A monument in Carmarthen dedicated to a hero of the Battle of Waterloo also known as the Tyrant of Trinidad will not be removed or renamed as part of a Welsh government probe into offensive statues.
The memorial to Lieutenant-General Sir Thomas Picton has stood in Picton Terrace in the south-western town since 1888.
A campaign was launched to have the monument removed a day after the toppling of a statue of slave trader Edward Colston and its dumping in Bristol harbour by Black Lives Matter protesters.
Reacting to demonstrations sparked by the killing of George Floyd in the US in May, Carmarthenshire Council set up a taskforce to review matters relating to racial inequality.
A royal painting of the Battle of Rorke’s Drift has had its description updated to acknowledge its links to imperialism.
It is among 62 works in the Royal Collection to be amended in the wake of the Black Lives Matter campaign.
Part of the Anglo-Zulu war of 1879, Rorke’s Drift saw 141 British soldiers defend a field hospital against an attack from 4,000 warriors.
Eleven Victoria Crosses were won in the battle which was depicted in Zulu, a 1964 film starring Michael Caine.
The online description of the oil painting, by Elizabeth Thompson under commission from Queen Victoria, now notes: ‘This work is connected to colonialism and imperialism.