Villa St Ignatius, a 19th-century villa with historical and architectural significance, was partially demolished in late 2017. This was condemned by numerous non-governmental organizations and other entities.
Netherlands • The
German bombing of Rotterdam on 14 May 1940 decimated most of Rotterdam's historical city center. •
De Noord, a
tower mill that had survived the Rotterdam Blitz, suffered a fire in July 1954 and was demolished soon after.
Norway From 1992 to 1995, members of the
Norwegian black metal scene began a wave of arson attacks on medieval
Christian churches. By 1996 there had been at least 50 attacks.
Poland Warsaw Old Town (including the
Royal Castle and
Warsaw New Town) as well as
Łazienki Park (including the
Łazienki Palace and
Ujazdowski Castle) were
destroyed by Nazi Germany in 1944 and later rebuilt from the 1950s to the 1980s.
Portugal •
Lisbon was almost completely destroyed during the
1755 Lisbon earthquake and the subsequent fire and tsunami. • A small section of the 19th-century quarter
Chiado was destroyed by fire on 25 August 1988. The eighteen damaged buildings were rebuilt in the following 20 years.
Romania • The 60-meter-high tower of
Rotbav fortified church, dating back to the 13th century, collapsed on 20 February 2016. • Many historical buildings were demolished to construct the
Centrul Civic in
Bucharest. • Old towns of
Bacău,
Bârlad,
Câmpina,
Galați,
Orșova,
Pitești,
Ploiești,
Râmnicu Vâlcea, and
Suceava, among others, were completely demolished because of
communist urban planning. • The 1989 fire of the
Central University Library in Bucharest destroyed over 500,000 books and 3,700 manuscripts, including those of famous Romanian writings such as
Mircea Eliade's novel manuscripts.
Russia • In Moscow alone, losses from 1917 to 2006
are estimated at over 640 notable buildings (including 150 to 200 listed buildings, out of a total inventory of 3,500). Some of the buildings disappeared completely, while others were replaced with concrete replicas. • President
Boris Yeltsin ordered the shelling of the
White House, seat of the Russian government, during the
1993 Russian constitutional crisis, causing a large fire and considerable damage to the top floors. • The figure of
Mephistopheles on a building in St. Petersburg known as
the House with Mephistopheles was smashed by a fundamentalist Orthodox group in 2015. • The original buildings of the
Metrowagonmash plant, founded by
Savva Mamontov in 1897 and built in Russian Gothic style, were demolished between 2016 and 2019 to make way for block houses.
Serbia , destroyed in 1941. • The
National Library of Serbia was bombed on 6 April 1941 on the order of
Adolf Hitler. Around 500,000 volumes and all collections of the library were destroyed in what was one of the largest book bonfires in European history. • A number of culturally significant buildings were destroyed in
Belgrade during
Operation Retribution, the
Allied bombing of Yugoslavia in World War II, and other battles. Destroyed buildings include the
King Alexander Bridge,
Old Post Office,
El Kal Synagogue, Beth Israel synagogue, and others. • The
Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia demolished dozens of synagogues in
Vojvodina after
World War II, since preservation of religious buildings and relics wasn't considered important. • The
NATO bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999 resulted in partial destruction of many cultural monuments, including: • The
Yugoslav Ministry of Defence building; • The
University Hospital Center Dr Dragiša Mišović, founded in 1922; • The
Avala Tower, one of the most iconic symbols of the Serbian capital; • Many medieval monuments, such as
Gračanica Monastery, the
Patriarchate of Peć monastery and the
Visoki Dečani monastery, which are on
UNESCO's
World Heritage list today.
Slovenia •
Partisan forces and their successors destroyed approximately 100 castles and manors during and after the Second World War. • An Allied raid heavily damaged
Žužemberk Castle during the Second World War. • Many churches were destroyed during and after World War II. A few examples include the churches in
Ajbelj,
Dragatuš,
Dvor,
Gabrje and
Žužemberk.
Soviet Union being demolished in 1931 • During the
deportation of the Chechens and Ingush from the USSR in 1944, their local cultural and societal heritage was destroyed. Placenames were replaced with Russian ones, mosques were demolished, villages were razed, and the historical
Nakh language manuscripts were almost completely wiped out. • After the
deportation of the Crimean Tatars in May 1944, the Soviet government launched a
detatarization campaign, which involved destruction of religious and cultural Tatar heritage. • A new anti-religious campaign was launched in 1929, and the destruction of churches in the cities peaked around 1932. Several churches were demolished, including the
Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in Moscow and
St. Michael's Cathedral in Izhevsk. Both of these were rebuilt in the 1990s and 2000s. • In 1959, Nikita Khrushchev launched his
anti-religious campaign. By 1964, over 10,000 out of 20,000 churches were shut down, and many were demolished. Of 58 monasteries and convents operating in 1959, only 16 remained by 1964; of Moscow's 50 churches operating in 1959, 30 were closed and six demolished.
Spain in 1876 • Because of the
Ecclesiastical confiscations of Mendizábal (secularization of church properties in 1835–1836), several hundred church buildings, monasteries, and civil buildings owned by the Church were partly or completely demolished. Among them were important buildings such as the Santa Caterina convent (the first Gothic building on the
Iberian Peninsula) and the Sant Francesc convent, both in
Barcelona, or
San Pedro de Arlanza Roman monastery, near
Burgos. Many of the artworks, libraries and archives contained therein were lost or pillaged while the buildings were abandoned. • The Convent of Dominicos of San Pedro Mártir, Convent of Trinidad, Church of Santiago, Church of San Torcuato and Santa Lucía, and Church of San Miguel, all located in
Calatayud, have been demolished. • Palacio de los Lasso de Castilla was a 15th-century palace in
Madrid that became the palace or residence of the
Catholic Monarchs. It was demolished during the mid-19th century. • Churches, monasteries, convents, and libraries were destroyed during the
Spanish Civil War. •
A Virxe da Barca sanctuary was destroyed by a fire started by lightning. •
Iglesia de San Pío X, a church located in
Todoque, Canary Islands, was destroyed by the
2021 Cumbre Vieja volcanic eruption on 26 September 2021.
Sweden •
Tre Kronor, the main residence of the
Swedish kings, was destroyed by fire in 1697. Several important documents of the history of Sweden were lost. •
Klarakvarteren, a part of Stockholm from the 17th century, was demolished in the 1960s. • The city of
Norrköping was razed in 1719 by the Russians. It was reconstructed with grid-pattern streets and by using the surviving Johannesborg fort as a quarry.
Switzerland • The city of Basel was devastated by the
1356 Basel earthquake. •
Pfäfers Abbey was destroyed in 1665 by fire. • The Majoria and Tourbillon castles in
Sion were destroyed by fire in 1788. •
Disentis Abbey was destroyed by fire in 1799, along with its library and archives. • The
Kapellbrücke (Chapel Bridge) in Luzern was substantially damaged by fire in 1993.
Ukraine •
Brotherhood Monastery was demolished by Soviet authorities in 1935. • The original 10th-century
Church of the Tithes was destroyed by
Mongol forces in the
Siege of Kiev (1240). A new church was built on the site in the 19th century, but it was destroyed by Soviet authorities in 1935. •
Great Suburb Synagogue was demolished by invading Nazi forces in 1941. •
Golden Rose Synagogue, the oldest synagogue in Ukraine, was sacked and demolished by the Nazi occupation forces between 1941 and 1942. •
Khreshchatyk, the main street of Kyiv containing many historic buildings, was heavily mined by retreating Soviet forces in 1941. As a result, most buildings were destroyed. Some buildings were restored after the war, but most were replaced with new structures in the style of
Stalinist architecture. •
St. Michael's Golden-Domed Monastery was demolished by Soviet authorities from 1934 to 1936. Some frescoes and mosaics were removed and taken to museums in the
Russian SFSR before demolition, and only a portion of them was returned when the cathedral was rebuilt in the 1990s. •
St. Nicholas Military Cathedral was demolished by Soviet authorities in 1934. • A large amount of Ukrainian cultural heritage was lost or damaged in the
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. • The
Antonov An-225 Mriya plane was severely damaged in 2022 during the
Battle of Antonov Airport. The aircraft's owner, defense contractor
Ukroboronprom, has announced that they will attempt to rebuild the aircraft. •
Babi Yar Holocaust Memorial Center in Kyiv was damaged on 1 March 2022 during the
Battle of Kyiv. The memorial complex, which was under construction at the time, suffered structural damage to a museum building as well as damage to the adjacent cemetery; other intrinsic elements of the site, including the memorial's synagogue and menorah sculpture, were not damaged. • The
building of the Chernihiv Regional Youth Center was destroyed by a Russian air strike on 27 February 2022. • Artwork and stained glass in the
Dormition Cathedral in Kharkiv were damaged in 2022 during the
Battle of Kharkiv. •
Ivankiv Historical and Local History Museum was destroyed on 27 February 2022 during the
Battle of Ivankiv. The museum contained folk artwork, including paintings by
Maria Prymachenko and textile works of
Hanna Veres. •
Kuindzhi Art Museum in
Mariupol was destroyed on 21 March 2022 during the
Siege of Mariupol. The museum was dedicated to the life and work of Ukrainian-born artist
Arkhip Kuindzhi. Although the works by Kuindzhi held by the museum were reportedly removed from the building prior to its destruction, the current location of the artwork is unknown. The status of the remainder of the museum's collection, which included around 2,000 works by fellow Ukrainian artists
Ivan Aivazovsky,
Mykola Hlushchenko,
Tetyana Yablonska,
Mykhailo Derehus, and others, remains unknown as well. • The
Slovo Building in Kharkiv was damaged in 2022 during the Battle of Kharkiv.
United Kingdom 13th–17th centuries •
Dunwich, the historic capital of
East Anglia and a major port city of medieval England, has largely fallen into the sea due to gradual coastal erosion following two great storms in 1287. Eight churches present in the 13th century and 400 houses have been swept into the sea. •
Hastings Castle was originally built as a wooden
motte-and-bailey castle in 1066, after
William the Conqueror first landed in England, and was rebuilt as a stone fortified castle in 1070. It was dismantled at the order of
King John, who feared it being taken by the French Dauphin Louis. It was then rebuilt and refortified by
King Henry III around 1220 to 1225. The destroyed remains of the castle were excavated in the 1820s when the sandstone cliff was cut back to make room for the construction of the neoclassical
Pelham Arcade. It last suffered damage as a target for bombs during World War II. • The
Dissolution of the Monasteries in the 1530s led to many monasteries, relics, and books being destroyed, for example the
Glastonbury,
Fountains, and
Furness abbeys. In total, around 900 monasteries were closed. For a complete list of dissolved monasteries, see
List of monastic houses in England and
List of monastic houses in Wales. • The
abolition of chantries in 1547 and the conversion to Protestantism led to iconoclastic destruction of artwork in many churches. • In the
English Civil War, many castles and stately homes were destroyed in sieges (such as
Old Wardour Castle),
slighted, or demolished by the victorious
Parliamentarians. This was done both to make them militarily untenable and as a symbolic destruction of the old order. Parliament could not afford to
garrison all castles in England against
Royalist insurgents, and an ungarrisoned castle could easily be used as a base by supporters of
King Charles. This happened at
Pontefract Castle, where the castle was left standing after the first civil war, was retaken by a party of Royalists, and had to be taken again in a lengthy siege. To prevent this recurring, the castle was thoroughly demolished.
Raglan Castle was an example of punitive demolition—the
Marquis of Worcester had held out long after every other castle except
Pendennis. As punishment his castle was ransacked and, in contrast to the preservation of that at Oxford, his library was deliberately burnt. Examples of destroyed or damaged castles include
Corfe,
Winchester,
Pembroke,
Aberystwyth,
Helmsley,
Bolton, and
Basing. The walls of the city of Coventry were also destroyed. • The
Great Fire of London in 1666 destroyed much of the old city, including
Old St Paul's Cathedral, 87 parish churches, 44 company halls, the
Royal Exchange, the
Custom House, and the
Bridewell Palace. • The
Palace of Whitehall, the main residence of the English and later
British monarchs, was destroyed by fire in 1698.
18th–20th centuries • The
Cotton library owned by Sir
Robert Bruce Cotton was partly destroyed in a house fire in 1731, resulting in the loss of a number of important
Late Antique and medieval manuscripts and serious damage to a number of others, including a copy of the
Magna Carta. The surviving works are now held by the
British Library. •
Arthur's O'on, a Roman temple or triumphal monument located near the
Antonine Wall in
Scotland, was demolished by a local landowner in 1743. •
St Mary's Church in
Reculver, an exemplar of Anglo-Saxon architecture and sculpture, was partially demolished in 1809. • The
Palace of Westminster was almost
destroyed by fire on 16 October 1834, and many documents about Britain's political history were lost. Only
Westminster Hall, the crypt of
St Stephen's Chapel, and the
Jewel Tower survived. • The Temple of the Sun, a Gothic folly in
Kew Gardens designed by
William Chambers in 1761, was destroyed when a nearby cedar tree fell on it in a storm in 1916. •
The Crystal Palace in London was destroyed by fire on 30 November 1936. •
St Michael's Church in
Coventry was a 14th-century cathedral that was nearly destroyed by the German
Luftwaffe during the
Coventry Blitz of 14 November 1940. Only the tower, the spire, the outer wall, and the bronze effigy and tomb of its first bishop,
Huyshe Yeatman-Biggs, survived. The ruins of this cathedral remain
hallowed ground and are
listed at Grade I. •
Charles Church in
Plymouth was entirely burned out by
incendiary bombs dropped by the Luftwaffe on the nights of 21 and 22 March 1941. It has since been encircled by a roundabout and turned into "a memorial to those citizens of Plymouth who were killed in air raids on the city in the 1939–45 war." •
Coleshill House, a historic mansion in
Oxfordshire (historically
Berkshire), was destroyed in a fire in 1952, and many historic items within were lost. The ruins were demolished in 1958. • Several historic structures, such as the
Euston Arch in
London and the
Royal Arch in
Dundee, were demolished in the 1960s to make way for redeveloped infrastructure. • Urban renewal in many historic cities, like
Exeter,
Coventry, and
York, in the 1960s and 70s resulted in the destruction of many historic buildings to create roads that were believed to be more suitable for traffic. • The
Imperial Hotel, London, designed by
Charles Fitzroy Doll and built from 1905 to 1911, was demolished in 1966–67. •
York Minster was severely damaged by fire in 1984, believed to have been caused by a lightning strike on the south transept. • The
Baltic Exchange in the
City of London was destroyed by a bomb placed there by the
Provisional IRA in 1992. The site is now occupied by
The Gherkin, and the
Baltic Exchange Memorial Glass can be seen in the
National Maritime Museum. • A
major fire in 1992 caused extensive damage to
Windsor Castle, the largest inhabited castle in the world.
21st century • The
original Wembley Stadium was closed in October 2000 for redevelopment and was demolished from 2002 to 2003. The top of one of the
Twin Towers was erected as a memorial in the park on the north side of Overton Close in the Saint Raphael's Estate. •
Clandon Park House, a historic mansion in
Surrey, was severely damaged by fire on 29 April 2015, leaving the house "essentially a shell" and destroying thousands of historic items, including one of the footballs kicked across no-man's-land on the first day of the
Battle of the Somme in 1916. • The
Royal Clarence Hotel in
Exeter, considered England's oldest hotel, was almost destroyed by fire on 28 October 2016. • The Mackintosh Building of the
Glasgow School of Art was extensively damaged by fire in May 2014, including the destruction of the artistically significant Mackintosh Library. As restoration was completed and the building was nearing reopening, a far more devastating fire broke out on the night of 15 June 2018, destroying the building's interior. Alan Dunlop, the school's professor of architecture, said, "I can't see any restoration possible for the building itself. It looks destroyed." • The Beehive Mills in
Bolton, Lancashire, a
Grade II listed building, was demolished in 2019 after the local authority agreed to build 121 new houses. •
The Crooked House, a historic 18th-century pub and former farmhouse in
Staffordshire, was destroyed by fire in August 2023, and the ruins were demolished. == North America ==