| CONTORTIONIST | Serving as a memorial to come: motive, arm-twisting (13) |
| COMMEMORATIVE | Serving as a memorial to come: motive, arm-twisting (13) |
| REQUIEM | Religious ceremony performed as a memorial to a deceased person (7) |
| CUTTY | - Sark; preserved in Greenwich as a memorial to the Merchant Navy and monument to the age of sail, the last surviving tea clipper, once the fastest ship of her time (5) |
| NOBEL | An obituary published prematurely prompted this Swedish inventor to set up the prizes he preferred as a memorial to his invention of dynamite, Alfred ... |
| TRIUMPHALARCH | Win a tree as a memorial (9,4) |
| NELSONSCOLUMN | Memorial to a British admiral in Trafalgar Square (7,6) |
| ADMIRALTYARCH | Memorial to Queen Victoria at one end of The Mall |
| MOUNTRUSHMORE | US memorial to increase charge further |
| MONUMENT | A memorial to a Greek character given in a tick (8) |
| ALBERTA | A memorial to a Canadian province (7) |
| AGRA | Site of a memorial to Mumtaz Mahal |
| ONO | Creator of Iceland's Imagine Peace Tower, a memorial to John Lennon |
| RELIC | From "remains, to leave", word for an object remaining as a memorial of a departed/deceased saint; a surviving trace or memory generally; a souvenir; or, informally, an old person or antiquated thing |
| ELEANORCROSS | Geddington in Northamptonshire has the best preserved ____, a memorial to Edward I's first wife |
| CAIRN | A mound of stones piled up as a memorial or to mark a boundary or path. |
| WELLOK | Agreement after a bit of arm-twisting |
| CENOTAPH | One erected fitting in church as a memorial (8) |
| EPITAPH | What about "very good knock" as a memorial? (7) |
| OBIT | Ring piece newspapers publish shortly as a memorial (4) |