The International Monument to the Reformation (French: Monument international de la Réformation; German: Internationales Reformationsdenkmal), usually known as the Reformation Wall[1] (French: Mur des réformateurs), was inaugurated in 1909 in Geneva, Switzerland.
Key individuals, events, and documents of the Protestant Reformation are depicted therein in statues and bas-reliefs.
The contest involved 71 proposals from around the world, and was won by four Swiss architects: Charles Dubois, Alphonse Laverrière, Eugène Monod, and Jean Taillens (whose other design came third).
[2] The sculptures were then created by two French sculptors: Paul Landowski and Henri Bouchard.
[3][4] During the Reformation, Geneva was the centre of Calvinism, and its history and heritage since the sixteenth century has been closely linked to that of Protestantism.