Memorial (disambiguation)

A memorial is an object served as a memory of something.

Memorial may also refer to:

Common uses

 * Memorial service, a ceremony performed in remembrance of a dead person
 * Online memorial, an Internet site set up to remember someone who has died
 * War memorial, an edifice to commemorate those who died, or were injured, in war

Places

 * Memorial, Houston, Texas
 * Memorial Bridge (disambiguation), various locations

Music

 * Memorial (Clifford Brown album), 1956
 * Memorial (Distorted album), an album by the Israeli metal band Distorted, or the title track
 * Memorial (Moonspell album), a 2006 album by the Portuguese metal band Moonspell
 * Memorial (Russian Circles album), 2013, or the title track
 * Memorial (composition), a composition by Michael Nyman
 * Memorial Album (Hank Williams album)

Television

 * "Memorial" (Star Trek: Voyager) an episode of the television series Star Trek: Voyager
 * "Memorial" (The Vampire Diaries), an episode of the television series The Vampire Diaries
 * Memorials (TV series), a 2020 South Korean television series

Other uses in arts, entertainment, and media

 * Mémorial, the official gazette of Luxembourg
 * Memorial: Letters from American Soldiers, a 1991 documentary film
 * The Memorial, a 1932 novel by Christopher Isherwood
 * Memorial (novel), a 2020 novel by Bryan Washington

Groups and organizations

 * Memorial (society), an international society in memory and for rehabilitation of victims of political repression in the USSR
 * Memorial Sloan–Kettering Cancer Center, a cancer treatment and research institution in New York City
 * Memorial University of Newfoundland, a university located in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada
 * OBD Memorial, online data of Soviet personnel killed or missing in or after the Second World War

Other uses

 * Memorial (liturgy), a feast day of rank lower than a solemnity or feast
 * Memorial Tournament, a PGA Tour golf tournament founded by Jack Nicklaus
 * Memorials were the original deeds registered and held by the South Australian General Registry Office in the early days of the colony